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Custom Handcrafted Furniture

Please contact me if you would like to discuss a commission for a particular piece of furniture. In general, my interests are focused on Queen Anne and Chippendale styles, as well as Shaker. I am happy to talk with you regarding any design. I do not do built-in installations, just free-standing furniture.


Bowsaw Pins

I am now offering two different pairs of bowsaw pins. The larger tapered pins are copies of the hardware from a 15" bowsaw with handles made by James Howarth, a Sheffield tool maker, sometime around 1835. The smaller pins are copied from a 6" coping saw sized bowsaw made by Melhuish of London, a tool maker from the 18th into the 20th centuries. These are designed to use pinless blades. Tapered pins are seen on many if not all antique bowsaws, but are no longer available. Bowsaws nowadays have straight sided pins. The advantage of tapered pins is that the handles lock into the bowsaw frame more tightly and are less likely to loosen during use and have the bowsaw frame rotate unexpectedly. Because of the taper, the fit into the frame will not loosen over time as well. The pins are $40 per pair,and $2 for shipping.

Travishers

Elia Bizzarri (http://www.handtoolwoodworking.com) and I make these chairmaker’s travishers. The tools are made with two different radii: 5” for the sharp curve of the back of the seat, and 12” for the more gentle curves towards the front. These can be purchased made from either walnut with a hornbeam wear plate (left, $100 each) or a more artistically sculpted set made from highly figured maple and with either ebony or rosewood for the wearplate (right, $200 each or a set for $350).

Windsor Chairmaker’s Jigs and Pattern Sets

I have had the opportunity to teach Windsor Chairmaking at John C.Campbell Folk School (http://www.folkschool.org) with Elia Bizzarri. For these classes, I have prepared a set of templates for laying out the turnings and crest rails, and for laying out the seat blank, with elevations. In addition, I have a boring jig for holding the turnings while drilling the mortises forms.

Template set (specify fanback or double rod back birdcage)…………..………… ….$150

Boring Jig…………………………………………………………………………………….$100

Bending Jigs (fan back crest rail or birdcage upper and lower crest rods………….…$ 25


Planemaker’s Buck

This buck is useful for holding molding plane blanks while shaping the sole or cutting the mortise or sawing the throat. The blank is held in place by wedges and spacers and allows one to quickly reposition the blank during the shaping. This buck is based on a jig described by Kenneth Roberts (Wooden Planes in 19th Century America), from the Marples plane factory in Sheffield, England. $150.


Finial Carving

This is my design for holding turned finials while hand carving them with a flame pattern, for example. This design was inspired by a wheelwright’s spokeshave vise, seen at Williamsburg, VA. One of the to heads slides on a track, and the finial is held in tapered holes. The finial is turned with a matching tapered tenon at both ends. After the carving process is finished, the top tenon is turned off, and the lower tenon is used to fit the fixture into the project. $150.



Angle Gauge. These gauges are useful for setting either plane blades or chisels in Veritas or Ellipse type honing guides. Each gauge has an inch and millimeter rule for setting the blade extension accurately for re-honing tools. The left side of the gauge has a fence for squaring the tool up in the honing guide. There are horizontal lines scribed at 5 degree increments for estimating the angle of the bevel (this is informational since the measured extension is the critical value for recreating a bevel. The underside has a ledger to hold the guide against the workbench. $25.


Bill Anderson


Edwards Mountain Woodworks


57 Woodside Trail


Chapel Hill, NC 27517-6077


phone: 919.932.6050


http://www.edwardsmountainwoodworks.com

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