G'day all,
There was a post a while ago about someone looking for Aussie woodworking magazines. Someone said that Australian Woodsmith wasn't really Australian, but was American with someone changing the figures from imperial to metric. They recommended Australian Wood Review as the best Aussie woodworking magazine.
Well, I already had a subscription to Australian Woodsmith, so I decided to take out one with Australian Wood Review as well. I've had a couple of issues so far and am in a position to compare them.
To be honest I much prefer the Woodsmith. I'm not that well advanced in woodworking, so prefer magazines that show me how to make things I can handle, with tips and tricks I can use. I find Woodsmith's projects are sometimes easy to cope with, sometimes stretching and sometimes a little beyond me, which is also good as I've got something to aim for. However, the projects in Wood Review are way too complex and often much more 'arty' than I'd like. Wood Review seem to take contributions from woodworkers who are so far in excess of my skills that it'd compare with a first year student trying to sculpt like Michelangelo.
I find the tips and tricks in Woodsmith are often relevant to me - I already have a long list of things to make when I have free time - and the explanations are complete - in other words, the article is all you need to make the project. Yes, sometimes the dimensions are a little funny, but then as I don't have a jointer, planer or thicknesser and I'm restricted to the sizes of timber I can purchase from merchants, I just adjust dimensions to suit me.
In comparison, Wood Review describe projects that are very unrealistic. Don't get me wrong, the projects are obviously made by real craftsmen, fantastic looking pieces, but really out of my league.
I don't think I'll renew my Wood Review subs -- maybe I'll take it up again in 20 or 30 years when I get a bit better.
On the other hand, Woodsmith is number one on my must-have list, and I've started collecting back issues. I can highly recommend it to those who like woodworking but don't have the creative or artistic skills to match those who do this stuff for a living.
Oh and to the person who wrote the article in the latest Wood Review about 'nesting' - creating a home for everything in your workshop so that it is comfortable and a place you look forward to going, I don't really see what is wrong with banging a nail into a shelf or wall to use as a hanging hook. It is the ultimate keeping-it-simple method. But thank you for making me feel like a real dropout - I guess our classless Australian culture is not devoid of snobs.
Cheers,
Adam