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Episode date: September 10, 2025
Host: Steven Ricks
Length: ~28 minutes
Episode Summary
Measuring might sound basic, but it’s where most beginner mistakes start. In this episode, Steven breaks down a practical, low-stress measuring system for shared shops: prioritize consistency over absolute precision, use the same measuring tools every time, and be consistent in how you mark and how you cut. We also hit Bench Notes (new shop benches, member projects, classes, and the Joinery Path), a Maker’s Moment about leveling table legs, and Ask the Joiner (the first measuring tool beginners should buy).
Segments
What’s On My Bench (Bench Notes)
The Craft — Measuring (Deep Dive)
Maker’s Moment
Ask the Joiner
Q: “What’s the first measuring tool I should buy?” — Brian
A: A 4” (or 6”) adjustable square you trust. It’s pocketable, checks squareness everywhere (machines, parts, boxes), doubles as a depth gauge (set to 3/4” for planing checks), and complements your tape. Bring your own tape in a shared shop; smaller tapes (6–12 ft) are handier and tend to stay truer in the ranges you actually use. Pair with a reliable marking pencil (see links).
Tools, Brands & Resources Mentioned
By The Joinery, LLCEpisode date: September 10, 2025
Host: Steven Ricks
Length: ~28 minutes
Episode Summary
Measuring might sound basic, but it’s where most beginner mistakes start. In this episode, Steven breaks down a practical, low-stress measuring system for shared shops: prioritize consistency over absolute precision, use the same measuring tools every time, and be consistent in how you mark and how you cut. We also hit Bench Notes (new shop benches, member projects, classes, and the Joinery Path), a Maker’s Moment about leveling table legs, and Ask the Joiner (the first measuring tool beginners should buy).
Segments
What’s On My Bench (Bench Notes)
The Craft — Measuring (Deep Dive)
Maker’s Moment
Ask the Joiner
Q: “What’s the first measuring tool I should buy?” — Brian
A: A 4” (or 6”) adjustable square you trust. It’s pocketable, checks squareness everywhere (machines, parts, boxes), doubles as a depth gauge (set to 3/4” for planing checks), and complements your tape. Bring your own tape in a shared shop; smaller tapes (6–12 ft) are handier and tend to stay truer in the ranges you actually use. Pair with a reliable marking pencil (see links).
Tools, Brands & Resources Mentioned