Showing posts with label now. Show all posts
Showing posts with label now. Show all posts

Monday, February 10, 2014

then and now

Tuesday I shared a few changes in the living room after cwts, and today I thought Id share how the bedrooms have changed. Ill be needing to update our home tour page soon, because a lot has changed!

We switched up the charcoal upholstered headboard with a bright coral upholstered headboard. Im loving the bright pop of color! We also added a grasscloth and nailhead feature wall behind the bed.


To the left of the bed we switched up the draperies and added the mint fabric on the chair. The desk was in the guest room for a few months, so I really need a second "then" shot, but imagine the fabric wrapped table there too (I never really got a good picture).

We decided to move the charcoal headboard into the guest room (well be selling the teal headboard). I put the room together with mostly things I already had, and will probably do a little more tweaking, but at least now we can see the bed (this was the dumping ground for cwts) and Davids parents who are coming next week, wont have to crawl through to find the bed :) 


























One of our former nightstands is in the guest room across from the bed and next to the closet. The other one is in my closet. I also reorganized my tiny closet, which is packed full!!


 We are still changing a few things and Ill be sure to share pics when I have them :)
 
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Sunday, January 26, 2014

Now theres a chisel

I have spent some considerable time searching the web for an information site about chisels and I cant find one. Not one. There are numerous sites about planes offering more information about them then I am ever going to need to know and there are web sites dedicated to just about every saw manufacturer that ever produced a decent one. Heck, I even found one dedicated to the topic of axes, but darned if I can find one dedicated to chisels. I dont understand this. Why are chisels treated as secondary citizens? If you work with hand tools you use chisels a lot. To me, they are the basis of any tool cabinet.

I seemed to have become hooked on the Stanley 40s. When I made the decision to buy a set, I found that a complete set was going for anywhere from $1500.00 to $2200.00. I even saw one 2" that had a price tag of $229.00 on it. One chisel!

Because of the cost of the set and the fact that I had never held one in my hands before I thought it might be a good idea to buy just one and have a look. It was back to eBay where I found a really good 1 1/4" that I picked up for $40.00. When it arrived, I did what I had to do to make it usable. Wow. What an amazing tool. There is a balance to that chisel that I have never experienced before, it takes an edge beautifully and holds it, and it really is a pretty tool.

The most amazing fact about the 40s, though, is that these 80 to 100 year old chisels arrive with their backs as flat as flat could be. All that I have acquired so far have not required any serious lapping, just enough to remove the stains and give them a polishing. It really is incredible.

Because my first purchase was so good I thought it would be smart, not to mention cheaper, to put a set together piecemeal. I do keep making mistake after mistake, dont I? The other day I got to double my collection of them when two more arrived, a 1/2" and a 1". These are not in as good of shape as my previous two, but once I cleaned them up, they are still far better than any of the other brands I own.

Im a collectors nightmare. I clean these old chisels with turps and steel wool, lightly sand the handles to get rid of as much crud as I can without removing much of the wood, sharpen the edge and lap the back, then give the whole thing multiple coats of paste wax. I use Johnsons paste wax as supposedly it does not have the no-no ingredients some of the other paste waxes have.

Heres what I started out with...



I cheat and use a Veritas Mark II Honing Guide. I use this guide for one simple reason - repeatability. I can set the angle of the chisel and sharpen it one day and two months later put it back in the guide set to that same angle and not have to start from scratch, just refine the edge based on the first honing. If I was sharpening chisels once a week I might be able to train my eye to hit the angle without the use of the guide, but given I might sharpen every two months or so, the guide is a necessity.



I also use wet/dry sandpaper or emery cloth to sharpen instead of stones. This can be a whole lot more expensive, even though one good stone could run me $70.00 or so here in Canada, as an out of flat chisel back can eat up a whole lot of paper before you get it right. My main reason for using paper, though, is just its size. I can stick two full sheets of different grits side by side on my glass plate and I have a double 9" x 12" of sharpening surface to work with instead of the usual 3" x 8" that a stone offers. Id really love a good power sharpener but I cannot rationalize it. It just doesnt seem right to turn your back on power tools in favour of working with hand tools then turning back to a power tool to sharpen your hand tools.



Heres what I ended up with after about a half hour of work...




For me, my little chisel section in my tool cabinet is just getting prettier all the time.



Peace,

Mitchell
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