The Woodworker & Woodturner – August 2019

(Ann) #1

http://www.getwoodworking.com August 2019 The Woodworker & Good Woodworking 33


mortise, first setting the gauge to the chisel
(photo 12) that’ll be used to chip out the waste
(photo 13). For a deep mortise it can be awkward
to level the floor without bruising the carefully
cut edges, but there’s a special tool for that –
the swan-necked lock mortise chisel – which
levers from lower down the end wall and
cuts at a more effective angle (photo 14).
Perhaps the most satisfying of scribing tools
is the one I was looking for earlier – dividers.
The sturdy iron winged sort, with a locking thumb
screw, has the weight to pivot firmly on the spot
while carrying the line just by dragging its pointed
foot (photo 15). The tool is commonly used
for scribing apertures, or where an end is to


be rounded off, but if arcs are intersected you can
soon create more interesting designs (photo 16).
Where dividers go the coping saw often follows,
but they’re also used for laying out the curves
of carved patterns, and stepping off distances.
Trammel points, a conveniently adjustable
alternative to nails hammered through a batten,
are for scribing larger arcs (photo 17). I was
attracted to this chunky brass-bodied pair by the
engraved details as much as their functionality,
recording their owner in 1885 was one TEF
Swindale of Newcastle (photo 18). They lock
to the chamfered mahogany beam by screws
bearing on tiny loose plates called keepers;
it’s a miracle these haven’t been lost in the

last 134 years. Callipers, on the other hand, near
relatives of dividers, are essential to woodturners
who apply their legs bent this way or that to
the gauging of diameters, but they’re also useful
in the making of simple hollow ware with hand
tools. In the example shown in photo 19, the
bow-legged outside callipers indicate plenty
of wall thickness remaining in a pot gouged
from ash.

Rules of thumb
Some of the measurements which have come
down through history have been inspired by parts
of the human body, which are at least unlikely to
be mislaid, and that tradition is nicely preserved

15 Dividers scribe the arcs...


18 TEF Swindale, 1885, Newcastle

16 ... for the coping saw to follow

17 Trammel points scribe to larger radii

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