Thank you! Those are some great ideas. I haven't had the need to make many of these cuts in the past and just don't know what I'll be making in the future that I couldn't do on a table saw. As you mentioned though, long cuts on sheets would be great though. I hadn't thought of that, especially if I'm building shelving.
I'm too nervous about messing up what will be an expensive amount of wood. My plan is to do a small mock up before hand to practice/test the steps needed before I dive into the big boards. I want to practice all the cuts, assembly, finish, etc.
As for future projects I have to make an arbor for our wedding, custom desk for home office, pergola over the patio, then eventually finish the basement. I love the idea of being able to custom build the shelving/cabinets for the basement as I go.
All great stuff! I got started in woodworking about 6 years ago when we bought a house that needed some love. I Forest Gumped my way through several DIY projects as well as woodworking projects. It's always good to plan out the project in detail, especially the first time. I usually start with a pretty good idea of what I want to do. I draw it up in sketch-up, and then modify the design as I go through the build. It's usually a start-stop project flow because I'll run into something I'm not sure of, so then I have to stop, do some research, and figure out a solution. I like your approach of taking it slow to figure out each step.
The great thing about wood is you can always buy more. It sucks to ruin a piece or re-make something because you screwed it up, but it's pretty hard to totally ruin a large volume of wood in one shot.
I will add that in terms of cutting things on a table saw...getting everything straight can be tough. Especially if you're feeding long pieces into the saw. Any errant force applied to the work piece in the wrong direction gives you a blade burn or gouge. If I can, I cut pieces cross-wise first before feeding them into the saw, but in your case with a table, you can't really do that. Plus, if you're trying to cut down a live slab of walnut, you're going to need a straight edge to work with at the start. That takes you right back to the problem you started with.
Good luck! Post pictures when you're done!

