A customer recently came to me with a story of her new extensions to her home. She had built a small addition which was a single room with a mezzanine floor. To build a staircase to access the mezzanine legally or to code would have dwarfed the room, that is a width, riser, tread and handrails to the Australian standards would have taken up a lot of space in the small addition, so she asked me to build her a set of shelves instead. While designing it I looked at using a stringer but even a stringer seemed to take up too much space in the small room (in my head that is) so I triangulated as best I could in such a open design (the more open the less invasive) by housing the horizontals tightly into the vertical members as well as chucking in a bit of epoxy and screws. She wanted the wood look (or wouldn't have come to me in the first place) but when I laid the wood for the shelves in place it just looked too woody to me so I "ebonized"

the shelves (black aniline dye in metho).
Now the bit for Stu, even a job like this Stu I used a chisel for about 30 minutes and a hand plane for about 15 minutes, I could have done the whole thing by hand including ripping the Tassie Oak down to boards with my old 4 point rip saw and dressing them with a number 7 plane but doing it that way would see my hourly rate fall well below that of a just legal age Macas worker which would not be so bad cause I do enjoy the work but try buying a decent tool kit on a income like that. So my advice in answer to your question in your thread in the guitar section would be to teach yourself then set yourself up and supply direct to customers, that way you can choose the way you work and you don't need any sort of certificate just skills you can teach yourself on the weekend while working a job that slots in with today's ways of doing things. I reckon you have probably worked that out for yourself but it did give me a chance to show off my design work.

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Jim
Life is good when you are amongst the wood.
Life is good when you are amongst the wood.
Jim Schofield