Hand Plane Class
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I've got a ton of molding planes, bench planes, block and rabbet. Like I said, they are addictive. Once you get the hang of them, there is nothing better to finish a table top with. I rarely use the molding planes but I collected them so I don't plan to get rid of them. The king of my collection is a low angle smoother by Stanley. This is the newer model. Well made. Plane guys argue all day about what makes a good plane, but Stanley really came back to the game with this version.
- Ed in Tampa
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 5834
- Joined: Fri Jul 21, 2006 12:45 am
- Location: North Tampa Bay area Florida
I watched in awe the video at the Paul Sellers site that TerryDowning posted. Excellent!
I wonder how many of you have watched it? Did you catch Paul where from the sound of plane instantly knew he was planing into the grain instead of following with it?
To see how this man works is fascinating. Everything he does is to mimimize the disaster should a mistake occur. CRAFTSMANSHIP!
I wonder how many of you have watched it? Did you catch Paul where from the sound of plane instantly knew he was planing into the grain instead of following with it?
To see how this man works is fascinating. Everything he does is to mimimize the disaster should a mistake occur. CRAFTSMANSHIP!
Ed in Tampa
Stay out of trouble!
Stay out of trouble!
- tomsalwasser
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 928
- Joined: Mon Feb 08, 2010 2:09 pm
I agree, the Paul Sellers videos are excellent. I just came across a video on scrapers. Look at what this fellow can do with his sharpened scraper. There sure is a lot of hand took skill in the UK.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OKZWqdPFul8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OKZWqdPFul8
- stickthrower
- Gold Member
- Posts: 96
- Joined: Fri Aug 17, 2012 5:41 pm
- Location: Central MN
- terrydowning
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 1678
- Joined: Mon Jul 19, 2010 3:26 pm
- Location: Windsor, CO
Paul's traditional English joiner's bench is the inspiration for a new work bench I'm going to build. I've never had a proper woodworking bench and have always been intimidated by some of the beautiful examples I've seen. Just the cost of the materials alone has kept me from even attempting. Seeing Paul make one with basic tools from 2x4 from the local big box was an eye opener and motivator. I really appreciate Paul's take on wood working and tools. It really is all about the craftsman and not the tools.
I do want to use a bench vise and and a tail vises, so I'm going to try combining Paul Seller's Traditional bench with the wedge powered wagons and bench vise from Shipwright's V8 degree powered workbench.
I do want to use a bench vise and and a tail vises, so I'm going to try combining Paul Seller's Traditional bench with the wedge powered wagons and bench vise from Shipwright's V8 degree powered workbench.
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Terry
Copy and paste the URLs into your browser if you want to see the photos.
1955 Shopsmith Mark 5 S/N 296860 Workshop and Tools
https://1drv.ms/i/s!AmpX5k8IhN7ahFCo9VvTDsCpoV_g
Public Photos of Projects
http://sdrv.ms/MaXNLX
Terry
Copy and paste the URLs into your browser if you want to see the photos.
1955 Shopsmith Mark 5 S/N 296860 Workshop and Tools
https://1drv.ms/i/s!AmpX5k8IhN7ahFCo9VvTDsCpoV_g
Public Photos of Projects
http://sdrv.ms/MaXNLX