 How to draw fancy curves on your workpieces. Hola woodworkers, Paul Carlson here, a small workshop guy. So, I'm building some nice quality, heirloom quality, I hope, saw horses. Really? Saw horses, heirloom quality? Who needs that? Well, yeah. You know, it's a fun project. And I'm developing some skills that I will apply as I'm trying to finish my samurai carpenter workbench. The plans call for shaping these feet. Having a cutout here in the middle for a little design and having some slopes on the edge. What I found, what I think is a really inexpensive set of tools for this that give me a lot of options. Options for different shapes. There's small ones, there's large ones, there's tight curves, there's design, there's all sorts of things. And I'll put the link to this set in the description down below. And then there's even a template just full of circles of different types. I actually used that when I came in here, six inches, and then I went up three quarters of an inch. I actually used this to mark off my curve that I wanted, which is a perfect quarter of a circle. So I put the zero degrees right at one edge, and then I put the 90 degrees right at the mark. So I use that to mark all of these up. And then what I'm doing now is I'm picking a curve that I want for the design. There's going to be a double curve here, one here and then another one here. So what I did was I knew the measurements that I wanted. This is up two and a half over two. So I used all to put a little dot there. And then I tried different ones, and I finally found a shape that I wanted. And so what I did on the first one was I marked on the template right on where it's going to meet the edge and then one where it meets the mark. That way, with those marked, I can get exactly the same shape, which is what I'm after. The shape doesn't matter so much. The consistency matters. And so with this little device, it's going to be very easy. And then using the bandsaw and the oscillating spindle sander, these will come out looking really nice. Small workshop, guys, signing off.