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Lost Art Press
Chairmaker's Notebook
Chairmaker's Notebook - a traditionally made, high quality hardback about chair making in the old way.
Download an excerpt of this book here
This is what Lost Art Press say....
Of interest to all aspiring professional chairmakers, experienced greenwoodworkers or home woodworker curious about the craft. "Chairmaker's Notebook" is an in-depth guide to building your first Windsor chair or an even-better 30th one.
Using more than 500 hand-drawn illustrations, Peter Galbert walks you through the entire process. From selecting wood at the wood yard, to the chairs' robust joinery, to applying a hand-burnished finish.
If you've never thought about building a chair, this book might convince you to try. Building a chair will open your eyes to ways of working wood that you might miss if you stay in the rectilinear world of boxes.
Once you understand chairmaking, then odd and compound angles become child's play. You will know how wood works in a deeper way (and how to exploit it). And you will gain access to an arsenal of open-ended tools, such as the drawknife, that will fundamentally change the way you work. Plus expand the shapes and surfaces you can produce.
At 406 pages, "Chairmaker's Notebook" is an in-depth look at the craft from the hand of a professional chairmaker, teacher and artist.
During the last 15 years, Galbert has developed process, tools and ways of understanding joinery that have simplified the way people build chairs using hand tools. He has traveled the world to teach his techniques to other chairmakers. He also spent more than three years drawing out every step of the process for the illustrations in "Chairmaker's Notebook."
The result is a book on chairmaking that starts with understanding a single stick you would find on a walk in the woods. Then takes you into advanced areas of the chair craft that no other book has ventured.
Lost Art Press books
All Lost Art Press books are produced entirely in the United States.
The text is printed on heavy #80 matte paper. Its signatures are carefully sewn together and then bound in cloth tape resulting in a book certain to last several lifetimes.
The book is hardbound, covered in cloth and a heavy full-colour dust jacket.