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Lost Art Press
The Joiner and Cabinet Maker
READ AN EXCERPT OF THIS BOOK HERE
The Joiner and Cabinet Maker, like most Lost Art Press publications, is hardbound, sewn, printed on quality paper and made entirely in the United States.
By Anonymous, Christopher Schwarz and Joel Moskowitz
The Joiner and Cabinet Maker is a huge book – with more than 370 pages of detailed hand tool instruction, including many processes that have not been covered before in the early woodworking literature. Though this sounds impossible, please read on.
Let's begin in 1839. In that year, an English publisher issued a small book on woodworking that has – until now – escaped detection by scholars, historians and woodworkers.
Titled The Joiner and Cabinet Maker, this short book was written by an anonymous tradesman. It tells the fictional tale of Thomas, a lad of 13 or 14 who is apprenticed to a rural shop that builds everything from built-ins to more elaborate veneered casework. The book was written to guide young people who might be considering a life in the joinery or cabinetmaking trades. Every page is filled with surprises.
Unlike other woodworking books of the time, The Joiner and Cabinet Maker focuses on how apprentices can obtain the basic skills needed to work in a hand-tool shop. It begins with Thomas tending the fire to keep the hide glue warm, and it details how he learns stock preparation, many forms of joinery and casework construction. It ends with Thomas building a veneered mahogany chest of drawers that is French polished. However, this is not a book for children. It is a book for anyone exploring hand-tool woodworking.
Thanks to this book, we can stop guessing at how some operations were performed by hand and read first-hand how joints were cut and casework was assembled in one rural England shop.
Even more delightful is that Thomas builds three projects during the course of his journey in the book, and there is enough detail in the text and illustrations to re-create these three projects just as they were built in 1839.
Here's what you'll find in our expanded edition of this book:
• A historical snapshot of early 19th-century England. Moskowitz, explains what England was like when this book was written. This includes the state of the labor force and woodworking technology. This dip into the historical record will expand your enjoyment of Thomas's tale.
• The complete text of The Joiner and Cabinet Maker, unabridged and unaltered. Includes every word of the 1839 original (plus a chapter on so-called "modern tools" added in a later edition). Also with footnotes from Moskowitz that will help you understand the significance of the story.
• Chapters on the construction of the three projects from The Joiner and Cabinet Maker. Schwarz built all three projects – a Packing Box, a dovetailed School box and a Chest of Drawers. All using hand tools. The construction chapters in this new edition of "The Joiner and Cabinet Maker" show the operations in the book, explain details on construction and discuss the hand-tool methods that have arisen since this book was originally published.
• Complete construction drawings. Lost Art Press drafted all three projects in SketchUp to create detailed drawings and cutting lists for the modern woodworker. This will save you hours of decoding the construction information offered in "The Joiner and Cabinet Maker."