Issue 492 Archives - Woodworking | Blog | Videos | Plans | How To https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/weekly-issue/issue-492/ America's Leading Woodworking Authority Thu, 28 Feb 2019 23:51:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.0.7 Tarik Yousef: Harmonious Designs in Modern (and more) Styles https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/tarik-yousef-harmonious-designs-modern-styles/ Tue, 22 Aug 2017 13:55:31 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=39187 Tarik Yousef looks for harmony as he makes the furniture he likes, whether that's Modern or Shaker design. Plus, he's developed his own finish.

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Tarik Yousef was introduced to woodworking in middle school shop class, and “I just took to it really well and really enjoyed it. It didn’t take long for me to start buying tools and messing around with stuff.”

Even while in college, where he studied mechanical engineering, Tarik continued to be active in woodworking, setting up a small business two or three years in to accommodate the requests from people who wanted to buy his products. “I believe when I graduated college, I always had one person on staff at all times, who helped me produce what I needed to produce.”

After graduation, he worked for five years as an engineer at Honda, “at the same time building furniture nights and weekends and essentially every waking moment, every free moment that I had. I had guys literally working night shift to build furniture for me. It’s a little unusual, but it worked.”

Overall, Tarik found that engineering and woodworking “play really well together in different ways. I enjoyed the creative aspects of furniture making, and I think that’s what engineering is completely missing as a field, but those two together were really great” – but, eventually, he determined that he couldn’t do it all and decided to focus his efforts full-time on his furniture business.

When first starting out at T.Y. Fine Furniture, much of the work was custom work, including things like side tables and small furniture. “The first real item that gave me a taste of designing a piece and seeing it take off was the Horizon Bed,” Tarik said. “That was kind of like the first piece I designed start to finish and introduced and people started showing an interest in. It’s the first piece I took to a true production style of furniture making.”

Bed frames still “are kind of our bread and butter,” he said, although his style has evolved over the years. When he started out, for instance, classic Shaker cherry furniture “was the stuff I was just absolutely in love with.” He then moved toward a more Scandinavian and Danish influence, and then “I moved into a more Japanese-inspired look, almost like George Nakashima kind of stuff.”

In the past six or seven years, Tarik said, “It’s really been about Modern. It’s almost full-circle, not too different from Shaker in a lot of ways: kind of simpler lines, squarer pieces, that kind of thing.”

With the Modern collection, “From day one, I knew it was something I wanted to do.” Lately, T.Y. Fine Furniture has been doing a lot of work with a Connecticut architect who trained under one of Frank Lloyd Wright’s students, “and I think that kind of rubbed off on me a little bit,” Tarik said, in the sense of “knowing you can do that kind of stuff and there are still people who appreciate it and people who are interested.

“Modernism is not particularly big in Columbus, Ohio,” he noted. On a nationwide scale, however, “It definitely is still relevant. I think the Modern stuff sells a lot better in the big cities: tighter spaces tend to make people want lighter looking, simpler lines. They don’t want the busy-ness or the format of older, more traditional styles.”

Customer preferences also drive Tarik’s wood choices, with walnut being popular these days. It’s a beautiful wood, but “I still appreciate cherry the most, personally,” he said. “A close second for me is maple. There’s something about that closed, tight grain with maple or cherry that gives a really nice finished appearance that I like quite a bit.”

Speaking of finish, in addition to his furniture, Tarik also sells a couple of specialized finishes – although he didn’t originally intend to. “When I first started woodworking, I tried pretty much every stain and finish, everything you can imagine, and I just never really liked anything I ever tried out,” he explained. Linseed oil was his choice for a while, “but it just was kind of missing something. Linseed lacks a certain luster and feel that I want.”

Handily, Tarik’s dad is a microbiologist, “so I kind of tapped into his resources and talked to him a lot about the chemistry and how we could make something that is a little more durable and nicer-looking and easier to apply and all that, and that’s how we ended up with our finish formula.”

Technically, it’s two finish formulas: an organic Food Grade Wood Finish and a Furniture Grade Wood Finish. Tarik describes the Food Grade Wood Finish as “a pretty simple, straightforward finish that pretty much anyone can apply easily. It looks good; it dries quickly, and it’s very, very, user-friendly.” The Furniture Grade Wood Finish “has much more waxes in it. It builds a harder coat and protects the wood a lot better, but it’s still a one-coat finish.”

Tarik never intended to sell the finish to woodworkers, “but what happened was, I had a friend who heard about it. He was really the one who was kind of like, ‘Hey, why don’t you bottle this stuff? I want to use it for my own stuff,’ and once he used it, it was like, ‘Oh my god, this is incredible, I want my friends to use it.’ He became essentially the sales rep for that line.”

Tarik originally wanted to develop the finish for himself, and that personal preference plays in to his furniture designs as well. Across all of his collections, Tarik said, “You can kind of see a little bit of this and a little bit of that in each piece.” His current repertoire “are the winners that I like and could live with every day of my life. We’ve whittled through quite a bit over the years. If I don’t like making it or I don’t always like it, I’m just not going to offer it anymore.”

That isn’t to say he doesn’t have favorites – like the Enso collection. “There’s just something about it. It’s harmonious with my natural design style, and it just flows really well for me. It’s always been one of the lines where a customer comes up to me and says, ‘Hey, I want an armoire out of this, I want a bench, I want this, I want that – it’s one of those styles I can almost envision it instantly and know what I want to do and how I want to do it.”

For all of his pieces, he said, his goal is to “feel like my customers can live with it and love it and enjoy it and not feel like it’s a fad or something boring after a few years.”

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VIDEO: Using Your Drill Press as a Sanding Machine https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/video-using-drill-press-sanding-machine/ Tue, 22 Aug 2017 13:45:14 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=39373 We show you a few sanding accessories that you can easily use with your drill press to sand different shapes and surfaces.

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The drill press is great for boring holes, but it can also make a very effective sanding machine. We show you a few sanding accessories that you can easily use with your drill press to sand different shapes and surfaces.

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DeWALT 20V MAX* XR 18-ga. Cordless Brad Nailer https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/dewalt-20v-max-xr-18-ga-cordless-brad-nailer/ Tue, 22 Aug 2017 13:00:47 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=39168 Full-featured, cordless 20-volt nailer fires 18-gauge brads from 5/8 in. to 2-1/2 in. long. It's powered by a single 20V MAX* battery.

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DeWALT’s XR 18-gauge Cordless Brad Nailer drives brad nails from 5/8- to 2-1/8-in. long, using a single 20V MAX* battery. It provides the freedom of a cordless tool while eliminating the need for an air hose, compressor or the gas cartridges required for other nailers. The tool features a micro-nose to improve line of sight and nailing accuracy, as well as a tool-free depth adjustment and jam release. Its selectable trigger can be set for sequential or contact actuation modes. Should the nailer stall during nailing when the battery charge depletes, there’s also a tool-free stall release lever that resets the driver blade to resume operation. A low nail lockout prevents dry firing and marring the work surface.

This 5.3-lb. nailer features a DeWALT brushless motor to maximize durability and battery runtime, LED lights to illuminate a dark work area and a belt/rafter hook that mounts on either side of the tool. You can buy the 20V MAX* XR 18-gauge Brad Nailer as a bare tool without battery or charger (model DCN680B) for $249 or kitted with one 2.0 Ah 20V MAX* battery and charger for $299 (model DCN680D1).

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Porter-Cable Restorer Kit https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/porter-cable-restorer-kit/ Tue, 22 Aug 2017 13:00:13 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=39163 Combining belt sander and angle grinder benefits, this corded tool comes with a variety of abrasive drums for sanding, grinding, buffing and polishing.

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Porter-Cable’s Restorer boasts many of the benefits of both a belt sander and an angle grinder. When compared to a belt sander, it is lighter and easier to handle. It’s also more versatile, thanks to the wide variety of sanding and abrasive sleeves available for it. Weighing 4.5 lbs., the Restorer is less than half the weight of most belt sanders. It is also more compact for maneuvering in tight areas. Its barrel-shaped roller flings debris away from the surface, which decreases heat buildup and clogged abrasives. When compared to an angle grinder, the Restorer yields a much smoother finish, particularly on wood, where the machine’s 2-13/16-in.-dia. x 4-in.-long rubber roller helps prevent gouging, and the abrasive can be aligned with the grain.

The tool is well balanced, with a pistol grip for one-handed use and a front palm grip for working vertically or overhead. Use it to buff, sand, polish, scrub or clean wood, metal, masonry and fiberglass. A quick-release end cover makes sleeves easier to change, and a lock-on button is helpful during extended use. It’s powered by a variable-speed, 3.5-amp motor with an 8-ft. power cord. The tool’s dust port enables it to be connected to a vacuum for cleaner operation.

The Porter-Cable Restorer Kit (item 57759) includes eight abrasive sleeves (two each of 180-, 80- and 60-grit sanding sleeves, one medium and one coarse mesh abrasive sleeve), a paint/rust remover wheel and a nylon carrying bag. Available now, it sells for $149.97.

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Restoring Teak Bench’s Wood Color? https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/restoring-teak-benchs-wood-color/ Tue, 22 Aug 2017 12:00:01 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=39157 How can I get rid of that old, gray coloration on the surface of my teak bench?

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I recently bought a solid teak bench that has not been maintained for years. What is the best method for restoring the wood and removing the gray, old, oxidized wood layer? Scraping? Sanding? – Kimberly J. Sutherland

Tim Inman: My best advice is this: if you wish to enjoy the teak bench outside, then learn to enjoy that wonderful soft gray patina. Teak will not rot, and it will last outside forever. It will turn gray and it will get a soft “fuzz” from UV light breakdown. You can’t stop that from happening. If you put finish on it, the finish will sooner or later crack and fail. This leaves behind a very objectionable “spoiled” look and feel, which is a bearcat to deal with. If, on the other hand, you wish to take the teak indoors, then simply surface sanding to remove the UV grayed surface fibers is what you’ll need to do. Then you can proceed to finish it as you wish.

Chris Marshall: I agree with Tim. That gray patina on outdoor furniture or decking, for me, is a sign that the wood is aging gracefully outdoors. Even so, you can remove the discoloration pretty easily if you want to with a liquid deck cleaner that contains oxalic acid (the gray is just surface deep, in most cases). Apply the cleaner, wait the specified time, and then hose or power-wash it off. The transformation back to “wood” color is quick and almost magical, but it won’t last forever. Unless you are diligent about refinishing that bench, then maintaining the finish over time, the wood will to turn silver gray again if it lives outside, as Tim explains. So, I’ve just decided to appreciate that color instead and save myself the extra maintenance work.

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Small Shop Chair Production https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/small-shop-chair-production/ Tue, 22 Aug 2017 11:09:58 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=39357 Reader Miroslav Jovanovic from Germany wrote in to share photos of his woodworking studio and some of the furniture he's produced there.

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Reader Miroslav Jovanovic from Germany wrote in to share photos of his woodworking studio and some of the furniture he’s produced there.

See the Gallery Below:

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