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moscowfield

Southbury, CT, US
managing editor


Fine Woodworking's managing editor, Mark Schofield, is an experienced furniture maker with a growing expertise in finishing. When he joined Fine Woodworking in the summer of 2000, he was made responsible for the finishing articles and has accrued hundreds of hours watching experts such as Peter Gedrys, Jeff Jewitt, Teri Masaschi, and Chris Minick work their magic.

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Contributions

Gifts from Woodworkers

What gifts do woodworkers make?

Wood Science and Design DVD

Learn about wood movement and how to design around it

French Polishing Demystified

This DVD will inspire you to try your hand at the ultimate furniture finish

How a paint brush is made

An editor tours a paint brush factory and sees the many parts and steps that make a quality brush

Young woodworker wins again

Vermont high school woodworkers showed off their pieces at an annual show.

Architectural inspiration

Just walking past a house can give ideas for furniture design

A rowing editor

How one editor combines work and pleasure

America's most important piece of furniture?

Fine Woodworking author gets a unique commission

The ultimate outdoor finish

In the article Torture Test for Outdoor Finishes (FWW, issue 205), one of the best finishes was the combination of a penetrating epoxy sealer under Epifanes marine varnish. Originally...

Woodworker's Guide to Dovetails

New book by Ernie Conover covers hand and router-cut dovetails.

Fine Woodworking Author in Space

After photographing his Master Class on gilding (FWW, issue 204), Peter Gedrys asked if I would take a photo of him and his wife while I had the camera and lighting gear. Imagine my...

Threat to American walnut

A fungus is wiping out trees in the West, but it musn't be allowed to spread east

Future Period Furniture Articles

What period project articles would you like to see in future issues of Fine Woodworking?

Woodworking the Williamsburg way

The 11th annual Working Wood in the 18th Century conference presented by Colonial Williamsburg

ALL you need to know about using the tablesaw

Read our review of a new DVD epic about tablesaw set-up and safety

James E. Forrest, 1928-2008

Jim Forrest, president of Forrest Manufacturing Company, Inc., makers of premium saw blades for the woodworking industry, died Nov. 5 in Pompton Plains, N.J. He was 80.



Recent comments


Re: A Plane from Matjiesfontein

Derek,
What an interesting story. Thanks for sharing it with us. Did the seller know anything about the history of the plane?
Mark.

Re: Architectural inspiration

Davcefai, I visited Bath 7 or 8 years ago and while it does indeed have a wealth of Georgian architecture, I think Edinburgh has a larger area in this style. On the other hand, the latter's stone tends to go dark as it ages where as Bath's sandstone retains that warm, honey colour. I wish I could afford a Georgian house in either city!

Re: The ultimate outdoor finish

Thanks for all your suggestions and comments. Our aim was to pick a representative from each type of exterior finish rather than several marine varnishes or several spar varnishes etc. If we do a follow up test we may test just the most durable finishes such as professional spray-applied ones, other marine varnishes and maybe the non-pigmented paint. We'll probably have to leave the boards up on the roof for several years before publishing the results!
Doneby, I'm quite glad to to read about the trouble you had stripping Epifanes. I think the secret is that as soon as the surface dulls, or the finish is damaged, scuff sand it and apply another couple of coats.
Farmer2, I think the width of the bench to is about 20 in. and I made the top a shallow W shape as people sit on it from both sides. From peak to trough it is only about 1/2 in. If I was making it for a one-sided top I'd probably go a little deeper. The end slats overhang the cross supports by about 3/4 in. Everything is screwed from underneath.

Re: The ultimate outdoor finish

John,
It makes sense that paint without the binder would work but I've never heard anyone doing it. Any particular brand of exterior deep base tint? Were you brushing it or spraying and are the last coats 40% paint or 40% mineral spirits? I'll have to try it. Thanks!

Re: Future Period Furniture Articles

Many thanks for all the suggestions. We are already putting feelers out to potential authors on some of the ideas. Suggestions of suitable authors on some of the more unusual subjects (S.W. furniture, regional period furniture, Biedermeier etc.)would be welcome. We may or may not do a full project on these styles but alternatives include a Master Class, a back cover plus How they did it etc. If you don't want to suggest a name publicly, (or you are embarassed to suggest yourself!) feel free to email me directly. Mark S.

Re: Future Period Furniture Articles

USNERDOC, what would you like the video to show and would you want it to be a stand alone video or linked to an article in the magazine?
Johnmcm, we have a master class coming up on carving a knee shell, currently slated for the Sep/Oct issue.
Bob, I've forwarded your birdhouse idea to Fine Homebuilding!
The last time we covered roll-top desks was in issue 13. The article has the nice sub-hed "How King Louis hid his clutter". It sure would be a big subject to tackle. Maybe Steve Latta is game for the challenge.
Kevin, not sure about the Spanish and Gothic furniture but I agree with you on how to create a finish on a period piece. My personal feeling is that the piece on the back cover of 205 (on its way to you) could have had some mild aging done to it.
Townsend fans, that is certainly an iconic American piece altough Randy O'Donnell covered most of these elements on a smaller scale in his article on the document cabinet in issue 178.