Among the classes on sale at 10 a.m. is Chris Williams’ Welsh Stick Chair Class – we’ll have to dig out our Y Ddraig Goch.
The following Covington Mechanicals classes go on sale today at 10 a.m. Eastern. They will likely sell out quickly – some in seconds – so be ready to register. (But before you do, please check your calendar to make sure you can attend the class for which you want to register).
If you don’t get into your desired class, do sign up for the waitlist – because I can’t remember a class in which we didn’t have to fill at least one slot.
Some righteous fried chicken from Libby’s, a Covington staple.
We are thrilled to host Lie-Nielsen Toolworks this weekend for a Hand Tool Event at our storefront at 837 Willard St. in Covington, Ky. (Details here.)
If this is your first trip to Covington, or you haven’t been here since the pandemic, there is a lot to chat about.
During the last five years, the city has blossomed in many ways (not our doing), and there are somehow even more places to eat and drink within a 5-minute walk of our front door. Here is an updated list of places close by that we recommend and love.
Breakfast
The Anchor Grill: Cash-only diner that is open 24 hours. No yuppies or hipsters. Pike Street diner: Upscale diner for fancier lads and lasses. Cedar: Still fancier breakfast spot for brunchers. Coppin’s: The fanciest breakfast. It’s at the Hotel Covington. Dang good. (Also great for lunch and dinner.) North South Baking: Great pastries, breakfast sandwiches and coffee. Point Perk Coffee: All manner of coffee. Left Bank Coffee: Also good coffee.
Lunch Olla: Best Mexican food in town. (Also great for dinner.) Guiterrez: Mexican deli run by the same family that runs Olla. Empanada’s Box: Fantastic selection of delicious empanadas. Gyros on Main: Just like it says. Kung Food: Good Chinese with good beer. (Also good for dinner.) Thai Pavilion: Good Thai with decent beer. The Standard: Burgers and fries in a converted gas station. Kealoha: Healthy and delicious Hawaiian food. Lorenzo’s: Good sandwich spot.
Dinner Otto’s: Southern classics. Libby’s: Fried chicken and other Southern specialties. Frida 602: Very good gringo Mexican. Mama’s on Main: Sturdy Italian food. Larry’s: Our fave dive bar with tater-tot-based cuisine Dewey’s: Excellent pizza. You can get it at the stand-alone restaurant, or order it from inside Braxton Brewing, the city brewery. Juniper’s: Gin bar with a great rotating tapas menu. Zola’s: Straight-ahead, no-apologies bar food. Riverside Korean: A Covington staple for 20 years.
Drinks Crafts & Vines: Our local. Great people and good small bites, too. OKBB: Probably the best bourbon bar in the world. Vintage: A wild place that sells vintage bourbon. Braxton Brewing: Solid beer, with a great pizza place inside. Rooftop bar. Knowledge or Coppin’s: The multiple bars at the Hotel Covington are all excellent. Second Story Bar: Very nice bar above the Flying Axes bar on Sixth Street.
Fun Stuff Earth to Kentucky: Toy store on our street. Amazing selection of cartoon-based stuff. Hail Records and Oddities: If you need vinyl, weird taxidermy, occult stuff, stickers etc., go see Neil. Hierophany & Hedge: A city landmark and magic shop. Not to be missed.
And then there’s Cincinnati – a whole other world of good food and drink. It is no wonder that it’s difficult to stay thin here.
Olivia and I, checking out the marvelous construction of one of the interactive pages in “The Dream of the Joiner.”
Last summer, a mysterious package arrived for me in the mail. It was from Suzanne Ellison, whom you know better as Suzo, our indefatigable researcher, aka The Saucy Indexer. Inside was an incredible handmade book, written and illustrated by Suzo, “The Dream of the Joiner.” And it was furoshiki-wrapped (see below). Oh, that I had a quarter of Suzo’s imagination – and a scintilla of her amazing ability to construct pop-up books (for lack of a better descriptor for the interactivity…though “pop-up book” seems insufficient for this handmade delight.). Suzo is the best! And I meant to share this long before now. But today, it was quiet enough in the shop that I could record it.
I felt bad about opening this gorgeous package.
With apologies for my attempt at character voices (I fear I forgot which voice went with which character from time to time) I give you “The Dream of the Joiner” in a video reading (and do read the left-hand pages, with information about the illustrations – I did not include that text, because it’s not part of the narrative). The folding/moving/turning parts of this book are even more impressive in person, but I hope this will suffice.
Thank you again, Suzanne, for this amazing gift (which lives on a shelf well out of reach of the cats)!
Just a few of the Lie-Nielsen tools from my Anarchist’s Tool Chest (there will be shinier LN tools on hand for you to try out next Saturday – as well as the fine folk from LN to answer questions).
Comments are now closed. A reminder that Chris will answer the as-yet unanswered ones later tonight or tomorrow.
It’s time for Open Wire, our almost-every-Saturday woodworking question and answer session! Next week, however, Open Wire will be in-person only at the Lie-Nielsen Hand Tool Event here in our shop. So if you have questions and can’t make it to next weekend’s shindig, ask now in the comments section below.
Note: Brevity is appreciated.
Note 2: Chris has an afternoon engagement, so he’ll circle back to later questions after comments close to answer any I’ve missed…or that I’ve willfully skipped (i.e. most chair questions, or queries about the amount of chromium in a 5/8″ rounding plane plane).
About 2012, Ty Black and I developed some leather pockets for the inside of tool chests that would hold important stuff. One held a block plane. The other held pencils, pens, knives, 6” rule and other skinny things that could get lost in a tool chest.
We never intended to make them for sale, but after more than a decade of using them in our shop, I realized that other woodworkers would find them as useful as we do.
We enlisted our clothing designer, Tom Bonamici, to create canvas versions. And we had Sew Valley (here in Cincinnati) stitch them for us. They are made of the same great canvas we use for our waist apron and tool roll. (So you can be all matchy-matchy.)
We have just received our first shipment, and they are available in our store. They are sold individually, or as a set with a modest discount.