Cheshirechappie
Established Member
Another thing that changed the tool marketplace after WW2 was the rise of the DIY market, which hadn't really existed before. That created a demand for cheaper tools. Combined with the rise of the power tool and consequent decline in the demand for high quality handtools, manufacturers were pretty well forced to drop quality to satisfy the cheaper, growing market for DIY quality tools. Indeed, quality had dropped so much by the early 1980s that a niche opened up for small volume high-end toolmakers, who together with a few surviving quality makers such as Henry Taylor, Ashley Iles, Joseph Marples, Thomas Flinn, Crown Tools, and Footprint make up the current picture.