hobbitss
Well-known member
TOOLLLLLSSSSSSS!!!!!!! 
Wo-Ho....
MORE TOOLS Please....
A garage is just a box with a door or two without TOOLS!!
More Tools Please..

Wo-Ho....

MORE TOOLS Please....

A garage is just a box with a door or two without TOOLS!!
More Tools Please..

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This is the work in progress, the mantel is oriented upside down as seen with the front of it now facing the camera. Note the cove profile that has been shaped and the mound of shavings in the background. Also note the mallet and chisel on the mantel.
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These are the same hand tools I used back then to fabricate it.
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To remove saw marks from the mill and straighten all sides of the mantel...
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...I used Grand Dads jointer plane, that's the long plane in back. It's 23" (58.5 cm) long and will provide a very flat surface. In the foreground is a jack plane that's used to remove single high spots quickly. My Dad removed the old wood handles from the jack plane and replaced them with what you see. He did that in the late 1940's. The green painted tool is a modern made tool, it's a cabinet scraper from an old design. My Dad said Grand Dad just used a piece of glass to scrape his wood with but I decided to buy a proper cabinet scraper. I was taught the best way to prepare a wood surface is not to sand it but scrape it. Since I was going to use an oil finish, proper surface preparation was important.
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That's a small block plane on the left, chisels and mallet. It just so happens that Dad made that mallet...
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...on this Delta wood lathe that he bought new in 1936 just after he graduated from high school, but I digress....
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This is great Grand Dads rabbiting plane. It's made of Rosewood, brass and ivory. I think it's wonderful looking and it's also a great operating tool.
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I also used a couple of great Grand Dads molding planes, this one in particular.
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The profile seen is that of the major cove on the bottom of the mantel.
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He had 40 or molding planes...
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... all with different profiles. This shows some of them on end in his old tool box. Each one would produce a different molding profile. Here's an end view of one of the more complex ones...
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You can see all the different names stamped into the ends of all the planes. Great Grand Dad's are the 4th set of names or initials stamped on it making him the 4th owner. Not sure how old these planes are but he passed away in the 1930's as an old man so I would guess these molding planes are kinda old.
What ties all this together is I'm planning on a putting another stone Rumford fireplace in the new house and I will be fabricating another solid Walnut mantel using old tools from my family. The tools are a bridge from the past to the future. I feel the same about Mr Johnson's shop, equipment and tools.
Thomas





May your day go well and, like you, I'm cooking tonight so all I've got to do is warm it up tomorrow. Country ham for Christmas dinner and maybe some homemade biscuits along with a pot full of beans.