Last August, at the National forest wood fair at Beacon
Hill, I met a traditional Windsor chair maker.
A few months later he visited the workshop and we discussed our shared interest in old tools and how interconnected our two crafts used to be.
A few months later he visited the workshop and we discussed our shared interest in old tools and how interconnected our two crafts used to be.
We also chatted about Stock Knives.
“What is a stock knife?” – is the first question many people
ask.
A stock knife is a distinctive, long woodworking tool that
has a strong handle, a blade of one kind or another and crucially a hook and
eye bolt that secure the tool to a sturdy bench. It is a hand tool with a
machine like action that uses leverage to maximum effect. A stock knife, when
used well, produces unique cuts in green timber- you try doing a continuous
curve over several inches with any other tool. What makes the device special is
the union of power and control the user has as the blade is always in contact
with the work; it never chops like a swung axe. Instead, it is applied to the
timber and the pushed through it, past it. The blade is fixed at one end
through an eye bolt allowing tremendous force to be exerted without the tool
moving out of the plane.
I love them. I think they are very clever and wonderfully
sculptural.
Here is someone who really knows the tool, Jeremy Atkinson.
I should say that there is some variety in types. There are
smaller pegging knives which have a similar appearance to the massive clogging
knives but there are also the fascinating French Paroir that use the same
principles but take a different form.
Here is the tool I produced for the chairmaker.
The handle, blade and hook were all forged from separate
pieces and forge-welded together.
Stunning work Josh, I have some old one I purchased second hand here in France I will set them up this spring and start to use them. My knives are not decorated in any way like yours its a pleasure to see such work.
ReplyDeleteThank you Steve, I really think they are interesting things to both make and use. I want to produce some of the French Paroir at some point, theyre just beautiful
DeleteNow that is some torsion work... hats off to you.
ReplyDeletewhat a brilliant simple tool! don't really need one but i WANT one!
ReplyDelete