Hand-Made Mortise and Tenon Joints

Woodworking

Hand-Made Mortise and Tenon Joints

Learn to make four kinds of mortise and tenon joints with hand tools.

 
Meeting Times
  1. Sat, 12/9/2023 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM
  2. Sun, 12/10/2023 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM
  3. Sat, 12/16/2023 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM
  4. Sun, 12/17/2023 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM

Sat, 12/9/2023 - Sun, 12/17/2023

Closed

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Type:
Class

Location:
Woodworking & Small Boatbuilding Studio

Interests:
General Woodworking, Hand Woodworking

About

Mortise and tenon joints are one of the most common types of joinery in furniture making. This class focuses on four variations — blind, drawbore, through, and wedged mortise and tenons.

You'll learn how to make mortises, cut tenons (and repair them when things don’t work out so well), make dowels, and apply these skills to your joinery. The crowning achievement will be what is widely recognized as the strongest joint in woodworking — the wedged mortise and tenon — a beautiful and virtually indestructible joint.  

The instructor will introduce and teach proper use of tools you may be unfamiliar with, such as a spokeshave, dowel maker, router plane, and brace and bit.

Details

  • Skill Level: Intermediate. Most of the time will be spent learning to make the joints, rather than on learning to use basic hand woodworking tools. You should  have experience with layout tools, saws, chisels, and planes.
  • This is not a project class. You will make samples of each type of joint.

Prerequisites

You must have taken Woodworking Basics: Hand Tools or have experience with basic hand woodworking tools, such as layout tools, saws, chisels, and planes.

Class Policies

  • Ages 14 and up are welcome.
  • You must wear closed-toe shoes.

BARN Policies

Instructors or Guides

Tom Leurquin

Tom Leurquin has been a BARN member since its opening and specializes in projects involving hand tools. After taking several hand tool courses at BARN and the Port Townsend School of Woodworking, he fell in love with the intimacy and meditative aspects of working wood by hand. His civil engineering background has helped him achieve a critical eye for detail and precision that enriches the art of hand tool woodworking.

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