 A glue-up technique you should know about. Hola woodworkers, Paul Carlson here, a small workshop guy. If you notice a bad left eye, I got a shot in it and the doctor hit a blood vessel, so it's in bad shape right now. I saw a video recently by Nick Ferry, had a technique in it that I thought was worth sharing. And that's an aid to gluing up multiple pieces into a larger piece. Fast forward through the actual glue-up, there's nothing magical about putting glue on some boards. So here's the technique. Turn them over this way. So grab that panel clamp, open the jaws, put it around your board. Put the jaws closed down, bring it up onto your work table, and start to tighten it a little bit. What you're doing is aligning, at least on the bottom, your boards. And now things aren't sliding around. You can adjust them to get them right where you want them. Tighten that down a little bit more. So that's the trick right there, using your panel clamp. So now we're going to come in and use our clamps that are going to put the pressure in the direction that it needs to be in order to get some squeeze out. And I want to thank Nick Ferry for sharing that. It will forever be in my repertoire. I like those French words, repertoire. Although I remember George Bush once said, you know the problem with him, ding, French, is they don't have a word for entrepreneur. George, maybe that is their word. I like that technique. Thank you, Nick. Nick Ferry, I hope you like that technique as well. Small workshop guy, signing off.