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A Piece Of Chalk
Ever need to mark a piece of wood for identification purposes, but
with what? No marking pens, sometimes not even a pencil. Enter a piece of black board chalk. Low cost, leaves a nice white mark, and can easily be removed when finished. Funny what you can learn if you keep your mouth shut, your eyes open, and just watch a craftsman do his/her job. Lew |
A Piece Of Chalk
Lew Hodgett wrote: Ever need to mark a piece of wood for identification purposes, but with what? No marking pens, sometimes not even a pencil. Enter a piece of black board chalk. Low cost, leaves a nice white mark, and can easily be removed when finished. Funny what you can learn if you keep your mouth shut, your eyes open, and just watch a craftsman do his/her job. Lew chalk is great- sometimes. if the wood is getting painted or is being left raw no problem. however, I have had ghost marks of the chalk show up after stain and especially after waterborne clearcoats. I no longer use chalk as a marker on interior finish work. |
A Piece Of Chalk
Lew Hodgett wrote: Ever need to mark a piece of wood for identification purposes, but with what? If I'm marking logs or boards in a pile to mean "I'm buying this one" then I use water-based paint dabbers from the Early Learning Centre. Bright fluo colours, not anything that can;t be got rid of later. My son is 11 now, so I've had these a few years since he was finished with them! For more permanent marking, I use a timber marking crayon. It's a double-sized coloured crayon in a wooden holder - just like a colouring crayon, only bigger and not easily broken. It's just the "right thing" - works fine and doesn't wash off. Enter a piece of black board chalk. How else do you do rough layout on a big board for which order you're going to cut the drawerfronts etc. from it? I couldn't work without one! OTOH, I find blackboard chalk to be crude and blunt. I use tailors' chalk (sharp-edged triangles) instead. |
A Piece Of Chalk
Lew Hodgett wrote: Ever need to mark a piece of wood for identification purposes, but with what? If I'm marking logs or boards in a pile to mean "I'm buying this one" then I use water-based paint dabbers from the Early Learning Centre. Bright fluo colours, not anything that can;t be got rid of later. My son is 11 now, so I've had these a few years since he was finished with them! For more permanent marking, I use a timber marking crayon. It's a double-sized coloured crayon in a wooden holder - just like a colouring crayon, only bigger and not easily broken. It's just the "right thing" - works fine and doesn't wash off. Enter a piece of black board chalk. How else do you do rough layout on a big board for which order you're going to cut the drawerfronts etc. from it? I couldn't work without one! OTOH, I find blackboard chalk to be crude and blunt. I use tailors' chalk (sharp-edged triangles) instead. |
A Piece Of Chalk
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