About This Book
This study traces the gradual evolution of hand woodworking tools from the 17th through the 19th centuries, examining how specialization, configuration, and incremental change shaped implements used by carpenters, joiners, and cabinetmakers. It emphasizes the chronic anonymity and dating difficulties of tools, surveys printed sources and illustrative manuals that document types and uses, and highlights museum collections and restorations as crucial evidence. The analysis considers national patterns and the predominance of British designs in American practice until the late 19th century, and discusses how visual features, surviving examples, and scarce written records inform efforts to classify and date tool forms.
About the Author
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