Jacob
What goes around comes around.
You can have a double bevel edge if you want so neither side is flat. Both bevels can be convex so no flatness is involved anywhere - in fact carving chisels and knives are sharpened that way. They can even be curved along the edge - most knives are and most plane blades are cambered so for many purposes even straightness is not needed on a sharp edge.phil.p":11tldsl2 said:Polishing? A bit extreme maybe, but flattening certainly. The sharp edge is the intersection of the back and the front, so it's sense to make sure they are both at least straight - unless you want a serrated edge chisel.
Calling the face "the back" is also recent? How recent? - it was the back when I started school fifty years ago.
Bevels benefit from polishing close to the edge - hence stropping, as this reduces friction where the edge is closest to the wood, but flatness or straightness aren't essential, nor polishing more than a few mm from the edge
Back/face. I was always told "face" for the flat side. It seems more logical and nobody refers to the bevel side as "the face" or the front. In fact on a bevel edge chisel the back (bevel side) looks like a back.
But it gets used both ways - except for the new sharpeners who all call the face the back - like a secret code or hand shake!