bugbear
Established Member
From a 1945 article in woodworker, by a British Guy working with (employing, I think)
Indian carpenters:
Some use the ordinary oil stone, but many use a combination
of a piece of open grained timber, a stone of the flint species
which is ground into fine crystals, and a few drops of water.
The water and crystals are mixed to a rough paste, this
is thinly smeared on the timber, and the craftsman sharpens up.
After a time this improvised hone needs the paste treatment only
occasionally. The grain of the timber fills and makes a hard, black
surface which is strangely efficient.
I think the words "improvised" and "strangely" tell us more
about the author than the process.
BugBear
Indian carpenters:
Some use the ordinary oil stone, but many use a combination
of a piece of open grained timber, a stone of the flint species
which is ground into fine crystals, and a few drops of water.
The water and crystals are mixed to a rough paste, this
is thinly smeared on the timber, and the craftsman sharpens up.
After a time this improvised hone needs the paste treatment only
occasionally. The grain of the timber fills and makes a hard, black
surface which is strangely efficient.
I think the words "improvised" and "strangely" tell us more
about the author than the process.
BugBear