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Recent Bios FAQ

230401 John Holladay <docholladay0820@g...> 2012‑05‑25 Re: The pillaging of Placerville (Galoat/Lore) / How I
Very funny.  Welcome aboard.  The porch is a great place, but not likely to
help you with your addiction, unless the goal is MORE TOOLS.  Isn't it
always.

Doc
On May 25, 2012 4:21 PM, "Brian Rytel"  wrote:

> The pillaging of Placerville (Galoat/Lore) / How I became a Galoot / Bio
>
> Staring at the floodgates:
>
> It all started simply, and interest in traditional Japanese & Chinese
> joinery (spurred by a friend). Some library reading and I became
> familiar with Japanese tools. Toshio Odate's book was particularly
> enlightening.
>
> My grandfather was a carpenter (2x4/framer) but died when I was young,
> I never got to see him work. My father ended up with some of his
> tools. I wanted a couple of smaller things (planes chisels, handsaws)
> but ended up with two tailed's. One, a 40's band saw that was badly
> rusted, and is being fully restored by myself. And that is the last of
> electricity that is relevant here.
>
> Two things led me to hunt for tools:
>
> 1) The book =93Selecting and Using Handtools=94 by FWW
> 2) Stumbling across =93The Galoots Progress=94 site in search of
> information of rust removal.
>
> What in the FWW book there is a section discussing preparation for
> Flea Markets and Auctions to acquire the tools you want at a good
> value, ie list of things you need, models preferred, price range,
> condition, etc. He forgot to mention the following:
>
> When shopping for old tools you must make a firm decision early on:
> Am I a collector?
> Am I just a wood worker looking for tools?
> Am I sure I'm not a collector?
> Am I sure I can't accidentally become a collector?
>
> Of course I frequent a swap meet and kept an eye out for some tools.
>
> The floodgate springs a leak:
>
> While I picked up some small things (mallet, zigzag rule) I hadn't
> bought anything important yet.
>
> A sunny afternoon and I ran across a Stanley H1220B (hand drill, Jeff)
> in great condition. Ask for a price, $1. It wasn't till I got home
> that I realized there was a full set of bits in the handle. I used it,
> I liked it. Then I needed another one.
>
> Of course, I picked around for some other things, I supplanted the
> H1220B for a Millers Falls 2-01 (bigger drill, Jeff) it was seized
> solid with dried, sticky grease. After some clean-up on it (a lot
> actually) it runs freer than, well use your imagination. The discovery
> of restoring antique hand tools.
>
> The nail in the coffin, or plane in the desk, was one of my
> great-grandfather's planes given to me by my grandmother. He worked in
> Montana as a millman in various capacities, and did my other
> great-grandfather from the same side of the family. I received a Type
> 9 or 10 No 5 (jack, Jeff) from her.
>
> The floodgates burst open/Pillaging of Placerville:
>
> So I took a trip to Northern California to see my father in
> Placerville, California.
> Along the way I found a drawknife, breast drill, Disston mitre box saw
> (no box) and a transitional in a little thrift store centrally located
> near nothing.
>
> Uh-oh.
>
> Placerville has a number of neat antique shops and cater to mid-price
> small & medium items, as most sales are by tourists. =93Mid-price, small
> & medium=94 sounds a good deal like tools and did they have them. 4
> wooden planes (jointer, fore, jack and smoother) and an archimedean
> drill.
>
> Oh boy.
>
> There was a flea market every Sunday, found lots there, including a $3
> mahogany smoother, metal zig-zag rules, and a carpenter's toolbox full
> of pre-war wrenches, that also had a S.A. Jones & Co. Bevel gauge and
> a Stanley Rule & Level Co No. 12 Type 2 (square, Jeff). I bought the
> toolbox for 2 sawset (unbranded and in the process of being
> identified).
>
> An oiled teflon slope.
>
> El Dorado county is a beautiful place to Galoot, mountains, oak and
> pine trees. And every garage sale is 2 miles of a county road.
>
> $5 for 4 Disstons and a Keen Kutter handsaw, handled augers at an
> annual market, Stanley levels here and there. An estate sale yielded 2
> Stanley folding rules (66 =BD and 27). The P.W. Square from a previous
> post came along with a transitional. Brace bits here and there. I
> stumbled into a couple of Stanley block planes and a North Bros +
> Yankee (no Stanley) No 1555 (2-speed breast drill, Jeff). Then a
> Goodell-Pratt No. 279 (aluminum breast drill, Jeff) and more and more.
>
> The soggy valley below:
>
> Very few of us are colle- (ahem). We're woodworkers, enthusiasts,
> history-preservationists. To cope (or deny as it were) with my
> affliction, I decided that I will start selling many of the pieces I
> found. That way it's an inventory, not a colle- (what was I saying?).
> An essential ingredient to a good business is a good inventory right?
> Therefore I must go find more great items for the inventory.
>
> Hopeless.
>
> And I need to remember to do more woodworking, as that is the primary
> thing.
>
> Any galloots in the SoCal area, either Orange or Los Angeles county
> may see me hunting tools at swap meets or garage sales, flag me down
> or arrange to hunt together if you like.
>
> But enough about me.
>
> Brian J.M. Rytel
> brian.rytel@g...
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