Devmeister
Established Member
The difference in use between 65 and 62 is insignificant and the edge retention is the same. But O1 is readily available and straight forward to heat treat. So I see no benefit to going beyond O1.
Does it come with a sharpening butler ?Holtey has remanufactured to Norris A13 . But his precision made dovetailed steel planes are far too hot for anyone's pocket other than the ultra-rich. We're talking typically 6k as an example for any of his planes, and I shudder to think what the A13 price might be.
This is typical of the prices Holtey A1 Jointer Plane a cool £10,560.00
https://www.holteyplanes.com/
And for the A13, thumb through this and you can see why his planes cost so much "Holtey Classic Handplanes A13 Technical page."
I don't think that is true. At least it doesn't apply to me. I just like making things. Do I do a better job than my father's generation? Or my grandfather's? Probably not, and I don't much care - I just do the best I can. As for design skills, I have no delusions of adequacy. I just (try to) make what I want to make.It seems like we are all in this perpetual rat race to improve the past because we perceive a problem that isn’t necessarily there.
I don't think that is true. At least it doesn't apply to me. I just like making things. Do I do a better job than my father's generation? Or my grandfather's? Probably not, and I don't much care - I just do the best I can. As for design skills, I have no delusions of adequacy. I just (try to) make what I want to make.
I sometimes think some exponents of furniture making want to liken it to an art form.
Plane must be this, iron sharpened this way. You must hold the handles that way. Deviation wrong.
Utter baloney in my opinion.
Too many saying you need follow this makers technique, or that you tubers technique. Worshiping them like they are gods. Up their own.. ahem.. behinds.
I'm more than sure the cabinetmakers of old didnt spent their tea breaks wittering on about such nonsense.
Few professionals would talk shop and in a lot of places it was frowned on.I sometimes think some exponents of furniture making want to liken it to an art form.
Plane must be this, iron sharpened this way. You must hold the handles that way. Deviation wrong.
Utter baloney in my opinion.
Too many saying you need follow this makers technique, or that you tubers technique. Worshiping them like they are gods. Up their own.. ahem.. behinds.
I'm more than sure the cabinetmakers of old didnt spent their tea breaks wittering on about such nonsense.
Few professionals would talk shop and in a lot of places it was frowned on.
Acceptable topics were how much you drank last night and whether or not you got lucky.
Regards
John
I sometimes think some exponents of furniture making want to liken it to an art form.
Plane must be this, iron sharpened this way. You must hold the handles that way. Deviation wrong.
Utter baloney in my opinion.
Too many saying you need follow this makers technique, or that you tubers technique. Worshiping them like they are gods. Up their own.. ahem.. behinds.
I'm more than sure the cabinetmakers of old didnt spent their tea breaks wittering on about such nonsense.
Interesting. Some might say you rate it rather generously, ha, ha. Slainte.
Rumour has it that they once held an aspidistra.Yeah thats not pretty The legs are the worst.
In fact it looks like they were taken off something else and stuck on as an afterthought.
A single pedestal in the same timber would be an improvement.
I agree, it's snobbery in a lot of cases.
Anyway, I think most contemporary furniture is over designed and over worked.
For example......Bluuurgh, pass the bucket !
View attachment 127864
It's hideous.
The wet skid mark motif is an odd one.I agree, it's snobbery in a lot of cases.
Anyway, I think most contemporary furniture is over designed and over worked.
For example......Bluuurgh, pass the bucket !
View attachment 127864
It's hideous.
I know, that's why I put it there.It is a cabinet by one of the all time greats, James Krenov. The legs are typical of his work, and are known as ballet dancer legs. Probably built in the 1960's.
http://jameskrenov.com/
They aren't that special except he just hit the zeitgeist somehow and good luck to him! I think he was surprised; he's quite frank about it in some of his interviews and talks of himself as just an old hippy amateur.You guys think you could make cabinets as well as Krenov? Well good on you.
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