I've been wanting to get going with woodworking on my newly made low roman workbench for a while now but I couldn't due to thesis manuscript.

Here you can see some rough planing of the surface of another workbench I wanna make for a buddy of mine, I'm gonna make a wooden bow workshop over the summer with friends and they need work surfaces to be able to do so. Thankfully I found a very cheap supplier of lumber in the province of Cuenca and the entire workbench will set me back only some 10€, kinda crazy.

This picture is just mood tbh. I love the little corner I have for my woodworking, the low workbench working both as seating and as workbench simultaneously makes it super compact, and the light was beautiful, finally it's the sunny season in Spain after a few months of unusually rainy spring

Here is the try square I wanted to make, finished and coated in linseed oil. I made some paste wax following the recipe of Wood by Wright (2 parts beeswax, 2 parts linseed oil, 1 part mineral spirits). This try square will open up a lot of possibilities regarding stock dimensioning and precise planning and lineup drawing, I'm stoked about it and it turned very straight!

Finally, a pic of the piece of log from which I split the wood to make the try square, it's from a tree they cut down locally and I hauled it home by hand, so yeah, free wood!! It's super hard, no idea what species it is, I'm used to pine and fir, so working with a hardwood like this is surprisingly different
Love this! I'm looking into making bows myself soon, after watching Kramer Ammons on YouTube and noticing how bad his general woodworking skills are... if he can do it, surely I can!
I built a little staked bench some time back, mostly as a quick hit between proper stick chairs. I made it for sitting at my workbench, but recently did baseboards and closet build-out in my apartment and found it extremely useful along with Japanese saws. If I have to go back to apartment woodworking I will definitely be building a roman bench!
Thanks for the encouraging words :)
If you wanna build a Roman workbench, I HIGHLY recommend the DW Woodworking video om workholding in Roman workbenches. It's mindblowing tbh.
Also, if you're gonna get into making selfbows, Dan Santana has amazing videos like the one explaining tillering, and I can also vouch for a few chapters of the first volume of The Traditional Bowyer's Bible, particularly the one on the mechanics and physics of bows. It dispels a lot of myths and explains some of the most important concepts around bows, such as "set", "string follow", the effect of stringing a bow higher or lower, the consequence of longer or shorter bows, why recurves are more efficient...
Oh dang, Dan Santana’s videos are gold. The Clickspring of bowyers!
"The clickspring of X" is the highest compliment a maker can receive
I’ll check those out, thank you!