I was surprised I didn't see a thread like this with a quick search (although that might be my searching skills).
Just curious, what is everyone's most valued tool? Not which is your most "valuable" tool (necessarily), but which tool could you never sell, or stand to lose? Whether you use it every day and couldn't be without, has the best story behind it, something with family history etc.
I was recently given, among other tools, the owner's stamp that belonged to my great grandfather. I couldn't tell you exactly when he had it made, but likely somewhere just before or after the turn of the century. I also have some tools of his that he stamped with this, including a type 4 Stanley plane, and some wooden sauerkraut mashers he made. We have some stamped tools, but thought the stamp itself was gone, until it recently turned up.
Apparently the stamp maker spelled his last name wrong, and for one reason or another he decided to use it as-is (my son's middle name is the same as his last, although spelled correctly).
Just a neat piece of family history.


Just curious, what is everyone's most valued tool? Not which is your most "valuable" tool (necessarily), but which tool could you never sell, or stand to lose? Whether you use it every day and couldn't be without, has the best story behind it, something with family history etc.
I was recently given, among other tools, the owner's stamp that belonged to my great grandfather. I couldn't tell you exactly when he had it made, but likely somewhere just before or after the turn of the century. I also have some tools of his that he stamped with this, including a type 4 Stanley plane, and some wooden sauerkraut mashers he made. We have some stamped tools, but thought the stamp itself was gone, until it recently turned up.
Apparently the stamp maker spelled his last name wrong, and for one reason or another he decided to use it as-is (my son's middle name is the same as his last, although spelled correctly).
Just a neat piece of family history.














