Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
Woodturning (rec.crafts.woodturning) To discuss tools, techniques, styles, materials, shows and competitions, education and educational materials related to woodturning. All skill levels are welcome, from art turners to production turners, beginners to masters. |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
It's 17 March and so a tip of a Scottish hat and a raised glass of a
single malt to our Irish turners. Slainte! I don't know why the difference between a shillalah and a tool handle comes to mind. We hold woodturning tool handles in our hands, at times tenderly and gently but at other times they must be held in a tight grasp, but never with pale knuckles. Either way they are _not clubs to bludgeon a workpiece. They may be guide-ons, but they aren't flag staffs to wave about the spinning wood. One of the independently diverse (perverse?) ways woodturners think about and do things is the difference in the size, shape, material and finish (or lack of same) of their tool handles. Plumbing pipe, copper tubing, lead weights, stainless steel, 2X4s, and exotic woods are all used in long, short, thick, thin, straight, curved, coved and ferruled tool handles. It's rare, but "I knew a turner who danced with his gouge's original handle... in Chicago, my hometown". A tool handle is a serious thing and worthy of all Turners to make a careful choice on their own. ![]() Please forget shafts, bevels and edges for this once and describe (pic?) some of your favorites and why you like them ... even if they be the originals. ![]() Turn to Safety, Arch Fortiter http://community.webtv.net/almcc/MacsMusings |