WWGOA 2018 Blogger Awards Winner: Steve Good

steve1

Meet Steve Good, winner of the “Best Plans & Projects Blog” category in both the 2016 and 2018 WWGOA Blogger Awards! In June 2018, WWGOA hosted a competition dedicated to finding the best of the best woodworking blogs on the web. We asked you to nominate and vote for your favorite bloggers, and now we’re thrilled to be able to announce the winners!

Steve’s blog, Scrollsaw Workshop, is dedicated to all things scroll saw! He’s made a vast amount of patterns and projects since he started blogging in 2007, and continues to provide the online woodworking community with quality scroll saw information and education. He also posts regularly to his YouTube channel, so make sure to check it out!

We asked Steve to share a little about himself, his blog, and his work so the WWGOA community can learn more about this talented woodworker. Read on.

Q: How does it feel to have won the WWGOA Blogger Awards for the second time?

Winning is always fun. In this case it is especially rewarding because it was voted on by our readers. These people go out of their way to say they appreciate what we do as content creators. My Blog is small and has no business being in the running against Marc and Jay. Those guys are just wonderful at what they do. They have huge followings. The fact that I even had a chance is testimony to how dedicated my readers are to me. I am very lucky and thankful to have their support.

Q: What has changed on the Scrollsaw Workshop since we last heard from you? Are you working on any new projects?

Since the WWGOA contest last year I have posted more than 330 blog posts. I have over 300 new project plans available. I am a full time scroll saw pattern designer and I work on new patterns every day. My goal is to post every day. I come up a little short of that goal but not by much. I want my readers to know that they can come to my blog and always fine something new.

Q: When did you first begin woodworking?

Steve Good: I am 58 years old. Like so many of my generation I watched Norm Abram on the New Yankee Workshop. I drooled over the power tools he used to create those fantastic projects. It amazed me he could build a Queen Anne Highboy in 30 minutes. In the mid-1980s I started to buy what tools I could afford. That was the beginning of a hobby that would last a lifetime.

Q: Who taught you how to woodwork?

With the help of Norm and other TV personalities like Roy Underhill and Scott Phillips, I slowly started to understand how little I knew. I bought books and sought the help of friends to advance my skill. This was before the internet. We had to actually leave the house and go to a bookstore, library, or local woodworking group to feed our desire to learn. I guess you would say I am self-taught but the reality is I am still just starting to learn.

decorative saw

Q: What was your first project?

The memory of my first project is lost in the cobwebs of time. More importantly to me is the first project I made for my blog. On May 1, 2007 I posted my first project/pattern online. It was an all wooden decorative handsaw with a patriotic scrolled theme. That first post started something that would change my life forever. I never imagined at the time that nine years later I would have produced thousands of patterns with tens of millions of downloads. I get to converse with people all over the world and have a blast every day.

Q: What is your favorite type of project to make in the shop?

Obviously the answer to that question is scroll saw projects. I spend more time in front of the computers designing patterns than I do in the workshop but I still love making saw dust. Other than designing and making scroll saw projects it’s always rewarding to make a toy box for a child in the family. I have made wedding gift boxes and other personal family and friend projects that I enjoy.

Q: What is your shop like?

A mess right now! I have full use of a two-car garage, and it is wall to wall tools. Because I am primarily a scroll saw pattern designer my shop is geared toward that work. My scroll saws are the Excalibur EX21, Jet JWSS-22, DeWalt DW788 type 1, and a DeWalt DW788 type 2. The rest of my tools are all geared toward taking rough lumber and turning it into scroll saw ready boards, with the exception of my CNC machine. It is a fairly complete workshop with table saw, 14″ band saw, 6″ jointer, 12″ planer, floor model drill press, and router table.

I also have a full assortment of sanding machines. I enjoy all the tools in my shop but they all have to take a back seat to my collection of computers. For a blogger and content producer these machines are my connection to my online presence. I sit in front of six 24-inch monitors attached to three high end computers. All the computers are network connected with one keyboard and mouse. This setup allows me to edit video, write a blog post, and design a pattern all at the same time without having to wait. The more content you produce, the more hours it takes. Having the computer resources available to multitask those jobs is critical.

wooden Christmas ornaments

Q: What are you currently working on?

I am currently in the holiday season. The last three months of the year are everything in my niche. Many of my daily patterns are holiday themed. I also design a set of custom name Christmas ornaments every year. I take orders for those and customize the pattern with customer’s names. They are a huge hit every year and take up quite a bit of my time.

Q: What project have you been most proud of?

That is a very difficult question! I have designed and built thousands of projects. Some are more successful than others. I recently designed and cut a pattern of the Statue of Liberty, which is a current favorite. I also design and sell two books of Wooden Vases built with the scroll saw. Both of these eBooks are self-published and have done extremely well. I am proud of that project and the many hours I spent making it successful.

wooden vases

Q: What woodworking tool could you not live without, and why?

For me that’s an easy question. It’s the computer. Without my ability to be very prolific with my designs my blog would not exist. I produce a new project almost every day. I can and have designed patterns by hand with pencil and paper, but trust me when I say it is way easier with a computer! My workflow is designed at every step to be quick but not rushed. Almost all the time spent on a new pattern is in the concept stage. Once I have the idea I can design the pattern in 30 minutes to 3 hours.

computer setup with multiple monitors


Q: What’s your favorite species of wood to work with, and why?

I have used many different species of domestic and exotic woods. I guess if I had to pick a favorite it would be walnut. I also like to use soft maple as a contrast to walnut. They may not be the most sought after woods but they are easy to find, cut great, and look nice when finished. For scroll saw projects you need to pick woods a little differently than traditional woodworkers do. Most of the time we are not as concerned with the beautiful grain pattern, instead we look for color and contrast. If you buy a board with incredible grain then cut it all away with fret work you have not used that wood to its fullest. If I build a fretwork box with contrasting walnut and maple then that wood is shown in its best light for that project.

Q: What would you say to someone who is just beginning woodworking?

Wow, I could write several paragraphs on this subject. I promise I won’t. As bloggers we get email questions by the hundreds a week asking for help. I get way more email than I can answer so I tend to triage them. I always try to answer questions from people who are just getting started. That is simply the most rewarding part of being a blogger to me. It’s also the hardest because of time. One theme that runs through many of those questions is the fear of taking on a project they think to too difficult. If you want to get better you have to push yourself past your comfort level. Don’t be afraid to fail. Failure almost always teaches you something. Look at a perceived failed project as a question. What could I have done better? Study the parts that you think are not right. Make a plan to change those areas and try again. One nice thing about most scroll saw projects is they don’t require large amounts of expensive lumber. Starting over on a scroll saw project is usually not a financial disaster.

man smiling in a shop


Q: What’s your favorite thing about woodworking?

I am a maker at heart. I have a never ending desire to make something new. It is my passion. Wood is a building material; it just happens to be the most beautiful material there is. Wood is the most basic stuff on earth to make something from. Think about it. If you have a block of clay you can make a beautiful sculpture. If you have a slab of wood you can do the same. If you lay each side by side the block of clay looks drab and cold. The slab of wood looks beautiful with all its colors and grain on display. I just prefer to start with wood.

I want to thank the WoodWorkers Guild of America for sponsoring this Blogger Award. In my case it is especially important to see the scroll saw niche recognized. The scroll saw can be a very creative and rewarding machine. There are many scroll saws sitting in the corner of a workshop not being used to their fullest. I just want to challenge all the woodworkers out there to take a closer look at the potential of the machine.

Last I want to thank all the people out there who voted for my blog. All of the blogs are winners. It’s very nice that you took the time to vote for me. The bloggers in this contest put in endless hours to produce great content. I follow almost all of them. The few I did not follow I do now. I encourage everyone to bookmark all of these blogs.

Share tips, start a discussion or ask other students a question. If you have a question for the instructor, please click here.

Make a comment:
characters remaining

15 Responses to “WWGOA 2018 Blogger Awards Winner: Steve Good”

  1. Nicholas Loye

    Hi new to this at 68 and retired from nursing. Have table, miter, routers, and now a delta scroll saw I bought from someone in buy sell market for 90.00 it runs great. I want to maybe make some children wood toys, learning toys, safely for the kids and yet easy for beginner to make do you suggest any sites do you have plans or patterns? Thanks for the info Steve. Keeping the saw dust alive! Boomerwoodsaurus …

  2. Nicolas Blackburn

    When a price is given in dollar's prior to payment for product is the amount transferred into UK pounds for payment?

  3. crosbyg2017

    I want to learn how to draw compound designs for scroll saw cutting, can you help me out?

  4. WWGOA 2018 Blogger Awards Winner: Steve Good – Thorn Woodworking

    […] post WWGOA 2018 Blogger Awards Winner: Steve Good appeared first on WoodWorkers Guild of […]

  5. ewsplc

    Steve certainly deserves this award thank sir sharing your blogs

  6. Joe zuckman

    Can you make a scroll saw pattern of the uss enterprise-cvn65 I’m a disabled veteran who served in gulf war picked up this hobby and just love your military patterns in your catalog thank you

  7. Gene Crider

    YEA STEVE

  8. Darrell

    Congratulations Steve on winning WWGOA 2018 blogger award. You've taught me a lot about scrolling and your patterns are great.

  9. Gary Cooke

    I wanted to note that I believe that Steve and his blog are so popular due to the Quality, Quantity, Wisdom and Economy of what he shares with us. Virtually all of his patterns are provided free with a humble request for donations to offset his costs of operating the blog. He gives good consul on products, services, suppliers and techniques, frequently sharing his imaginative humor.

  10. Jim Houston

    I would just like to say a special "thank you" to Steve for all his creative wonders. He has done an excellent job in what he is doing for the scroll saw community. He is available and concerned about all of us here in the scroll saw community. He is gracious and always looking to do what he can for others. Now that is an incredible legacy. Thank you, Steve. God Bless.