You cut yourself with a chisel and you’re more concerned about not getting blood on your workpiece than you are about the laceration.
You inexplicably find sawdust in your drawers. And I’m not talking about furniture.
You can say “crotchwood” with a straight face.
It has caused you great pain to pay money for furniture that was poorly made.
You have dropped to your knees and looked beneath a table in a museum, a gallery, an historic home, or a friend’s house.
You know the difference between a tendon and a tenon but you sometimes use the words interchangeably.
You cannot resist the temptation to lift the lid on a wooden box.
You secretly think “measuring tape” suspenders are pretty cool.
You can talk to your partner/spouse/significant other for HOURS about woodworking despite the glazed over look in his/her eyes.
You have wondered what it would be like to own a woodworking business.
You can spend an entire day in your shop, accomplish little if anything, and thoroughly enjoy it.
You know exactly where everything is in your shop....except for a pencil.
You have said these words: “I can build that in two weeks.”
You have built more projects in your head than in actuality.
Your spouse/partner/loved ones/pets know not to bother you, and sometimes choose to run for cover, when you are gluing up a project.
Even if you don’t work with it, you love the smell of fresh cut pine.
You either love or hate the smell of fresh cut walnut. There is no in-between.
You remove more splinters from your hands in a month than most people do in a lifetime.
You can correctly pronounce Padauk and Lignum Vitae.
And the folks at the ER know you by name.
ReplyDeleteJust how many wood magazines do you read?
You want to junk your modern Stanley, Record ,etc planes for a set of Bedrocks.
You actually know what Rockwell hardness is.
You've said more than a few times, "No, it's not dirty, just dusty."
It comes easy, "Don't touch that!"
You've given me a good laugh. Thank you Kari, now it's official: I'm doomed.
ReplyDeleteI can check almost all of them although I've learned to tame myself on #9 and to read her eye's expression. I don't want to risk a divorce from the one who took me to a Lee Valley store for the first time (and more importantly, followed me through the aisles for hours without complaining even once!).
Kari - one you forgot:
ReplyDeleteYou always open a drawer first to see what the dovetails are like (and also to test the fit) - Rob
You know you are...
ReplyDeleteWhen the camera in your cell phone does not work... because fine saw dust got under the button you press to take the photo... :(
Tape measures! Oh the hours I have wasted looking for one of the dozens of tape measures I own.
ReplyDeleteYou made my day, Kari!
ReplyDeleteI confess to all of them except for that tendon/tenon thing. Must be my biology training.
Cheers --- Larry
I laughed out loud when I read #1. I can't count how many times that I've cut myself and been more concerned about what I'm bleeding on than the fact that I am bleeding.
ReplyDeleteI don't work with pine too much, but whenever I do the whole shop smells like a Christmas tree. Freshly cut pine has a wonderful smell.
Dave
All of them are great, but for some reason I resonated with:
ReplyDeleteYou have said these words: “I can build that in two weeks.”
Good job capturing my reality and apparantly many others.
Thanks for the comments and for the additions to the list! : )
ReplyDeleteKari,
ReplyDeleteHa ha, great! Funny and dead-on. First one is my favorite. True!
Rob
Ah the pencil one is true for my dad but not me! I have a hundred of them all over the place! But I do look at the underneath of furniture to see how they were constructed. Is that so strange?
ReplyDeleteAah, aren't you the clever one...yes, I think you are!
ReplyDelete... You remove your hat, bow, and genuflect when St. Roy looks at you during WIA...
ReplyDelete... When your blog reader has more than 10 woodworking blogs in it...
... If you refer to the man as, "The Schwartz."
...You think Frank Klausz actually invented the dovetail...
... You get more excited about a good handplane or dovetail saw than the woman in your life does about jewelry...
... A finally planed piece of cherry instills reverence deep within your soul...
... The smell of shellac is something to look forward to, and you see nothing wrong with that ...
... Titebond stuck to your hands is nothing new to anyone in your life ...
... You head to your shop to have that good cry you've been needing ...
Geez, I better stop.
Great list, Kari!
ReplyDeleteA few to add to it...
You know not to say the words "carcase saw" too loud in public places. (Ditto the words "striking knife")
You know that Lie-Nielsen isn't that actor from the Naked Gun movies.
Not only have you gotten on your hands and knees at museums to stare at furniture, but your head has knots from banging it against the plexiglass trying to get a closer look. (Uhm, guilty)
You fantasize about the furniture the oak tree in your front yard might make when the Weather Channel forecasts high winds.
You pass over the Victoria's Secret catalog that just came in the mail for the Lee Valley catalog underneath it.
Your Firefox web browser is perpetually set on the Walnut add-on even though it's really Oak.
You've rearranged a holiday or vacation trip to see or buy something related to woodworking.
You have more lumber stacked in your garage than was used to build your entire home.
Cheers!
Yes, yes, and yes! Especially this one from Doug: "You've rearranged a holiday or vacation trip to see or buy something related to woodworking."
ReplyDeleteYou've kept that plank of curly cherry for ten years and that plank of rosewood for twenty years 'cause you know you'll find the perfect project for it tomorrow.
ReplyDeleteWhile putting another log into the fireplace, you think to yourself: "Jeez, that's got nice figure. I shouldn't be burning this one."
ReplyDeleteGreat list! You had both my wife and I laughing and 1/2 way through she asked “is she writing about you?”
ReplyDeleteCheers,
Konrad Sauer
Someone inadvertently mentions the word 'sharp' in a conversation, and that's all it takes to get you started in clearing a room.
ReplyDeletetoo true, great list and comments.
ReplyDeleteMy wife reminded me that "I can build that in two weeks" needs to be followed by "Piece of cake!" (my famous last words).
All true! Thanks for adding to the list. :o)
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteYou secretly think “measuring tape” suspenders are pretty cool.
Don't say that in Britain!
BugBear
And you know woodworking has caught another victim when ...
ReplyDeleteYou don't want to wash the old t-shirt you wore to your last woodworking class because it smells like sawdust;
you don't have a bench yet, or room for one, so you use the dining table;
that same table, which looked so good to you a month ago, now has mismatched boards in the top, and pocket screws, and ... you're sure you can build a better one.
When you buy a house, you get more excited about the garage than the kitchen,
ReplyDeleteAnd you tell your real estate agent, "Be sure he knows that it's okay if he doesn't want to move the scrap pile!" because a woodworker used to live there.
Unfortunately, he took the scrap with him. Dang it. There was some nice wood in there.
Good ones, guys!
ReplyDeleteBugbear, I had to google that word to see what it means in Britain. :o)
A real list of 'Woodworker's traits' (I almost said Woodie there, until I remembered, it means something else in the Good ol' US of A!) :)
ReplyDeleteWell done.
John
I can add just one?
ReplyDeleteYou look at an ancient oak and wonder...
'How many sideboards could I make from that?'
:)
John
lol@John! Yes, please refrain from using the term "woodie" as this is a G-rated blog. haha
ReplyDeleteYou're not a true woodworker until you blow your nose and saw dust comes out!
ReplyDeleteYou know you're a woodworker when you lick a piece of untreated wood to see what the finished surface might look like.
ReplyDeleteHahaha! I can honestly say all of those have happened to me except 2.
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