OldTools Archive

Recent Bios FAQ

183687 Paul Schobernd <paul.schobernd@v...> 2008‑10‑13 Re: Noob Bio
Dan,  Welcome to the Porch.  I am just up the road apiece from you in  
Normal or Bloomington-Normal, Il  depending upon whose chamber of  
commerce is writing the materials!  Wow, tools unchanged since 1600?   
Now that is a tall order here on the prairie, anything native is going  
to be French or a rock!  But, be not dismayed my good man, there is  
water even in the driest desert, ya' just gotta dig real deep or if  
you don't mind mixing metaphors, ya' have to cast a wider net.

I'm not a member, but the MWTCA just met in Decatur, Il recently and  
that is not too far afield to go seeking after early technology?  It  
probably isn't bottom-feeding, but what can I say, supply and demand  
is a rough tax master!  That I believe is a fall event every year.  I  
just returned from a triumphant tour of the Spoon River country in  
Western Illinois and found enough to warrant the long drive and what  
felt like a longer walk! I worked there in "Forgotonia" for many years  
and know the deep pools of rust, OK, so they are puddles, but fun.

Should you desire to drown your tool-collecting-woes in a pot of my  
most excellent coffee, give me a holler.  I'm here most days, except  
when I'm not, but I always come back, unless I get lost. I'll even let  
you tour Tool Hell, where old tools go to live in high-density format!  
Paul in Normal

On Oct 13, 2008, at 4:00 PM, barondevin@c... wrote:

> Hello. My name is Dan Hurst. I'm fifty and married, with three step  
> children and one grand daughter.
>
> We all live in Springfield, Illinois, which seems to be a bit light  
> on old tools in the flea markets. At least at the ones I've been  
> able to find.
>
> I'm part of the "poofy shirt" brigade (SCA), and that might be part  
> of my problem findling tools. My preference is for tool that haven't  
> changed substantially in form or function since before 1600.
>
> As a result of that and only having been seriously looking for two  
> or three years, my collection is pretty meager. Half a dozen wood- 
> bodied planes, three metal. A wooden brace and a couple of metal  
> ones. One dozuki, a small flush-cut and a straight-handled gent's  
> saw. I got a nice set of augur bits in their original box off eb@y,  
> and a set of spoon bits from a guy who's probably a member here. A  
> bunch of cheap modern chisels, and some socket chisels that need new  
> handles.
>
> I've spent years messing about with wood, sacrificing electrons, and  
> have only seen the light in recent years about hand tools. During my  
> first hand-tools-only project (a Mastermyr-style box), I discovered  
> the "zen"-like qualities of OldTools-style woodworking.
>
> I've read all of St. Roy's books (absent the upcoming one), and am  
> in the middle of one recommended here (Bealer's "Old Ways of Working  
> Wood").
>
> I haven't had much to contribute, but am very happy about finding  
> this list. I look forward to reading it every day, both for the  
> eloquence of the writers, and the knowledge passed on.
>
> Dan Hurst
> Springfield, IL
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Recent Bios FAQ