
The shop is a bit disheveled, but if you are reading this I know you understand. The door to the garage opens to make the space even nicer. The lights on the vertical garage door surface near the table saw become the overhead lighting for the table saw when the doors are up. I am big on safety. Good lighting, eye protection, hearing protection, and a good dust mask get me where I want to go.

The planer and sander are on wheels so as to free up needed assembly space when glue-up time comes for furniture. It may not seem like it in the photo, but I frequently don't have enough clamps, or the right ones.

Because the shop is actually used for all manner of tasks from rebuilding a weedeater to metal work to fine woodworking I have a bench that has most of the hand tools I would need for any project. The drawers on the right keep other bits and tools out of the dust. The cabinets to the right do the same for my hand power tools.

This photo shows the go-bar deck I just made, as well as most of the stationary machines. At the very left of the photo the dust collection pipe can be seen exiting the shop to the shed on the other side of the wall and the dust collector. Partly visible is my much-used compressor.
Of all the machines I have I would love to most upgrade my bandsaw. Grizzley is a brand where you can hit or miss. My bandsaw was made probably on a Friday afternoon before Chinese New Year in the year of the sloth.
You can barely make out the jointer just in front of the bandsaw. You can position one machine very close to another if you are willing to manhandle a machine out of the way twice a year. My bandsaw is on skids with pipes under the skids for ease of moving it.

Every time I don't have to go to the hardware store or Home Depot I gain 90 minutes in my day. I keep all kinds of hardware, parts, material scraps, and general stuff JUST IN CASE. It pays off! The tool box is holding down the stickered Alligator Juniper guitar tops I recently resawed and sanded to within 90% of their final thickness.