Out of all the tools I own this is the only one that I consider irreplaceable. I bought it from Ion Constantin a Romanian pole lathe turner and spoon carver in 1998, it an antique blacksmith made tool and it is quite the best adze I have ever used.This is the nail that did the damage.

Thankfully I now have the tools and skills to repair the damage, so after half an hours grinding, shaping and polishing my adze was working again. I remember over 15 years ago meeting an American blacksmith/woodworker called Don Webber, he showed me the basics of toolmaking in a very demystified way. He said that it was very empowering for a tool user to become a toolmaker, it has been good advice.

After that experience I felt like a break from that tree, I couln't face hitting another nail in the same day so I picked up a bowl blank I cut a few eeks ago from burr maple, this one was destined to be a mazer. I turn these very finely and ready to fit a silver rim. The rims are made first and I turn the bowl to fit. The problem is I have to turn them a little over size and gues just how much it will shrink so that when it is dry the rim fits perfectly. It took me quite a while to work the technique out but I have a pretty good succes rate now.

This one looks a bit drab now but I recently finished another from the same tree and it looks stunning.
3 comments:
That nail looks like a horse shoe nail. It's amazing what you can find in a tree
You should get a metal detector wand and check the tree as you remove wood. Most are less than $100 (approx. 70 British Pounds) and can save a lot of angst.
Bob
http://flyingchips.blogspot.com
There are good books of Alexander G. Weygers about wood sculpture and tool making.
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