• This Old House Mobile

Chisels

By Harry Sawyers, This Old House magazine
japanese and western chisels Photo:  David Lawrence
Back 1 of 9 Next

Western and Japanese Style

Western-style chisels (left) have long, narrow, alloy blades that are easy to sharpen and quick to dull. This chisel's boxwood handle has two metal bands, which prevent it from splitting, and an octagonal shape to stop the tool from rolling off a work­bench.
10 1/2 inches long, 3/4 inch wide; $45; woodcraft.com

Japanese chisels (right) forge-weld low-carbon steel (for resilience) with high-carbon steel (for sharpness). The process, used to make samurai swords, creates the swirls. Japanese blades get sharper and hold an edge longer—an asset for woodworkers—and have concave "faces" to reduce friction.
14 inches long, 1 1/2 inches wide; $500; thejapanwoodworker.com

Gallery: Best Random-Orbit Sanders
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • Google Plus
  • Email
Back 1 of 9 Next
Home Interior Exterior Remodels + Upgrades How-To + Repair Watch TOH TV Subscribe to This Old House
Privacy Policy Terms of Service View Full Site
© 2013 Time Inc. All rights reserved Time Warner Company