View allAll Photos Tagged Handtool
I picked this vintage crosscut saw up at a flea mart for $10. I am going to restore it and bring it back to its original glory. There is no markings to indicate the maker.
Muddy boots and gardening tools on back deck with flower pots with hyacinth bulb in pot after working in garden.
All my photographs are copyright protected, If you wish to use my photos please contact me and we can discuss usage fees.
©Jim Corwin_All Rights Reserved 2022, Contact me at jscorwin@mac.com or visit my PhotoShelter site using the link Jim Corwin Photography on my Profile Page.
My website is jimcorwin.photoshelter.com
My E-Mail Address is jscorwin@mac.com
3 models of our Scandi Brother Damascus knives in Damascus steel version with 3.9", 5" and 6.3" blade length. Lapland curly birch handle. Cow hide leather sheath.
This is a picture featuring probably the best woodworking tool I own, a Lie-Nielsen jack plane. I don't think I'm worthy of it, but I'm trying to be. I was shaving some paper thin slices off this walnut board and thought it might make a good shot. The image also features a lignum vitae mallet I turned a long time ago, and the bench I made in (you guessed it) 1994.
The School begins classes once each year, early in October. Students are divided into sections of 12 students each, and get two hours of classroom instruction and six hours of shop instruction per day, Monday through Friday 8am - 5pm.
Basic Boatbuilding is the focus of the first semester, which runs from early October to late December.
The instructors assume that most, if not all, students have no woodworking skills and proceed from that assumption. The skills taught in the first semester are those essential to boatbuilding, and the course, for that reason, is very "hands-on".
Students learn to sharpen and use all their tools, and participate in a wide range of individual skill-building exercises, from learning to make the joints commonly used in boatbuilding to a series of tools. Basic lathe work is taught. Students learn to draft and make a half-model. Then, working in pairs, they learn to loft a boat full-size on the floor. Finally, working, together as a team, the semester culminates in December as students work together to build a flat-bottomed skiff.
The Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding is located in Port Hadlock WA and is a private, accredited non-profit vocational school.
Our mission is to teach and preserve the fine art of wooden boatbuilding and traditional maritime crafts. We build both commissioned and speculative boats for sale while teaching students boatbuilding the skills they need to work in the marine trades.
You can find us on the web at www.nwboatschool.org .
You can reach us via e-mail at info@nwboatschool.org or by calling us at 360-385-4948
Some collection of completed orders. It is not often possible to put together so many of our creations that has been made in a while. This morning before saying "Goodbye" to our work we had a chance to document this happen.
Title / Titre :
A worker with a hammer repairs a ship's propeller at a Halifax shipyard, Nova Scotia /
Un ouvrier muni d’un marteau répare l’hélice d’un navire dans un chantier maritime de Halifax (Nouvelle-Écosse)
Creator(s) / Créateur(s) : Harry Rowed
Date(s) : April 1942 / avril 1942
Reference No. / Numéro de référence : ITEM 3196023, 3627033
central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.redirect?app=fonandcol&id=3196...
central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.redirect?app=fonandcol&id=3627...
Location / Lieu : Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada / Halifax, Nouvelle-Écosse, Canada
Credit / Mention de source :
Harry Rowed. National Film Board. Still Photography Division. Library and Archives Canada, e000760663 /
Harry Rowed. Office national du film du Canada. Service de la photographie. Bibliothèque et Archives Canada, e000760663