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Building a Roubo Woodworking Workbench |
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An exhilarating DIY adventure! |
In late 2022 I decided to build me a
woodworking workbench. I had recently found myself attracted to
traditional hand tool woodworking, and my folding Black and Decker
Workmate was too flimsy for that job. After some research I decided
to build a short version of the Roubo bench, a very
sensible design published by the Frenchman André Jacob Roubo about
1770 in his treatise L’Art du Menuisier (The Art of the Carpenter). It took me a year of of intensive (if intermittent) work, and here is the outcome: |
Click photo to enlarge |
Building this bench was an incredibly
satisfying experience. It was my first large project with real wood
(which, unlike the plywood I’ve worked with before, is a natural
material with a mind of its own). It required hand tool skills I
never had, which meant that every step of the way forced me to
master new tools and techniques. It involved problem solving and
dealing with mistakes. All told, it was an exhilarating journey, and
at its end I had a sturdy workbench in the time-honored tradition of
centuries of woodworking, that now enables me to embark on exciting
new creative projects. The full build process, with photos and drawings, is detailed in this document that you are welcome to download (warning: unless you're planning to build a bench yourself, it probably has way more detail than you need). Below I show a small sample of photos, that may capture the diversity and complexity of the tasks involved. Click any photo for a larger version. |
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Building one's own workbench is a rite of passage for any amateur woodworker. If you are into this lovely hobby, and haven't done it yet, I strongly advise you to consider building one. It is incredibly useful once finished, and the build will be at once challenging, edifying, and pure fun! |
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