DIY Builds
Photo: Anna Shvets
A competent carpenter can build cabinets and vice-versa.
Outbuildings and garages to be single storey with maximum eaves height of 2.5 metres and maximum overall height of four metres with a dual pitched...
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Fast-setting concrete is ideal for setting posts because there's no mixing—you simply pour the dry concrete from the bag right into the hole, then...
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Do synthetic fibers reduce cracking in concrete? YES. The use of synthetic fibers at the manufacturer's recommended dosage rate per cubic yard can...
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Q: Can You Build a Tiny House out of a Shed? The short answer to this first question is “yes.” Plenty of people have already built their tiny...
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These are! They guide you every step of the way to complete your dream shed.
Learn More »I was a PM in the trade show industry, located in the Southern US. All of our shop hands were union carpenters. I think union only to get into those places that require union workers. Very talented folks they are - some of them work with wood, build cabinets, weld, HPL, electrical wiring. A carpenter in Atlanta both builds and wires an exhibit and the customer is required to hire an electrician to plug it in, in Chicago. We all have a range of skills, some of which we learn by exposure and some that are natural to us. Does not mean you cannot learn the others. Also your location may use a term such as "carpenter" to define a slightly different aspect of the wood industry. But when asked, I claim to be a cabinetmaker, not a carpenter. I am certified CAD as well and a CNC operator and, as I'm self-employed, the chief cook and bottle washer. I am glad that so many of you have responded. When I wrote the first post I was very upset because I truly felt that I am a carpenter, but after reading many of your responses, it seems that I probably should identify myself as a cabinetmaker or a woodworker. It is hard for me to have my skills questioned by someone who sits at a desk all day and has no idea what a carpenter or cabinetmaker really does. I think we all are carpenters in one way or another. We all have a deep love and respect for wood, and we take a lot of pride in what we can do with it. Whether that is framing houses or building the pretty little boxes that go inside the houses! I have learned a lot from this thread. I guess I will just try to keep my head up and continue looking for work in other places. And maybe I will lie on my next resume! Just kidding. Thank you all very much. What really bothers me is, after enduring a 4 year apprenticeship and 30 years in the trade, having a laid off factory worker that goes out and buys some tools at Home Depot and a pickup truck then hang out a shingle saying he's a carpenter, and there's not a damn thing I can do about it.As a former chef who trained in a professional restaurant and management school, I learned a particularly harsh lesson early. The school's management decided to open up the curriculum and split the school into components, each class specialising in a subject. At the end of the course, each participant got a diploma from the school similar to mine. I felt gypped! This left me wondering what the heck happened to all the money I spent on a degree. There were a lot of gripes and veiled threats by my classmates who didn’t like the idea that their prestige was going to be hurt. I was a chef for almost 20 years and I did not like people calling me a cook! I’ve seen a lot of good chefs and many bad ones. Some of the better ones were self taught who took night classes; some of the worst I have worked for learned for 6 years and had tons of experience! I am a self taught carpenter, woodworker, cabinetmaker? Where does that leave me? I now do this exclusively for a living; does this make me a professional? Does this take away from anyone else’s accomplishments? The question could be asked what makes a carpenter, woodworker, cabinetmaker a carpenter, woodworker, cabinetmaker? I’m not sure if there is one right answer. A quote from my website: "...In the traditional sense, after the carpenters framed the home, the joiners would arrive to do the finish work, splitting their duties between the shop and the structure being built. The joiners would mill and install the floors, wall panels, doors, windows, trim, staircases, carvings, built-ins and cabinets. Molding details would vary from structure to structure, based on the tools that particular joiner had in his collection and, when necessary, would make the tooling for the profiles required..."It's my understanding that government jobs are often union jobs, which means defining yourself as a carpenter according to the United Brotherhood of Carpenters (UBC) or other appropriate trade union. According to the UBC, Construction Carpenters, Cabinet Makers, Millworkers, Millwrights, Drywall and Plasterers, Bridge Builders and Concrete Workers (to name but a few) are all considered carpenters. The acquisition of basic carpentry skills as defined by the UBC means the successful completion of their general apprenticeship program or the procurement of a Journeyman's Certificate through qualifying application. Specialized accredited job training programs are also available under the auspices of your local trade union and through community colleges and elsewhere. A CDM Certificate, for example, is the Cabinet Display Millworkers Union and (I believe) a division within the UBC. And no, I am not making a pitch for the union here, but sometimes it helps to have a little card in your wallet that says you are a carpenter! Of course cabinetmakers are carpenters. What else would you be? (I am still not sure about those concrete guys though.) In my humble opinion, a master carpenter can build a house, cabinets or furniture, and do as good a job as most cabinetmakers or furniture makers, whereas a lot of cabinetmakers or furniture makers couldn't frame a house or scribe a log. Of course, there are fewer and fewer master craftsmen around for all of the reasons stated previously. There are a lot more specialists out there than all-around carpenters, and the lack of respect and money doesn't make it any easier.What would you call the guy who forms the concrete? Especially on tilts. As I recall, guys that worked underwater on oil rigs were part of the carpenters union.I was kidding about concrete workers. Of course these form setter guys are all carpenters. Here are some new ones...
Where Is the Best Place to Put Your Money After Selling a House? Put It in a Savings Account. ... Pay Down Debt. ... Increase Your Stock Portfolio....
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Blown-in insulation is typically more expensive than rolled insulation. However, this difference isn't by that much. Blow-in insulation can cost...
Read More »Same would be true of a guy who has worked onsite exclusively coming into a cabinet shop... His inexperience would be obvious. To say that a carpenter can build as fine a grade of cabinets as a seasoned cabinetmaker is absurd. There are always exceptions, such as a site carpenter that has his own cabinet shop, but in general a site carpenter does not have the tools it takes to make high grade cabinetry, or the experience. It would be fair to say that a site carpenter is able to build some sort of cabinet and that a shop carpenter would be able to build some sort of building, but I wouldn't go any further. I have been a carpenter for 35 years, and am very proud of it. Where I live in a small town in Iowa, I have to be equally adept at building a 400,000 variable pitch roofed house, pole barn, cathedral cabinet doors, laminate work, siding, roofing, etc. To frame houses that are being built today, the framing guy is as talented as the cabinet guy, in my opinion. Anyone can build a cabinet, granted not as nice as we who have worked in cabinet shops, but to try to get 2 or 3 different pitches on a roof to work out, not everyone can do that.And that 1/4" difference between the carpenter and the cabinetmaker is in the length of their index fingers. Remember, "Don't use remaining fingers as push sticks."The difference between a cabinetmaker and a carpenter... It's the style and size/weight of hammer one uses for the job one has. A brad verses a 16 penny nail. Both can be hammered, but at what finesse is it done?I worked in a shop for about 12 years. Now I work on site doing cabinet installs and various other finish carpentry projects, with some rough carpentry thrown in here and there to pay the bills. I can honestly say that my shop experience is more valuable in the field than my field experience would be in the shop.I live in Canada, in S.Ontario, and have worked all over North America, and in Europe, to some degree. I was born in the province of New Brunswick and trained by masters. When we built a custom home we worked from the ground up. We built the cabinets in the house, installed plaster board when time allowed, and did all of the finish carpentry. We were taught as much as possible about the entire job, as carpenters were usually responsible for all of the other trades on site. I have worked on homes from 1200 to 50 thousand sq feet, and built wall units and kitchens and many types of cabinets. Every day I thank the men who taught me and I only wish that there were young people willing to learn and the time and money to do just that. We suffer from not enough new blood and too many under trained people. The difference really depends on the person, but the more one knows about the other, the better it is for all of us in the trade.I couldn't help but laugh at some of the responses here. Having a carpenter build fine custom cabinets is like having a house painter paint your family portrait.Hogwash. Most of the people I know who work at cabinet shops went to tech school for carpentry. A competent carpenter can build cabinets and vice-versa.I don't think anyone is suggesting carpenters are incapable of building cabinets - they can build almost anything out of wood. How well and how accurate they build them is a whole other question.That is the question, isn't it. I don't think the average carpenter is capable of building cabinets to an acceptable level. Like I have said before, give most carpenters a skill saw and get out of the way, but a table and a jointer could be a problem. Then if it comes to a CNC router, forget it. This is all based on the premise that a majority of carpenters are framers and few are finish carpenters.I have my own business in the UK and I specialise in making freestanding and fitted furniture. I consider myself a cabinetmaker. A good friend is a general carpenter. Things like scribing are more his skill set than mine, not because he can't do what I do and vice versa, but because he doesn't have the experience. On the other hand, I know someone else who calls himself a carpenter but makes furniture (badly). By trade my dad was a heating engineer, but after finishing college he changed careers and moved into making replica antique furniture, but when asked his profession, he didn't say heating engineer. Surely this debate should be how you define what you do on an every day basis.
OSB can be used for exterior shed walls but needs to be covered or sealed soon after installation. It takes longer to get wet but also takes longer...
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There is a natural right of drainage that allows water that flows naturally across your land to flow downhill naturally to your neighbour's land....
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Any wood that combines beauty with outdoor durability is the ideal choice for exterior timber cladding for sheds, summerhouses and garden rooms....
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A pole barn building typically costs less to build than a traditional stick-built one. Pole barn structures use posts buried in the ground versus...
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