My essential tools
In my latest book I have distilled down the tools I use into categories depending on the section in the book. In one category, where we are carving and shaping wood, I have isolated the simplest tools I use for a variety of tasks such as bowl carving, making spoons, scraping and so on. The next category is the joinery section we use for a range of jointed projects and the last category are tools I associate with sharpening alone. Each category has between 9-10 tools I consider basic but essential to my work and so too for those getting started in real woodworking where they want to establish good hand skills instead of limiting themselves to what the machine can do for them. The lists are:
Shaping tools
Four-way rasp
Gouge
Spokeshave
Coping saw
Scraper set
Hand saw
Tenon saw
Chisel set
Chisel hammer or mallet
Smoothing plane
Joinery tools
Combination square
Tape measure
Sliding bevel
Layout knife
Combination gauge
Tenon saw
Chisel set
Chisel hammer or mallet
Smoothing plane
Hand router
Sharpening tools
Flat file
Saw set
Burnisher
Buffing compound
Sharpening atone (Whetstone)
Saw file
Strop
Nail punch (set)
Hammer
Many of these you may already have. I have already begun my minimalist list here on previous blogs to get you started in the looking-buying process. As time permits I will try to complete the list.
I buy lots from eBay, second hand from garage sales and flea markets and places like that. I would rather pay more from a garage sale than see it go to landfill or be unused for the remainder of its life. $20-30 is not too much to pay for a plane you can use for 50 years and more and neither is it too much to pay for an old Henry Disston saw. My work is all about getting you doing it for yourself so I will rarely advocate buying disposable tools such as throwaway saws and knives. I want you to be able to sharpen your tools and hone your skills in the process.
I promise to only give you the truth s best I know it and to the best of my ability. After that you can make your own educated decisions as to which method, technique or tool is best suited to you, but at least it will be educated.
Thanks for the list Paul. I just ordered the DVD/book collection today. I have to still get some tools from these list’s, but can’t wait to get started. Thanks.
I’m so glad. The book and the DVDs are only the beginning. You will be able to transform wood into beautiful things as you follow the plan outlined. As you grow you will be come proficient and understand your wood and your tools in a way machinists never do. Its an adventure of discovering the nature of the real wood and the qualities each tools has and then you discover things about your own character you never knew existed.
Hi Paul
Where can i find the buffing compound? I recall that green lump you have in your workshop, but I have no idea where to find one.
Many thanks
Hi Matt
I bought this product from Amazon uk for £5.30 free pp, you can also buy on Ebay. its called polishing compound or jewellers rouge. Good luck
Paul,
Thank you for all of your time help. I have a question about wood vises. I am looking at an old Wilton and an old Morgan. In your experience, does one have an advantage over the other? They both have the bench dog that pops up and are in decent condition. Thank you again and I appreciate an input you have.
Joe
Great list. For beginners and non English as a first language speakers it would be great if each instrument could have a photo next to it.
Hi Paul,
Do I have to buy a jack plane and smoothing plane?Is it possible to buy one of them?Which one is most essantial?
Thank You
The #4 or #3 smoothing plane is the single most useful in the bench plane range. I recommend choosing older models by Stanley and Record secondhand from the pre 1970s era ideally. Short, light and flexible and extremely versatile, it is like the Arabian bloodline of horses of bench planes rather than the emerging range offered by makers that are heavy draught horse types that though strong and powerful are highly restricted by weight and body mass. The jack plane should be the next bench plane type you can consider when you have worked with the shorter plane to see if you need a longer plane. At least 95% of my daily work I accomplish with a basic, non retrofitted Stanley plane with its standard cutting iron; the one that came with the plane. Thinner irons work exceptionally well and were developed by the master designer of this plane Leonard Bailey back in the 1860s. Again, don’t fall for advertising jargon by makers and sales outlets that there is a need for thicker irons to prevent chatter resulting with thin cutting irons. There is no need. My bench planes have never chattered. If you need more in depth information on this and what I consider the core essential tools I would recommend my new book Essential Woodworking Hand Tools. It is available with a three-DVD set and gives great detail about the plane.
Hey paul, what would be the minimum set you would recommend someone starting out with?
I currently have
Cheap Power Tools
Miter Saw
Table Saw
Drill
Jig Saw
Antique Hand Tools
Disston D-8
Stanley #4
~1950 Miller Falls 9 1/4″ plane
New Cheap Tools
6 pc Harbor Freight Chisels
A few harbor freight clamps
Assortment of Wet/Dry Sandpaper
10″ Harbor Freight flush cut pull saw ( I heard I had to tape the bottom to use it as a flush saw oddly enough)
No 33 Bench plane from Harbor Freight. (I plan to convert this to a scrub plane)
Harbor Freight Combination Square
TEKTON 30812 Double-Faced Soft Mallet, 35 mm
Good New Hand tools
1/8″ Narex Chisel
Ultra Sharp II Diamond Sharpening Stone Kit
Woodstock D2902 1-Pound Extra Fine Buffing Compound, Green
Leather Scraps