Posts: 4,004
Threads: 0
Joined: Apr 2002
Is it cleaning up all the stuff you chiseled off?
Posts: 63
Threads: 0
Joined: May 2014
Measuring? Assemblying? Finishing? Thinking?
Cleaning mentioned above is good candidate too...
Posts: 929
Threads: 1
Joined: Sep 2008
I would think that sawing would be important. I personally look at woodworking as a process of subtraction (cutting and shaping of the individual pieces) and addition (gluing the pieces together).
Posts: 14,851
Threads: 10
Joined: Jan 2010
Location: southeastern VA
Sawing, filing, scraping, shearing, and rasping all use the same sort of cutting action as a chisel (some of them on very different scales, of course).
Sanding/grinding come to mind as possibly different.
Measuring/designing mentioned above also seem possible. Cleaning up after the chiseling would seem like a throw-away type joke to me. So, CS could have said that.
"the most important safety feature on any tool is the one between your ears." - Ken Vick
A wish for you all: May you keep buying green bananas.
Posts: 3,156
Threads: 1
Joined: Jan 2005
Location: Northern Ohio
(12-30-2019, 12:22 PM)toolmiser Wrote: I read once that all woodworking basically is one of two operations. !st one is chiseling, meaning cutting, planing, etc. all are pretty much a variation of using a chisel. My problem is I can't remember the second and I should be able to figure it out. A mind is a terrible thing to waste.
It might have been Christhopher Swartz when he was a guest on Woodwright Shop with Roy Underhill. It probably wasn't original from him either.
I thought it was interesting, but not enough to recall
Thanks1
I believe it was Chiseling which was defined as any woodworking operation requiring a cutting tool - and Hammering which was defined as the application of force. I don't remember where I heard it either.
Mike
Posts: 1,289
Threads: 0
Joined: Sep 2012
Location: Mobile, Alabama
I think the act of "fitting" might encompass design, measuring, assembly, fastening, etc. I guess that if you are trying to pare it down to bare bones basics, finishing and clean-up aren't really wood working. And, in my case, thinking is hardly basic :>)
Posts: 6,678
Threads: 1
Joined: Jan 2003
Location: Southern California
Since almost anything can be built with just a chisel, I'll suggest design as the missing half.
Thanks, Curt
-----------------
"Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards."
-- Soren Kierkegaard
Posts: 116
Threads: 0
Joined: Jan 2011
Per Roy Underhill, all operations fall under wedge or edge.
Posts: 4,764
Threads: 0
Joined: Sep 2009
Location: The GA Lowcountry
The answer is chiseling and masking your chiseling mistakes.
---------------------------------------------------
When something has to be done, no one knows how to do it. When they "pay" you to do it, they become "experts".