Monday, August 31, 2020

Modern Woodworking Tools



Jacob Scholl is a law student, bodybuilder, and painter with a degree in international sports administration and agency law from the Metropolitan State University of Denver. Outside of his studies, Jacob Scholl is a passionate and experienced woodworker with specific interests in handcrafting the scales of Justice as decorative chandeliers.

Woodworking is the pursuit of crafting items from wood. It can be further categorized into carpentry, woodcarving, woodturning, making furniture and joinery. The evolution of civilization shows the development of the skills involved with woodwork. Several traditional woodworking tools include saws, axes, bow drills, chisels, and knives. However, with the development of modern technology, the woodworking trade has changed.

The use of power tools, wood routers, and Computer Numeric Controlled (CNC) machines has revolutionized the industry. These machines carve exquisitely intricate patterns, craft products faster, and mass-fabricate with little waste. Besides, power tools speed up the handcrafting process with less energy compared to traditional carving tools.

For instance, the wood router carves complex and in-depth shapes on wood compared to traditional methods that require extensive experience and skill. However, art buyers and collectors value handcrafted woodworks, and they fetch higher prices. 

Friday, August 21, 2020

MENSA Gathers the Brightest Individuals in the World


Jacob Scholl is a final year student at the Sturm College of Law, University of Denver. With a class rank of 90 percent, he had previously graduated magna cum laude from the Metropolitan State University of Denver. Jacob Scholl belongs to many associations, including MENSA, where he has been a member since 2018.


MENSA is an international non-profit organization for people whose intelligent quotient has been proven in standardized intelligence testing to be among the most intelligent two percent of the population. This organization started in Britain in 1946, has more than 140,000 members from 100 countries in 51 national groups and MENSA International. Some of these national groups are divided into local groups.

MENSA members are very diverse in their socio-cultural and economic backgrounds. They meet regularly in their local groups and annually at regional, national, and international levels to engage in intellectual activities like lectures, discussions and games, and social plus cultural events. There are also meetings for members of special interest groups, which could be at any level.

MENSA conducts and cooperates with other organizations on intelligence and intellectual-related matters through the MENSA Foundation. The organization undertakes various research, the results of which are published in the MENSA Research Journal. The MENSA Foundation also awards college scholarships to student members.