Sgian Dubh
Established Member
Back in the dark days of my training an old cabinetmaker said to me something like, "If you cannae even shairpen your tools sonny, ye'll niver be a cabinetmaker." I've removed some of the swear words and generally softened the tone. Back then I think the only sharpening guide or jig that might have existed was a Stanley or a Record device, I can't recall which brand, but I think it had a fairly narrow wheel at the back and you were meant to fiddle about fitting the plane iron or chisel on a plate above the wheel with a clamp thing to hold it in place. All the guys in the workshop seemed to consider such an 'aid' a worthless piece of junk and sharpened their standard plane irons, straight edged chisels, gouges and the like freehand on a combination oilstone, with a slip or two for odds and ends.
There was no fuss about it and it was a case of "Tool's blunt, better sharpen it," and that was it. They could all plane wood, chop mortices, trim shoulders, pare slivers off wood, and make joinery and furniture, some of them very well, and others not so good. It just seems so odd to me that something so basic and essential to the trade has now become so difficult, challenging and involved with people poncing around with elaborate jigs and guides and electron microscopes and the like to inspect the results of their drawn out efforts. I've always found you don't need magnifying glasses and microscopes to tell you how good a job you've done of sharpening-- the first time you put tool to wood tells you immediately if you've done a good or useless job. And isn't that usually the point? Although I suppose for some people the main hobby is tool sharpening, and not woodworking.
Anyway, I can see how a simple guide or jig might be useful to an intermittent woodworker, but in all honesty I can't really fathom out why a professional woodworker needs such a thing (or multiple types of sharpening jigs or guides) but then I'm maybe old fashioned in that I let the cutting action of the tool on the wood tell me if it's doing the job it's meant to or not, and if it's not, I'd better slop it up and down a sharpening stone a bit until it's sharper. Slainte.
There was no fuss about it and it was a case of "Tool's blunt, better sharpen it," and that was it. They could all plane wood, chop mortices, trim shoulders, pare slivers off wood, and make joinery and furniture, some of them very well, and others not so good. It just seems so odd to me that something so basic and essential to the trade has now become so difficult, challenging and involved with people poncing around with elaborate jigs and guides and electron microscopes and the like to inspect the results of their drawn out efforts. I've always found you don't need magnifying glasses and microscopes to tell you how good a job you've done of sharpening-- the first time you put tool to wood tells you immediately if you've done a good or useless job. And isn't that usually the point? Although I suppose for some people the main hobby is tool sharpening, and not woodworking.
Anyway, I can see how a simple guide or jig might be useful to an intermittent woodworker, but in all honesty I can't really fathom out why a professional woodworker needs such a thing (or multiple types of sharpening jigs or guides) but then I'm maybe old fashioned in that I let the cutting action of the tool on the wood tell me if it's doing the job it's meant to or not, and if it's not, I'd better slop it up and down a sharpening stone a bit until it's sharper. Slainte.