[quote="JPG40504"]Keep a detail in mind. That detail is the 'tool trough'**. Tools not in hand, belong in the trough. Since there are other 'hard' tools there, a plane is safer with the blade setting on the wooden trough bottom. Scarring of the trough bottom by the plane blade is likely not discernible since many tools are also placed there doing their own damage. Since it is not a 'work' surface, any damage to the bottom is meaningless.
Now for those of us without a trough, do as Ed just suggested. However, do not limit that to only your plane(s).]
JPG
My bench has a tool well/trough and it usually used for everything but my tools. If the project has hinges, catches and uses screws or things they are in the well. Along with bench dogs and hold downs. I also put small pieces of the project that I don't want knocked to the floor and lost in there.
I usually have a couple of shallow metal containers sitting in there to hold small parts, trim and such. That way I can control where small parts go, I don't enjoy crawling around on the floor looking for 1/4x1/4 inch pieces cut to fit.
I never put cutting tools in there for two reasons if they get covered up I may forget their are there, then brush something aside and lay my hand open on the sharp cutting edge.
Secondly I don't want my cutting edges touching anything other than air or wood. Places in the well/trough they can get shoved into each other and edges nicked.
All my chisels have flats filed in the handles so they don't roll, as does my scribing knife and awl. My normal chisel plane storage is within arms reach of my bench and when setting them down I am always aware of where I setting them so as not to damage a project piece, bench top or my self.
Nothing more painful than sliding parts around on the benchtop and jamming you hand into a chisel that is wedged against a bench dog and with a project piece over it so you didn't see it.
And yes you can shave with my chisels and plane irons.
