Woodworking & DIY Projects — 2026-05-16
This week brings fresh beginner project inspiration from woodfromhome.com, with a guide to foundational builds published just days ago. Pro Tool Reviews rounds up 10 eye-popping new tool models for spring 2026, including Ridgid's new SubCompact 1/4-sheet sander. We also spotlight the enduring craft value of basic woodworking skills for anyone looking to level up in the shop.
Woodworking & DIY Projects — 2026-05-16
Projects
Getting Back to Basics: Foundational Woodworking Builds
If you're looking for a confidence-building weekend project, woodfromhome.com published a fresh guide this week covering beginner-friendly builds — birdhouses, cutting boards, and small storage boxes — that provide genuine hands-on experience with core joinery and shaping techniques.

The guide emphasizes that introductory carpentry projects aren't just for newcomers — they're also ideal for experienced woodworkers who want to practice specific joints or try a new species of wood without committing to a complex, material-heavy build.
Fine Woodworking: Projects & Plans (Updated May 2026)
Fine Woodworking's projects and plans page has been refreshed this month, with new featured builds visible including what appears to be a beautifully crafted box project. The site remains one of the most reliable destinations for detailed, expert-level plans spanning furniture, cabinetry, and decorative pieces.

Tool Review
Ridgid 18V SubCompact 1/4-Sheet Sander — Spring 2026
Pro Tool Reviews published their "Best New Tools 2026: 10 Eye-Popping New Models for Spring" roundup roughly two weeks ago, and one standout for woodworkers is the Ridgid 18V SubCompact 1/4-Sheet Sander — the first SubCompact-branded sanding option from Ridgid.

Ridgid has been earning praise for its SubCompact 18V lineup for several years now, with the line's size-to-performance ratio consistently impressing reviewers. Adding a 1/4-sheet sander to that family makes sense: finish sanding is one of those tasks where a lighter, more maneuverable tool genuinely reduces fatigue on longer sessions.
For woodworkers already invested in the Ridgid 18V ecosystem, this sander slots in cleanly. For those not yet on the platform, it's worth considering as a gateway tool — compact sanders are among the most frequently reached-for tools in any finishing workflow.
Technique
Mastering the Cutting Board: Why This Classic Project Teaches More Than It Looks
The cutting board remains one of the most recommended starter projects for good reason — but it's also deceptively educational for more advanced woodworkers.
The woodfromhome.com basic projects guide (published this week) highlights how a cutting board forces you to work through several fundamental skills at once: selecting and dimensioning stock, achieving flat, glued-up panels, and applying food-safe finishes.
What to focus on when building your next cutting board:
- Wood selection: End-grain boards are harder on knife edges but more self-healing. Face-grain boards are easier to build but show cuts over time. Edge-grain is a practical middle ground.
- Glue-up flatness: Use cauls (clamping boards) above and below the panel to prevent bowing during glue-up — this single habit will save hours of flattening afterward.
- Finishing: Mineral oil is food-safe and inexpensive; follow up with a beeswax/mineral oil blend to seal and add water resistance. Avoid film-forming finishes like polyurethane on any surface that contacts food.
Even experienced woodworkers find that revisiting a simple project like this — but executing it to a higher standard each time — is one of the most effective ways to tighten up core skills before tackling more complex furniture builds.
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