Woodworking Reference · Canada

Techniques, tools, and wood knowledge for Canadian woodworkers

Coverage of hand-tool methods, joinery, Canadian hardwood selection, and finishing approaches — written for those who build with wood at any level of experience.

Recent guides and technical notes

Stanley No. 45 combination hand plane on a workbench
Tools

Choosing Hand Planes for Canadian Woodworkers

A look at the hand plane types most useful in a Canadian shop — from the versatile No. 4 smoother to specialty planes for joinery work — with notes on what to look for in used and new tools.

Updated May 1, 2026

Woodworking hand tools resting on stacked timber planks
Wood Species

A Practical Guide to Canadian Hardwoods

Identifying and working with sugar maple, black walnut, white oak, and yellow birch — four species widely available from Canadian mills, with notes on grain, workability, and typical applications.

Updated April 28, 2026

Test pieces of maple wood finished with tung oil and linseed oil
Finishing

Wood Finishing: Penetrating Oils vs. Varnish

A comparison of penetrating oil finishes — linseed, tung, and Danish oil — against film-forming varnishes, with attention to durability, repairability, and how each responds to Canada's seasonal humidity swings.

Updated April 20, 2026

Joinery that holds across seasons

Canada's indoor humidity can swing 30–40% between July and February. Mortise-and-tenon, dovetail, and box joints handle wood movement better than most mechanical fasteners alone — understanding why is the basis of furniture that stays tight for decades.

Read the hand plane guide

What this reference covers

Veritas router plane tool

Hand Tools

Planes, chisels, saws, and layout tools — selection, setup, and maintenance.

A woodworker whittling drawbore pegs in front of a wood stove

Joinery Methods

Mortise and tenon, dovetails, box joints, and bridle joints with hand tools.

Set of historical woodworking hand tools

Wood Species

Canadian hardwoods and softwoods — grain identification, movement, and use.

Wood surface treated with linseed and tung oil finish

Surface Finishing

Oils, varnishes, shellac, and wax — application, durability, and repair.

Canadian hardwoods at the bench

Sugar maple, black walnut, white oak, and yellow birch all behave differently at the plane and chisel. Grain direction, ray figure, and end-grain density determine how each cuts, glues, and takes a finish. The species guide breaks down what matters at the workbench.

Read the species guide

How a finish behaves through a Canadian winter

Seasonal humidity swings stress film finishes differently than penetrating oils. Understanding the trade-offs helps match the finish to the piece — and to how it will be used.

Interior of a wood workshop with tools and timber
Tools

Setting Up a Hand Tool Shop in Canada

A reasonable starting set of hand planes, saws, and chisels — with notes on sourcing second-hand tools from Canadian estate sales and flea markets.

Updated May 1, 2026

Woodworking with hand tools at the North House Folk School
Wood Species

Reading Grain Before You Cut

Grain direction affects whether a hand plane cuts cleanly or tears out. Here is how to read it on quartersawn, flatsawn, and rift-cut boards.

Updated April 28, 2026

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A reference built for the Canadian bench

Read about joinery, species selection, tool setup, and finishing — with Canadian climate and sourcing in mind throughout.

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