A shorter course in woodworking; a practical manual for home and school . Fig. 338 Fig. 339 with gouge and scraping chisel, or scraping chisel alone, as in Work entirely between the centre and the edge nearest you,—never beyond the centre, for the further half of the wood is movingin the wrong direction. Test the straightness of the sur-face by eye and with straight-edge. To turn shapes similar to that shown in Fig. 341, firstturn a disk, then the centre with gouge and chisel, after-wards holding and turning the gouge as in Figs. 338 and 339, to remove, as at A in Fig. 340, a part of
A shorter course in woodworking; a practical manual for home and school . Fig. 338 Fig. 339 with gouge and scraping chisel, or scraping chisel alone, as in Work entirely between the centre and the edge nearest you,—never beyond the centre, for the further half of the wood is movingin the wrong direction. Test the straightness of the sur-face by eye and with straight-edge. To turn shapes similar to that shown in Fig. 341, firstturn a disk, then the centre with gouge and chisel, after-wards holding and turning the gouge as in Figs. 338 and 339, to remove, as at A in Fig. 340, a part of the large saucer-like depression. Keep thebasil bearing on the hold the gouge as in Fig. 341, and turn the tool so as to make a shearing cut at the edge, and also complete round-ing the edge, working from the face-sideFig. 342 {B in Fig. 340), with the basil bearing on the wood, and movethe tool forward, and at the same time roll or turn it in the positions. Fig. 340 Fig. 341Then start the gouge as in 124 A Shorter Course in Woodworking o shown in Figs. 343, 344, and 345, so that the edge works itself up andout of the wood. The surplus wood (Cin Fig. 340) can be removedand the surface finally smoothed by repeating the operations just de-
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublishernewyorklondongpput