OldTools Archive
Recent | Bios | FAQ |
178306 | "Phil Koontz" <phil.koontz@g...> | 2008‑03‑18 | Re: New-ish member bio |
>I love beer, > And every once in a while > I even build something. Hey John. I can tell that we're going to get along fine. Can I offer you a home brew? PK Don't play a guitar, but I listen real good. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
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178305 | Archie England <christinmedaily@y...> | 2008‑03‑18 | Re: New-ish member bio |
Welcome, and chip in as often as you like. _________________________________________________________________- ___________________ Be a better friend, newshound, and know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile. Try it now. http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ ------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
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178304 | "John Erhardt" <johnlikesbooks@g...> | 2008‑03‑18 | New-ish member bio |
(Apologies if this is copy #2 of my bio; that's not a sign that I want you to really, really pay attention to me.) So in scanning list archives and the list FAQ (looking for a reason people make clarifying asides to someone named Jeff, honestly) I discovered that it's customary to post a bio as an official introduction/announcement. That's not usually my style with discussion lists, but here goes ("A man said to the Old Tools list, 'List! I exist!'" etc). I'm not a hand tool user (or Old Hand Tool User) for any philosophical reason involving wood. I've been a guitar player (classical and steel string fingerstyle) for 18 of my 30 years, and while I can imagine my life without woodworking, I can't imagine it without guitar. Hence: anything that can bite my fingers off is not allowed in my shop. I'm also suffering from slight hearing loss, and so I'm not terribly welcoming of any tool that encourages that to continue. I'm not militant about brand or age of my hand tool, so long as it's a hand tool that sits still and behaves; I have both famous-ish brand name and no-name older chisels that I use quite happily alongside newer tools. This is, quite likely, one of the few times you'll hear a peep out of me, as I'm a bit underqualified to respond to some of the specific questions posted here on tool history, finishing, troubleshooting mistakes, and so forth. But I've learned a great deal so far, and there's a decided lack of "should I buy Lie-Nielsen or old Stanley" threads here, which I find a bit tiresome when I read other sites. Feels pretty comfortable so far. So my name's John, I live outside Rochester, NY, I sit in a cubicle all day and write XML, I play guitar, I love beer, I moonlight for a baseball publication, and my wife makes fun of me because I stare at the tool photos in Garrett Hack's books before I go to bed. And every once in a while I even build something. Thanks for reading, J ------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
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178307 | "Bill Taggart" <wtaggart@c...> | 2008‑03‑18 | RE: New-ish member bio |
-----Original Message----- From: oldtools-bounces@r... [mailto:oldtools-bounces@r...] On Behalf Of John Erhardt Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2008 7:57 PM To: oldtools@r... Subject: [OldTools] New-ish member bio > there's a decided lack of "should I buy > Lie-Nielsen or old Stanley" threads here You could start one. You might just have. Welcome to the Porch! - Bill Taggart - Richmond, VA ------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
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178310 | "Joseph Sullivan" <joe@j...> | 2008‑03‑18 | RE: New-ish member bio |
John: Welcome to the porch. However as a guitar player myself, I gotta warn you -- hand tools bite, too. I haven't played in a month or so and have lost my calluses, because of a festered splinter under the nail on my right index finger (and I play with my nails), followed by a blood blister on the end of my left ring finger where I smashed it. Chisels can be exciting, too. Cheers! Joseph Sullivan -----Original Message----- From: oldtools-bounces@r... [mailto:oldtools-bounces@r...] On Behalf Of John Erhardt Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2008 6:57 PM To: oldtools@r... Subject: [OldTools] New-ish member bio (Apologies if this is copy #2 of my bio; that's not a sign that I want you to really, really pay attention to me.) So in scanning list archives and the list FAQ (looking for a reason people make clarifying asides to someone named Jeff, honestly) I discovered that it's customary to post a bio as an official introduction/announcement. That's not usually my style with discussion lists, but here goes ("A man said to the Old Tools list, 'List! I exist!'" etc). I'm not a hand tool user (or Old Hand Tool User) for any philosophical reason involving wood. I've been a guitar player (classical and steel string fingerstyle) for 18 of my 30 years, and while I can imagine my life without woodworking, I can't imagine it without guitar. Hence: anything that can bite my fingers off is not allowed in my shop. I'm also suffering from slight hearing loss, and so I'm not terribly welcoming of any tool that encourages that to continue. I'm not militant about brand or age of my hand tool, so long as it's a hand tool that sits still and behaves; I have both famous-ish brand name and no-name older chisels that I use quite happily alongside newer tools. This is, quite likely, one of the few times you'll hear a peep out of me, as I'm a bit underqualified to respond to some of the specific questions posted here on tool history, finishing, troubleshooting mistakes, and so forth. But I've learned a great deal so far, and there's a decided lack of "should I buy Lie-Nielsen or old Stanley" threads here, which I find a bit tiresome when I read other sites. Feels pretty comfortable so far. So my name's John, I live outside Rochester, NY, I sit in a cubicle all day and write XML, I play guitar, I love beer, I moonlight for a baseball publication, and my wife makes fun of me because I stare at the tool photos in Garrett Hack's books before I go to bed. And every once in a while I even build something. Thanks for reading, J ------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
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178308 | Tim Pendleton <tpendleton@g...> | 2008‑03‑18 | Re: New-ish member bio |
After pondering that sage question for some time, it seems that the proper answer is that you probably "need" both! :) Tim Thinking about the next batch of home brew... Bill Taggart wrote: > -----Original Message----- > From: oldtools-bounces@r... > [mailto:oldtools-bounces@r...] On Behalf Of John Erhardt > Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2008 7:57 PM > To: oldtools@r... > Subject: [OldTools] New-ish member bio > > >> there's a decided lack of "should I buy >> Lie-Nielsen or old Stanley" threads here >> > > You could start one. You might just have. > > Welcome to the Porch! > > - Bill Taggart > - Richmond, VA > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
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178317 | "Kaye, Danny" <danny.kaye@n...> | 2008‑03‑19 | RE: New-ish member bio |
welcome, nice to meet you Danny Kaye Multimedia group 0115 848 2231 ________________________________ De: oldtools-bounces@r... en nombre de John Erhardt Enviado el: mar 18/03/2008 23:57 Para: oldtools@r... Asunto: [OldTools] New-ish member bio (Apologies if this is copy #2 of my bio; that's not a sign that I want you to really, really pay attention to me.) So in scanning list archives and the list FAQ (looking for a reason people make clarifying asides to someone named Jeff, honestly) I discovered that it's customary to post a bio as an official introduction/announcement. That's not usually my style with discussion lists, but here goes ("A man said to the Old Tools list, 'List! I exist!'" etc). I'm not a hand tool user (or Old Hand Tool User) for any philosophical reason involving wood. I've been a guitar player (classical and steel string fingerstyle) for 18 of my 30 years, and while I can imagine my life without woodworking, I can't imagine it without guitar. Hence: anything that can bite my fingers off is not allowed in my shop. I'm also suffering from slight hearing loss, and so I'm not terribly welcoming of any tool that encourages that to continue. I'm not militant about brand or age of my hand tool, so long as it's a hand tool that sits still and behaves; I have both famous-ish brand name and no-name older chisels that I use quite happily alongside newer tools. This is, quite likely, one of the few times you'll hear a peep out of me, as I'm a bit underqualified to respond to some of the specific questions posted here on tool history, finishing, troubleshooting mistakes, and so forth. But I've learned a great deal so far, and there's a decided lack of "should I buy Lie-Nielsen or old Stanley" threads here, which I find a bit tiresome when I read other sites. Feels pretty comfortable so far. So my name's John, I live outside Rochester, NY, I sit in a cubicle all day and write XML, I play guitar, I love beer, I moonlight for a baseball publication, and my wife makes fun of me because I stare at the tool photos in Garrett Hack's books before I go to bed. And every once in a while I even build something. Thanks for reading, J ------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
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178322 | paul womack <pwomack@p...> | 2008‑03‑19 | Re: New-ish member bio |
John Erhardt wrote: > I'm > also suffering from slight hearing loss, and so I'm not terribly > welcoming of any tool that encourages that to continue. You might want to be careful IF you get into pig-sticker mortise chisels and large mallets. The sounds generated whilst using these is rather "high impact" BugBear ------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
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