Meetings

Next meeting: Wednesday, April 10, 2024 at 7:00PM is an in person event.

The Central Jersey Woodworkers Association normally meets monthly on the second Wednesday of the month (except for July and August) from 7:00PM to 10:00PM at the Old Brick Reformed Church on Route 520 in Marlboro NJ. We welcome new members and guests.

Upcoming Meetings

  • April 10, 2024
  • May 8, 2024
  • June 12, 2024

 

 

 

 

 

 

Membership

The Central Jersey Woodworkers Association is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization of woodworkers founded for the purpose of providing a resource to the community for the promotion of woodworking and woodworking education at all levels of experience, sharing of information about woodworking techniques, tools, and sources for supplies, and facilitating the exchange of ideas with fellow woodworkers.

We always welcome new members to our club.  As a member you will enjoy all of the benefits described above with the additonal perks found on our members only area; discounts for lumber, tools and hardware, access to our book and multimedia library, group builds, and educational seminars.

 

Simply download the membership form  and bring to a meeting with payment, or mail form with check payment to:

Doug Poray
Central Jersey Woodworkers Association
617 Bennetts Mills Road
Jackson, NJ 08527

 

Membership Dues or Renewal of Dues may also be paid electronically via:

 Zelle

                                                                                                                                           

 

 

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Tuesday
Jan182011

CJWA member Wilbur Pan featured in Popular Woodworking

As many of you already know, our own Wilbur Pan caused a bit of commotion in Kentucky last October while giving Christopher Schwarz some pointers on Japanese planes during a break at Woodworking In America. The following article appeared in the December 2010 Issue of Popular Woodworking, and we got permission from Popular Woodworking to reprint the article on our website. Nice job Wilbur!

========

I just spent three days teaching hand-tool techniques at our Woodworking in America conference and my staff members are now trying to keep their eyes open long enough to get this issue looking good, reading correctly and in your mailbox.

During my three days at Woodworking in America I talked until my voice was hoarse, answering questions about router planes (which Roy Underhill coined the “One-Tooth Sex Monster” plane), workbenches, saws, chisels and scrapers. But what was most amazing about the conference was how much I learned when I shut my mouth.

I am a confessed moron about Japanese planes, and I’ve been hesitant to set up a Japanese plane that was a gift from a friend. But when I found out that Wilbur Pan, a New Jersey doctor, was attending Woodworking in America, I asked him to give me a lesson in Japanese planes. He agreed.

On my lunch break Saturday we dragged a workbench into a hallway below an enormous window facing the 19th-century streetscape of Covington, Ky. Pan explained the fine points of seating the iron into the wooden body (called the dai) and showed me how to adjust the wooden bed to get the iron fitting properly.

While we were talking, other attendees began watching Pan’s mini-lecture. A blogger began filming the event. Soon everyone was getting into the act. Attendees were giving the planes a try. Pan was explaining how Japanese planing stops were different and I was thinking of ways to hollow out the sole of my dai.

And that’s when tool collector Tony Murland and woodworking legend Frank Klausz walked up and started listening. I could tell that Pan was a little nervous. He had started out explaining Japanese planes to just one guy. But now he had a high-powered audience that was growing by the moment. After Pan finished, Klausz added that he had heard that Japanese woods were softer than American woods – that’s why the tools were different.

Pan took a deep breath, and he politely disagreed with Klausz. I could hear a slight tremor in Pan’s voice as he explained that Japanese furniture was made from a wide variety of woods, including species that were very hard. Klausz listened thoughtfully and nodded his head.

It was an amazing moment for me, seeing this amateur woodworker hold his ground and explain the things he had learned to Klausz. But I knew that this was just one of the hundreds of amazing moments occurring everywhere at Woodworking in America. By the end of the weekend, attendees had also managed to show me a better way to mark hinge mortises and cut rabbets with a chisel.

I just hope that I showed them a few things myself. PWM

——————
Christopher Schwarz
Editor

Popular Woodworking Magazine
4700 E. Galbraith Road, Cincinnati, OH 45236

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