Maybe we do need teachers to demonstrate - or confirm our efforts - that we are using a tool the ‘right’ way. Tool use is only a part of the skill sets necessary for a craft. There are nagging questions and doubts that the technique informed from the tool is not as elegant or efficient as possible. Is this a part of what a tool is - an object that contains information about its use? I had no real knowledge of this specific tool and hadn’t seen one being used. It can be used to carve straight lines just by using the cutting edge, and make curved ones by jabbing the point into the wood. Surveyors used to use it to mark bearing trees.Īfter learning the name of this tool, and by extension its intended use, how to use it seemed obvious. Later, a bit of looking through Salaman’s Dictionary of Woodworking Tools revealed that this is timber scribe or log race, made to carve letters and numbers onto stakes, crates, barrels or other wooden objects. Tools for the amateur market are more likely to be damaged by inexperienced users and poor quality construction. It is heavily used but completely functional - often the sign of a quality tool used by a professional. The length of the handle is about three inches, or nine centimeters, and I’m slightly embarrassed to use such a cliche, but it really does fit my hand perfectly. Small details like the wedge shaped, chamfered scales make it comfortable to hold and indicate it was meant to be operated by a pulling motion. This tool is strongly constructed observe the thick bolster and tapered forged tang. ![]() The curved tine on the top is sharp (or should be) on both ends and is slightly adjustable in height. I had a chance to think about these questions a bit more broadly when I purchased the tool pictured below at a flea market.Īt the time I didn’t know what it was for, but it was cheap and appealingly well made.Īt first I thought it might be a tool for cutting a groove in leather. Since I am familiar with bookbinding tools, it is a matter of subtleties - very important subtleties! - but not massive unknowns. I investigate questions such as these in my research of 18th century French bookbinding, in part by making and using reproduction tools as pictured in Diderot’s Encyclopedié and Dudin’s L’Art du Relieur-doreur de Livres. Can technique be embodied in a tool? Does the universal nature of hand tools enable a reasonably skilled practitioner to pick up and use an unfamiliar tool? Is experience with tool use, or common sense, enough? Or is it necessary to have external guide: a teacher, book or video? How does the use of obsolete tools become rediscovered, like stone axes? Can they ever be understood and used ‘correctly’ or in a historically accurate manner?
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