Collecting is basically organised hoarding.
shed9":2uh32b6h said:
As I've seen the use of the word collector used both positively and negatively on many woodworking forums, I feel the urge to ask - At what point do you become a collector, and is it positive or negative?
I'd surmise that you become a tool collector when you own more multiples of a specific thing (say, Marples chisels, or No. 5½ planes) than you'll likely have need of or use for, or you just amass a large number of tools in general for the express purpose of having them rather than using them.
Same for most things, really.
There's having four or five different spokeshaves, with perhaps a second of each as backup, to give you a choice... and then there's having multiples of each kind, from each year of manufacture, especially if you don't even know how they work.
If they're organised away or on display in cabinets, perhaps lovingly restored, you're a definite collector. If they're displayed and open to visitors, you're a museum. If they're gathering dust in some cardboard box somewhere, you're hoarding... even if you always plan on sorting them out, but never manage to get around to it.
Whether this is good or bad depends on who you ask.
Some people "collect" original flash battery cases from Graflex cameras, much to the annoyance of Graflex camera enthusiasts... later on, these "collections" end up being sold to replica prop makers, who use them to make Star Wars Lightsaber replicas... because the handle of Luke's original blue Lightsaber was a Graflex camera flash battery tube.
The Graflex club are incensed by this wanton destruction of an original piece of history, especially since other people out there make perfect copies of the things precisely for use in Lightsabers.
I know several people with quite large prop collections, worth more than the houses they're stored in. Some hide their stuff away from everyone, letting them rot in cardboard boxes... Others take pics of everything and post them online for people to see. A couple actually exhibit them at public events.
I guess it's up to you whether depriving another woodworker of a tool they could use is worth you having a ninety-third No4 plane in your collection, or not. Perhaps if it helps to kill off the whole hobby of woodworking with hand tools, it would actually
increase the value of your collection...?
Sounds pretty selfish if you're looking for that blasted router plane that Paul Sellers keeps advocating, until you learn that tool collection is what will one day send the collector's grand-daughter to nursing school...