A very fancy hand-powered drill. I think the real name is a 'hand
brace'.
Who would use a tool that looks that nice? Maybe, once a woodworker
has made all the useful furniture or cabinets possible, and still has
extra time, he or she would go ahead and make things like hand-carved
mahogany-and-ivory hand braces.
Andy
Joe Barta wrote:
> Ok, I give up. What the hell is that thing on the cover of the 2005-06
> Lee Valley woodworking tool catalog? The ivory/carved wood turny
> holder thingie?
Flip the cover over and look at the inside of it. There in the middle
column, all the way at the bottom, where it says "Cover Photo"....
(The rest of the text it says is, "A classic woodworking brace, made in
the best tradition by Andre Milette. a noted toolmaker and carver from
the province of Quebec." Which is exactly what it looks like, except
the fact that it's a heck of a lot fancier than most furniture tends to
throw one off.)
- Brooks
--
The "bmoses-nospam" address is valid; no unmunging needed.
"Andy" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Who would use a tool that looks that nice? Maybe, once a woodworker
> has made all the useful furniture or cabinets possible, and still has
> extra time, he or she would go ahead and make things like hand-carved
> mahogany-and-ivory hand braces.
Someone who wanted beauty in his life?
I remind SWMBO when se falls too far into the jeans and sweatshirt mode that
there are pedestrian (!) women out there that could satisfy basic needs, but
I appreciate a bit of beauty.
Brooks Moses wrote:
> Joe Barta wrote:
>> Ok, I give up. What the hell is that thing on the cover of the
>> 2005-06 Lee Valley woodworking tool catalog? The ivory/carved
>> wood turny holder thingie?
>
> Flip the cover over and look at the inside of it.
Geez, and to think I DID look inside the front cover for an
explanation.
Sometimes I'm dummer'n a box of hair and blind as a bat.
Thanks for walkin' a brotha towards a clue ;-)
In article <[email protected]>,
Joe Barta <[email protected]> wrote:
> Ok, I give up. What the hell is that thing on the cover of the 2005-06
> Lee Valley woodworking tool catalog? The ivory/carved wood turny
> holder thingie?
Hi Joe. If you had opened the cover, you'd discover that it's identified
as "a classic woodworking brace, made...by andre Milette, a noted
toolmaker and carver from...Quebec."
If you're unfamiliar with what a brace is, think hand drill. And it sure
is a gorgeous piece of work.
--
Owen Lowe
The Fly-by-Night Copper Company
__________
"I pledge allegiance to the flag of the
Corporate States of America and to the
Republicans for which it stands, one nation,
under debt, easily divisible, with liberty
and justice for oil."
- Wiley Miller, Non Sequitur, 1/24/05
> Ok, I give up. What the hell is that thing on the cover of the 2005-06
> Lee Valley woodworking tool catalog? The ivory/carved wood turny
> holder thingie?
>
> Joe Barta
>
That is a bitstock. The bit brace is the later evolution in design. Bitstocks did
become metal bodied in factory production later. The bits used in them are square
tapered heads with square shanks and cannot or should not be used in bit braces.
However, bit brace bits (round shanks) can be used in bitstocks, as only the the head
is clamped. A bit brace chuck will include clamping the round shank, not made for
the larger square shank.
--
Alex - "newbie_neander" woodworker
cravdraa_at-yahoo_dot-com
not my site: http://www.e-sword.net/