A shorter course in woodworking; a practical manual for home and school . Fig. 225 Fig. 226 the top, as with the mitre-box just shown, so that they will be at the correctangles with the surfaces against which the wood to be sawed will rest. Agood form, readily held in the bench-vise, is shown in Fig. 225. 85. Bead-cutters and reed-scrapersand fluters can be bought of various pat-terns. It is usually best to stop reeding ashort distance from the ends of a surface,and with the chisel cut the reeds to asquare end (Fig. 226). Fig. 227 shows an easily made tool for scrap-ing beading, reeds, and the


A shorter course in woodworking; a practical manual for home and school . Fig. 225 Fig. 226 the top, as with the mitre-box just shown, so that they will be at the correctangles with the surfaces against which the wood to be sawed will rest. Agood form, readily held in the bench-vise, is shown in Fig. 225. 85. Bead-cutters and reed-scrapersand fluters can be bought of various pat-terns. It is usually best to stop reeding ashort distance from the ends of a surface,and with the chisel cut the reeds to asquare end (Fig. 226). Fig. 227 shows an easily made tool for scrap-ing beading, reeds, and the like. The blade,Fig- 227 made of a piece of saw-blade steel, is filed to the shape required. The hole in theblade is larger than the screw to allow of adjustment. This tool is pushedforward with both 86. Winding-sticks (which are simply straight-edges), are to Common Tools and Their Uses 87 help in getting surfaces true, and to determine whether different partsof the work are in the same plane. Take two straight-edges, each ofequal width throughout, and lay them on edge, one across each end


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublishernewyorklondongpput