Sharpening
Weekend Class, Open to All
Spring 2023
June 24-25
Fall 2023
September 16-17
Sharpening is a fundamental skill required to build a successful woodworking practice. In this weekend class, we’ll be focusing on how to sharpen chisels and plane blades, and introduce you to techniques to sharpen a wide variety of hand tools. During the second day of the class, we will demonstrate how to sharpen the curved edge of a gouge.
This two-day course is intended for woodworkers who have started their journey into hand tool woodworking and have begun to acquire planes, chisels, and handsaws. We expect that you’ll already have waterstones (or their equivalent) and some beater tools that you are prepared to use during the course.
Think of this two-day course as a sharpening boot camp. Our goal is to get you to practice sharpening enough in the class that you’ll be confident that you can go home and sharpen your own tools. We’ll look at how you can apply your new understanding to sharpening anything from kitchen knives to hatchets and more! This class also will include a brief demo on saw sharpening.
Feel free to bring lots of different types of blades to practice on!
We will cover the following topics and techniques:
Basics of sharpening
Metal types
Bevel angles
Grit sizes
Types of stones
The bench grinder
Types of wheels
Jigs
How to shape bevels
Sandpaper on glass plates
Using and maintaining waterstones
Restoring old blades
Strops
Saws types and geometry
Card scraper
Tools - What you need to bring
Required Tools:
Waterstones: The waterstones we’re recommending here are Naniwa from Chef’s Knives To Go. We have found them to be good and good value for money. Other waterstones in the same grit sizes are fine. If you don’t get all the stones we’ll have a few to share.
Coarse waterstone 220 or 400 grit
1000 grit waterstone
8000 grit waterstone
140 grit diamond waterstone flattening plate (the Atoma plate is recommended)
Stone trough - to keep waterstones wet and your bench dry. A plastic box with a press seal lid big enough to hold your waterstones
Blades / Tools
We suggest that you bring a couple of beater blades along. Having a couple of beater blades to sharpen and resharpen is good. By this we mean tools that you may have found at a yard sale or hiding at the back of the shop that you have no attachment to. It’s better to practice on them, rather than your prize blade from Lie Nielsen or Lee Valley. However, keep in mind new tools also need sharpening before use.
Plane blade(s) - any or all of block plane, bench plane, shoulder plane or specialty plane
Chisels - ½’’ and above
Kitchen knife
Recommended Tools
10” Smooth Mill File - getting a handle is optional
Gouge
Small handsaw
Prerequisites
Open to All. There are no prerequisites for this class. Come, learn and practice!
Class Information and Registration
Class runs from 9:00 am to 5:00 pm on Saturday and Sunday in Building 315 at Fort Worden. Map
Please read our What to Expect page for general information about the school.
Please also read our Registration Policy.
Please sign up for the waitlist if the course is full.
Class size: 10
Cost: $350
Materials Charge: $35
Furniture Design, Hand Tool Woodworking
Port Townsend, WA