Great video. Great design. I am now making my own folding shave horse and find this really helpful. By the way this is Nancy's husband writing, not that a lady wouldn't want her own shaving horse.
Hello, is there a link to the Country Workshop shave horse, please? For the angles. Thanks. Like you I am really needing a shave horse to be able to be folded and stowed.
Thank you so much. Making some walking stick for the grandkids from a tree we cut in their yard. It is time for. Shave horse. I will do some engraving to make them a bit personal.
Brilliant videos I wanted to build a folding shave horse and this has inspired me I have not been able to find Country workshops plans are they in Australia? I am the Uk but that shouldn’t make any difference please can you advise me where Zi can find the plans Best wishes Ken
Sorry, those plans seem to have been removed. These plans are very similar 3dwarehouse.sketchup.com/model/9a9d15eab22de49a1cac03af19f0be62/Shaving-Horse-Brian-Boggs-Fine-Wood-Working?redirect=1
I’m pretty new to woodworking but I’m planning to build a shave horse soon. I’m curious to know what types of screws you used for the project? Particularly the ones that you used that allowed the parts to rotate.
Thanks so much for this effort of supplying some dimensions for us. I have a question regarding the angled area of the tops of the rear legs where they meet the main stringers......were they steam bent or cut from a larger piece of wood perhaps getting two legs ripped out of a single thicker piece? thanks
No, it's an easy trick I found in the country workshops plans...simply cut the leg to required angle to meet the main beam, than glue the cut piece (wedge) on the other side! Brilliant thinking on their part! It has the advantage that the bolt then goes through at right angles and makes a stronger joint.
Love it! The plans are not available any more? Is this true? Would love to buy them! Looks really great!
Great video. Great design. I am now making my own folding shave horse and find this really helpful. By the way this is Nancy's husband writing, not that a lady wouldn't want her own shaving horse.
Hi John, Thanks for the measurements, I am just getting around to building one so this information will be invaluable.
Thank you for this video, currently building mine out of hickory.
Hello, is there a link to the Country Workshop shave horse, please? For the angles. Thanks. Like you I am really needing a shave horse to be able to be folded and stowed.
Sorry, those plans aren't there anymore.
Yes!! So happy you did this follow-up video.
Thank you so much. Making some walking stick for the grandkids from a tree we cut in their yard. It is time for. Shave horse. I will do some engraving to make them a bit personal.
Brilliant videos I wanted to build a folding shave horse and this has inspired me I have not been able to find Country workshops plans are they in Australia? I am the Uk but that shouldn’t make any difference please can you advise me where Zi can find the plans
Best wishes
Ken
Sorry, those plans seem to have been removed. These plans are very similar 3dwarehouse.sketchup.com/model/9a9d15eab22de49a1cac03af19f0be62/Shaving-Horse-Brian-Boggs-Fine-Wood-Working?redirect=1
@@homesteading thank you very much for your replyI appreciate it
Best wishes
Ken
I’m pretty new to woodworking but I’m planning to build a shave horse soon. I’m curious to know what types of screws you used for the project? Particularly the ones that you used that allowed the parts to rotate.
All the moving parts are built with bolts, not screws. I would have used wood bolts.
Thanks so much for this effort of supplying some dimensions for us. I have a question regarding the angled area of the tops of the rear legs where they meet the main stringers......were they steam bent or cut from a larger piece of wood perhaps getting two legs ripped out of a single thicker piece? thanks
No, it's an easy trick I found in the country workshops plans...simply cut the leg to required angle to meet the main beam, than glue the cut piece (wedge) on the other side! Brilliant thinking on their part! It has the advantage that the bolt then goes through at right angles and makes a stronger joint.
Funny how the simple solution escapes our complicated minds! lol
Thanks again.