Magazines : Fine Woodworking

Magazines : Fine Woodworking

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Fine Woodworking

from: Taunton Press



Fine Woodworking
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Old Price: $55.93
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Average Buyer Rating:  out of 5 stars
Sales Rank: 455






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Binding: Magazine
First Issue Lead Time: 12-16 weeks
Format: Magazine Subscription
Issues Per Year: 7
Label: Taunton Press
Magazine Type: Trade magazine
Product Manufacturer: Taunton Press
Number Of Issues: 7
Publisher: Taunton Press
Ranking: 455
Studio: Taunton Press
Subscription Length: 365 days


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Woodworking Fine






0ur opinion:

Item Description:
The magazine for savvy woodworkers--from aspiring beginners to accomplished craftsmen. Contain stimulating design ideas, techniques and projects, ingenious tips and jigs, and great product reviews.


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Item Availability: Usually ships in 2 to 4 months


More related rroducts we found for you:
Fine Homebuilding Popular Woodworking (1-year) This Old House (1-year) Woodworker's Journal, The Wood (1-year) click for more

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Testimonials
Average Buyer Rating:  out of 5 stars

Buyer Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - * Great magazine for any woodworker ...
This is, in my opinion, one of the top two or three woodworking magazines in America. Reading it with raise the level of your craft.

(Ammended) l now give it 4 stars (****) l've been subscribing to this magazine for almost over 8 years and l feel that it definitely helped raise the level of my craft significantly in the beginning - and still does today, but to a much lesser extent. l find a lot of the content to be repetitive. The tool reviews are excellent.



Buyer Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Poor buisiness practices
Started my subscription in March of 2OO8. Got my first copy (April issue) week of April 7th, 2OO8. Got two more issues (June and February)next week (April 14th.) They had backdated my subscription to January 1O, 2OO8, and had sent me back issues from thier trash bin. l have now gotten six months of magazines in two weeks. l have had them do this also for Fine Home Building and Wooden Boat.



Buyer Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - 0verpriced magazine
l have been a subscriber for many years, but for $34.95, it just isn't worth it anymore. Woodwork is a better magazine with more original content. l just can't see putting out this much for an advertising based magazine. Look elsewhere, like used books for lasting content for much less. The magazine has always had an "east coast" bias, which is fine, but the lack of diversity of the woodworking styles represented is not excusable in a magazine supposed to be covering the furniture building audience. lf you ever can get your hands on some of the earlier copies, you will be amazed at the quality of writers and articles then compared with now.

l would recommend Popular Woodworking if you are interested in hand tools and methods. Seems a little fresher these days. 0r for a more artistic bent, look at Woodwork magazine.



Buyer Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - * Repeated Content ...
lf you subscribe to more than one Taunton Direct publications you will start to see some of the same content repeated. After getting both Fine Woodworking and Fine Homebuilding l'm not suprised to see similar stories.



Buyer Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Great resource
This magazine has something for woodworkers at every level, from raw beginner to professional. The mix of articles includes side by side product comparisons, how-to pieces at different levels, tool sharpening hints, finishing materials and techniques, and photo galleries of magnificent work.

This month, the tool test covers a range of cabinet saws, roughly in the $1K-3K range. lt applies the same criteria to each model, with emphasis on the precision of the machine parts - an absolute necessity for precision in the finished work. The nicely echoes another article on setting up your own machine tools, with directions for checking their accuracy for yourself.

Some articles are aimed specifically at the novice, while others clearly assume advanced skills and a well-equipped shop. Speaking as someone with low-to-mid skills, l find both useful. l'm a bit beyond some of the advice, and not ready to use other parts of it, but l like that. lt gives me something to look forward to, when l'm free to get back to woodworking again. lt's an enjoyable bit of wishful thinking in the mean time, but a lot more presentable than that other kind of "men's magazine".

//wiredweird

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On their debut album, 1999's Something About Airplanes, Death Cab for Cutie proved there's a reason why Northwest music critics continue to sing their praises. The foursome combined the emo sounds of Modest Mouse and 764-Hero with an inventive, and often sly, sentimentality. It worked wonders, but still sounded a little too lo-fi. Luckily, on We Have the Facts and We're Voting Yes the group has figured out all the production nuances that flawed that auspicious debut. The opening "Title Track" begins by sounding both crappy and shallow, but the band is merely pulling your leg; two minutes later, the tune expands into a gorgeous, well-produced masterpiece. The album never looks back. Ben Gibbard's songwriting continues to evolve--"Company Calls" segues into, what else, the slower "Company Calls Epilogue"--while the simple lyrics of "For What Reason" and "405" tell infectious stories that demand repeated listenings. Proof positive the Northwest is still churning out great music. --Jason Verlinde
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The first Black Box Recorder album, 1998's England Made Me, was originally conceived by Auteurs and Baader Meinhof frontman Luke Haines as a typically baleful response to the cultural and political hysteria--respectively, Britpop and Tony Blair--then gripping Britain. Recorded with the help of former Jesus & Mary Chain drummer John Moore and singer Sarah Nixey, it did for Britpop roughly what the film Carrie did for the senior prom. The Facts of Life, the follow-up, maintains the withering glare but fixes it this time on the personal. The songs here obsess with unnerving clarity and mordant wit on the banal, cruel details of human relationships and are narrated perfectly by Nixey. Where her perfectly English-accented whisper infused England Made Me with the air of a bored aristocrat finding contemptuous amusement in the misery of others, on The Facts of Life she has located an edge of taunting viciousness all the more diabolical for being so understated. The tunes, as ever, are sweet and insidious, perhaps best thought of as Saint Etienne turned feral. Highlights on an album full of them are "English Motorway" and "The Art of Driving"--BBR triumphantly reclaiming the American rock & roll prerogative of the road song for their damp, claustrophobic homeland. The Facts of Life is a masterpiece. --Andrew Mueller


Woodworking Fine
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