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start a woodworking collective in Seattle

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start a woodworking collective in Seattle (read all 3 entries…)
ShopCoOp Now Has a Wiki 2 years ago

I don’t know why this took so long, but I finally put up a wiki using DHH’s Instiki. It’s password protected, so if you want to start adding to it, drop me a message at:

exposhare[At]gmail

And I will send you the password.

It’s really just a place to put ideas about setting up such a CoOp…I have been pondering two different models, the centralized, large warehouse workshop vs. the distributed network of folks sharing time, energy, and their space and tools. The distributed model would certainly be less expensive, but it would really put the cooperative nature of the endeavor to the test.



start a woodworking collective in Seattle (read all 3 entries…)
Step one, You need a wiki! 3 years ago

Alright, I haven’t gotten the wiki set up yet, but I have a new server at home, and a domain name for the organization that is:

http://www.shopcoop.org/

I intend to set up an instance of Instiki this weekend…more to follow…



Todd Gehman I miss Bible Spice.

start a woodworking collective in Seattle (read all 2 entries…)
Tools for Loan on Phinney Ridge 3 years ago

Here’s an interesting program. The Phinney Neighborhood Center has a tool-lending program. They don’t have some of the dream tools (band saw, jointer, etc), but it looks like you can get a router (with table), miter saw, table saw, or drill press on loan. Not sure if something like a table saw is carried out or if you have to carry in your…uh…plywood. But it’s an interesting idea anyway. Cool to see it available in Seattle.



Todd Gehman I miss Bible Spice.

start a woodworking collective in Seattle (read all 2 entries…)
Space is the Final Frontier 3 years ago

I’m excited to learn that other people have been considering this. I recently started thinking about getting back into woodworking after a years-long lapse. I’d only done it regularly for about a year, and never graduated from basic outdoor projects (patio benches, mailboxes, folding chairs and the like). I decided that a good project to reintroduce myself to the hobby would be a simple nightstand: something I’d use heavily enough to adopt more exacting standards, but personal enough that I could tolerate the side effects of my rudimentary skills. I searched around the web and finally found a design I liked, with PDF plans available for purchase. It was only after buying and downloading the plans that I realized they assumed a much more elaborate woodshop than my own. Not only am I missing the equipment required to follow the instructions verbatim, but I couldn’t fit all the equipment into my small basement woodshop even if I bought or borrowed it.

It’s an expensive hobby any way you look at it. Adding insult to injury is the fact that the raw materials for most projects cost more than one might spend on comparable finished projects purchased via retail. Just pooling tool resources and the financial power to buy stock in bulk would be enough to make a collective very worthwhile, but with a critical mass of participants we might be able to share a dream shop as well, be it rented space in a public building or in a giving participant’s home. In that shared space we’d all have a band saw, a router table, a jointer, and so on…not to mention the educational benefits of a broad knowledge pool. This will rock if we get enough people on board!



start a woodworking collective in Seattle (read all 3 entries…)
Want the woodshop... 3 years ago

...but don’t have to own the tools. I know the big box hardware stores keep trying to convince us that we need to own every tool they sell so that we can “Do It Yourself,” but come on, do I really need to own a joiner or a planer? Can’t I just share one with a large group of responsible, courteous, careful, and tidy fellow woodworkers?

I want to make this happen in Seattle.