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  • 18th-century Tools for Every Shop

    Cabinet Scraper
    The cabinet (or card) scraper is your friend. Get to know it better and you will be rewarded. No shop should be without one. I think period cabinetmakers used them to tame curly woods and veneers. You can use them to scrape glue, brass or your favorite figured wood. You can buy them new, or make your own out of old rusty saw blades. If you don’t have one, get one. The only trick to using it is learning to sharpen it – and Editor Christopher Schwarz tells you how in the February 2007 issue (#160).

    Small Moulding Plane
    Small moulding planes are wonderfully fast and effective. For a small job, it’s hard to beat the quick work and smooth finish left by a moulding plane. They’re really not that hard to use. You may need to read up on sharpening them and it may take you an hour to do it. This is something you could do on a jobsite. When your stock is straight grained, the finished moulding will be crisp and so smooth. Mouldings cut with a plane usually can’t be improved with sandpaper.

    Wide Paring Chisel
    I’m guessing most woodworkers have at least one chisel. Many of you probably have a set of chisels. Craftsmen in the 18th century had several sets of special-purpose chisels. I think every woodworker would benefit from reserving one wide chisel for use as a dedicated paring chisel.

    I use a wide chisel for a great variety of tasks. I clean up tenon cheeks and faces with one, pare end grain to perfect miters, and level proud dovetails and pins. The trick is keeping it sharp. Choosing a high-quality chisel will help with that. You don’t need a special long-pattern paring chisel. Any wide chisel will do. You can pare bevel down (I do it all the time and actually prefer it). I recommend you grind it with a low angle (20°-25°). I like a convex rounded bevel and a little back bevel doesn’t bother me one bit. Think of it more as a carving tool than something you hit with a hammer, and sharpen it accordingly.

    Each year, I go to Williamsburg, Va., to the “Working Wood in the 18th Century” conference. Call me nuts, bu
    t watching the cabinetmakers use their chisels to quickly, accurately and elegantly define features is like watching a professional athlete hit a homerun, catch a “Hail Mary” pass or sink a three-pointer. It makes me want to stand up and cheer. If you could see that, I think you’d feel the way I do about chisels. Get yourself a wide chisel, keep it sharp and try it.

    Gimlet
    I often come across jobs around the house that require the drilling of one small hole. I don’t own a cordless drill, so I find the gimlet is a perfectly acceptable way to drill up to four or so small holes. If you have to drill many more than that, you might as well go find an extension cord. Gimlets can also be handy if you are working on a ladder, as you can keep a few in your shirt pocket.

    Center Bits and Brace
    Center bits are useful for boring large shallow holes quickly. To avoid break out, work until you feel the centerpoint break the far surface of the stock. Then finish the hole from the other side. As good as center bits are at drilling holes, I often use them for excavations. I made boxes for my oil stones out of solid wood. I use centerbits to excavate for half-mortise locks, or mouth patches in wooden planes. You may use a drill press for the same operations, but the center bit offers maybe a little more control. You can remove one shaving at a time and see it happening. You may find you don’t need a set of these. Maybe just a single 5/8″-diameter bit will suffice.

    Wooden Handscrew
    When woodworkers think of clamps, they often think about gluing. When period furniture makers think about clamps, they think about holding. My bone-crushing wooden handscrews are invaluable to me. They are big and very strong. I think you only need two. I like those with wooden screws better than the metal-screw versions, which all seem to have one left-hand screw thread; it always confuses me. The wooden-threaded versions have two right-handed screws, which I like better. But if you are smarter than I am, go ahead and get the metal-screw clamps. Get the biggest pair you can find. But don’t turn your nose up at cheap, old wooden clamps at the local antique shop. They are there on the floor under the table with the cast iron kettle with the plastic daisies in the spout.

    Conclusion
    When recommending tools to woodworkers, it’s easy to lose sight of the importance of the work and instead become mired in the often ambiguous world of “performance.” In this article, I’ve tried to suggest not necessarily top-performing tools, but tools that add some additional capability to a wired shop. In so doing, I’ve revealed the very heart of this column.

    Last year, I wrote about my vision of what period furniture making is all about. It was a series about period woodworking, for period woodworkers. I’m not looking for puffy-shirt wearing converts, though. And this is not an elite clique. I’m hoping folks with no desire to reproduce 18th-century furniture read this column and glean something of use for their work. It may be something as small as trying a gimlet instead of a cordless drill.

    I hope that instead of restricting yourself to one sort of tools as I have, what you read here in Arts & Mysteries will encourage you to try new things, explore new possibilities for your woodworking – whatever sort that may be. PW

    Visit Adam’s blog at artsandmysteries.com for more discussion of traditional woodworking techniques and tools.

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    Adam Cherubini About the Author: Adam Cherubini is a long-time woodworker and contributor to Popular Woodworking Magazine, who studies and works in the 18th-century style using period techniques and tools.

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