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Thread: Chisels, Draw Knives, Etc. - Recommendations

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    FWIW --

    You can buy Japanese chisels -- traditional laminated blades -- from Lee Valley:

    Lee Valley Tools

    They also carry other Japanese tools, and just about everything a woodworker would need.

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    Heat it and beat it Bruno's Avatar
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    Personally, I'd seek out the flea markets.
    I often find old chisels and drawing knives. Usually covered with surface rust, but that's easily fixed.
    There is almost no market for old tools here, and people on flea markets often sell their grandfathers' tools when he passed away. Generally, the price for any old tool is between 50 cents and 2 dollars (unless the seller is a merchant).

    I've bought a couple of antique sheffield chisels for a couple of bucks.
    A blacksmith's hammer for 90 cents.
    A huge handmade rasp (with irregular aligned teeth) for 1 euro.
    A huge nicholson file, never used. For 1 or 2 euros...

    As long as the temper is still good, an antique chisel will serve you as good as a new craftsman chisel which costs 10 to 20 times more.
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    Senior Member Wintchase's Avatar
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    If you are going to carve furniture then there are a few different styles of chisels to chose from I would look at woodcraft and some of thier swedish stuff. I like palm chisels because I can use them for palm and chasing work... And the steel is superb...takes a while to build a nice kit, but you can start with a basic set of five and do quite a bit.

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    falingore (10-15-2012)

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    Maniac, Mechanic, Mastermind falingore's Avatar
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    Thanks to everyone who's replied so far. I'm gathering from what I've read here that I should look for pieces at estate sales and flea markets and that $100.00 is probably not enough to get what I'm really interested in.

    So, thank you Wintchase for the Woodcraft recommendation, it seems like a great place to start.

    Anyone have any other specific brands I should keep an eye out for, now that I've removed my original price point?

    Thanks much!
    Do to budget cuts the light at the end of the tunnel has been turned off; we apologize for any inconvenience.

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    Senior Member blabbermouth Theseus's Avatar
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    If you go the vintage route, don't discount Stanley. It wasn't too long ago that they made high quality tools, especially their chisels and planes.

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    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    I can't really gather what you're going to do, are you going to do restoration carving (which would require gouges) or are you going to be using straight chisels?

    Straight chisels can be had cheaply. The best inexpensive chisels are probably narex brand, which can be had for about $8 each.

    Carving tools not nearly so, and you will not get by with a few carving chisels, especially if you're doing restoration.

    A trade carver would have probably 100-400 gouges, depending on what they were doing. That said, carving, to get something professional looking, will take a lot of practice.

    I am not aware of any good and cheap carving tools. Austria, switzerland and germany make good western style carving chisels that require little prep work, but two gouges of any size will eat up your $100 budget.

    Carving is not something to do on a budget.

    If you're just looking for chisels and you have minimal kit to restore tools, I would just buy the narex chisels or something similar. Log yourself into sawmillcreek.org or one of the other specific forums where the current crop of beginners is hanging out and where the cost and benefit of various tools is discussed in detail.

    If you are thinking of just carving more sculptural, or just wide open in general, then you have more room with carving tools and can acquire a little bit at a time. In terms of inspiration for wide open, check out Randall Rosenthal's work.

    What's New

    All the work on those pages is carved from wood, including the money, the boxes, etc, it's all wood.

    (the only danger in looking at randall's work is not noticing that you're actually looking at wood carvings that he has hand painted, and despite the newspapers in the picture looking like newspapers, there is no newspaper there, it's carved out of wood to fool you into thinking you're looking at newspapers, boxes, baseball cards, etc when nothing of the sort is present in any pictures, just painted carvings that look *an awful lot like* the real thing).
    Last edited by DaveW; 10-15-2012 at 05:48 PM.

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    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Quote Originally Posted by Theseus View Post
    If you go the vintage route, don't discount Stanley. It wasn't too long ago that they made high quality tools, especially their chisels and planes.
    Somewhere around WWII is pretty much the cutoff. The 50s and 60s pretty much killed cabinetmaker quality tools from stanley, marples, etc. The era of industrial design took over and plywood and straight lines relegated a lot of new tools to wood shop in school.

    Most stanley planes that don't say "defiance" or "handyman" and that have wooden handles can be made to work very well, though. Same with the chisels - if the handles are wood and they aren't really shiny and/or don't have clear plastic handles, they're probably pretty good.

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    Maniac, Mechanic, Mastermind falingore's Avatar
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    Theseus and Dave,

    Thank you both for the information. I'm primarily looking at straight chisels/furniture chisels and a good draw knife.

    Two Cherries or Pfeil seem to the brands at the top of the list. I'll probably get a small set of gouges, but don't intend to do any intricate carving in a restoration sense. Perhaps this thread actually belongs under scale making?

    I had a draw knife when I was younger that we used for carving longbows, but I lost it somewhere in a college move. Something I'd like to back into and razor scales seemed like an alright place to try it... I suppose we'll find out.
    Do to budget cuts the light at the end of the tunnel has been turned off; we apologize for any inconvenience.

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