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Posted 7/24/2009 in All Weblog Posts | Personal Favorites
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One of the coolest woodworking things I’ve seen is where a guy named Mike Burton made some awesome scrapers for cleaning up crown moulding using – ready? – table spoons.

A second cool thing: John Sindelar’s tool collection, which is worth more than the GNP of several Latin American countries. Burton, a professional woodworker, and Sindelar, a farmer and cabinetmaker, have simply let their freak flags fly.

I never thought, “Man, that Mike Burton is one cheap chicken-scratcher.” Nor did I think, “John Sindelar is one rich yuppie fool.”

I’ve never understood those extremes, which is why I love my $9 Zona saw and my $900 Wayne Anderson smoother and use them both on almost every project.

Recently we’ve been having some fun on this blog on this topic. Sawmaker Andrew Lunn is removing some of the decorative details from his saws to lower the price. As a joke, I made a saw from an Altoids tin and posted photos of it saying it was the new cheaper Lunn saw.

Some people were not amused.

However, Matt Hodgson, a custom planemaker with Gabardi & Son Toolworks, was. He got into the spirit of things and made a bullnose plane from an Altoids tin. I was drinking some coffee when I opened his e-mail and almost scorched my nostril hairs with hot Italian roast.

For the record, Matt makes *much* nicer infill planes. I’ve borrowed one for a couple months to review. Check out his web site for details.

After seeing his “plane,” it gave me an idea. A perfectly stupid and dumb idea. Let’s have a toolmaking contest with Altoids tins! Yes, I used an exclamation mark, so you know that I’ve consumed a beer (a rye-based IPA, actually).

Here are the official rules: This contest is not valid for the terminally closed-minded or uptight. Make a “tool” using an Altoids tin. Take a photo of it. Send it to me (chris.schwarz@fwmedia.com) before midnight July 31, 2009.

The winner will receive a one-of-a-kind prize: The unbound printer proofs to my new book “Handplane Essentials.” I’ll sign them in a bodily fluid if you like. Wipe them with Woobie II, whatever you want to ensure the package is worth more when you sell the proofs on eBay.

This is a readable book! By that, I mean you can actually turn the pages! There’s a hardbound cover and the printed signatures of the complete book. They’re just not all glued together. It’s a great conversation piece, and suitable for burning by any of the local chapters of Wives Against Schwarz.

So save that next Altoids tin (or ask Managing Editor Megan Fitzpatrick for one of her eleventy-billion ones). Make a tool. And amuse the rest of us.

— Christopher Schwarz


Friday, July 24, 2009 10:33:38 PM UTC
"John Sindelar’s tool collection, which is worth more than the GNP of several Latin American countries".
And which would those countries be, Mr.Schwartz? I had you for an educated person, with good writing and woodworking skills; it's very disappointing that you would make fun of countries foreign, smaller and indeed poorer than the US where people have concerns in life other than LV vs LN.
Jorge, born and raised in Uruguay.
Jorge Albe
Friday, July 24, 2009 10:48:37 PM UTC
Jorge, lighten up will you. It's a figure of speech.

Nice plane, and in mint condition too!
Mattias in Durham, NC
Friday, July 24, 2009 10:49:15 PM UTC

Jorge,

It was a joke, not a statement of fact. No one could possibly think the statement were true. I'm a Southerner and prone to jokes that involve hyperbole.

Chris
Christopher Schwarz
Friday, July 24, 2009 11:42:22 PM UTC
We're not going to get sued by Altoids for participation in this contest are we??

Hee hee, mint condition... I wish I thought of that first.
Jeremy
Saturday, July 25, 2009 12:20:21 AM UTC
Oh lighten up francis!
Mike D.
Saturday, July 25, 2009 12:40:51 AM UTC
What the heck is woodworking coming too!?!?! What a rip-off! You can get bullnose planes made out of Pez dispensers that are just as good for half the cost! Why in the heck would anyone shell out the extra money for an Altoids tin?
Kevin Kuehl
Saturday, July 25, 2009 1:09:41 AM UTC

Give me levity, or give me death.

...and by the looks of it, Jorge would choose the latter.
My two cents
Saturday, July 25, 2009 2:42:47 AM UTC
Does the winner get to choose the type bodily fluid?
anonymous
Saturday, July 25, 2009 2:46:35 AM UTC
Jorge,

I can't believe you just charactorized people from the US as having no concerns in life other than the brand of plane they use. That's pretty offensive.

Frank V
Frank V
Saturday, July 25, 2009 12:40:38 PM UTC
Does the tool have to actually work, or just give the appearance of a tool? Looks like Matt's bullnose plane takes some decent shavings.
Saturday, July 25, 2009 12:41:13 PM UTC
Matt Hodgson will be my guest on the Tuesday Night Hand Tool Chat on WoodCentral this Tuesday night at 9:30 PM Eastern Time.

http://www.woodcentral.com/content/images/hodgson_chat.gif

Stephen
Saturday, July 25, 2009 1:06:27 PM UTC

Kari,

The tool doesn't have to work. My saw could cut paper....

Chris
Christopher Schwarz
Saturday, July 25, 2009 5:03:16 PM UTC
I have to side with Jorge on this one.

I was born and raised a number. Hurtful names like "eleventy-billion" are simply not acceptable in this day and age!

Numbers are people too!
8675309
Saturday, July 25, 2009 6:54:48 PM UTC
What percentage of the tool had to be made out of Altoids? I'm thinking of an Altoids table saw...
Saturday, July 25, 2009 7:05:29 PM UTC

Mark,

Hmmm. As long it looks like Altoids were critical to making the tool, it's OK by me.

Chris
Christopher Schwarz
Saturday, July 25, 2009 10:33:09 PM UTC
8675309..

Im so sorry for the loss of one of your 'numbers'. I did not mean it, no one could resist, he was just walking around falunting is Lemon filling and Graham crust. But 3.14 got just his just desserts!!

And if you see 3, 5, 7, 11 or 13.. let them know Im coming for them... I heard a rumor that their last name is Rib. mmmmmmm
Jeremy
Saturday, July 25, 2009 10:37:12 PM UTC
I'm betting those shavings were produced elsewhere and then strategically placed around the Altoid "plane".
Bill
Sunday, July 26, 2009 2:29:32 AM UTC
Hmmm...

Do they sell Altoids in Canada? I'm not sure I have ever seen them before.



For a good time call...
Jenny 867-5309
Sunday, July 26, 2009 9:01:50 PM UTC
.

Chris,,,,

"Kari, The tool doesn't have to work. My saw could cut paper.... Chris"


I don't mean to mince woods here, but ,,,,,,

if the "tool" doesn't work, can one honestly still call it a "tool"?

wouldn't that be a lateral move to ......................."sculpture"?

,,,,,roger


.
Sunday, July 26, 2009 10:05:53 PM UTC

Roger,

If we want to get ridiculously technical, then paper is a wood by-product. The ultimate MDF, as it were....

OK, so maybe this should be a contest to make the best "tool-shaped object."

Chris
Christopher Schwarz
Monday, July 27, 2009 11:21:13 AM UTC
Don’t be silly - I have lots of tools that don’t work all of which looked good in the catalog pictures.
Don Peregoy
Monday, July 27, 2009 8:29:43 PM UTC
Something faintly reminiscent about Altoid tins... Hmmmm Where have I see them before...

Could it have been Here?

Not a tool but it sure improved the workflow in and around my shop.

Comments are closed.

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