Saw Box

Wayland

Hárbarðr
Found a carpenters toolbox recently that needed a bit of restoration. It seemed like decent timber but had been painted with thick black paint at some point in it's life.

Out came the paint stripper and on went some furniture wax instead. I added three removable box drawers for hardware and the like and then set about making the mounts for a couple of saws in the drop down front.

Saw-Box.jpg


Added some labels and handles to match the Engineers Tool Chest I fettled up a while ago. Must admit, I'm quite pleased with the result.

This will carry some of the larger tools that don't fit so well in the other tool chest and be portable for our Steam Tent Co-op events.
 
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Macaroon

A bemused & bewildered
Jan 5, 2013
7,243
386
74
SE Wales
All the carpenter's toolboxes seemed to have had that thick black paint finish; My father was a joiner/coachbuilder and during a very long apprenticeship he built four toolboxes to hold the tools he made and aquired as he progressed. He didn't know why but it was how they were all told to do it.

Those four boxes are still as good as the day they were made and still in occasional use by a brother who followed him onto the wood.

Your restoration and mods look great and it's nice to see such things get a new lease of life.
 

Fraxinus

Settler
Oct 26, 2008
935
31
Canterbury
These types of tool boxes were often made as carpenter and joiners practice pieces during the apprenticeship but had an ongoing use or function afterwards. They were an advert for your skill to potential employers but needed finishing/weather protection and black paint was probably the most accessible or cheapest method available.
These tool boxes also acted as a seat, a saw horse or a hop up on site.
I still own my one (varnished) and my father in laws black painted one, great bits of kit and so glad to see this one being used again.
Rob.
 

demographic

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Apr 15, 2005
4,762
786
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Looks more like a joiners box than a carpenters to me.
Although carpenters often get called Joiners (I get it all the time) the difference is basically...

Shop/Bench Joiner usually works in a workshop, where they have had have access to stationary circular saws for donkeys years but till recently have still cut some joints with backsaws.
Carpenters usually work on sites doing the framing of the floors, roofs internal walls the stairs, door casings and so on (first fix) and the finish work like doors, skirting and so on which gets called Second Fix.

Consequently joiners boxes are more likely to have backsaws (like the brass backed saws you have there) and carpenters have a box thats big enough to fit a handsaw (which doesn't have a separate metal back) inside there. Most carpenters don't need a backsaw for their daily job.

As for the colour? Well for some reason I'm unaware of they get painted black, dunno why but most of them I've seen have been painted black right from the outset.
They were kind of an apprentice project, like a sawhorse and an open topped tool tote as well.
 

demographic

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Apr 15, 2005
4,762
786
-------------
These types of tool boxes were often made as carpenter and joiners practice pieces during the apprenticeship but had an ongoing use or function afterwards. They were an advert for your skill to potential employers but needed finishing/weather protection and black paint was probably the most accessible or cheapest method available.
These tool boxes also acted as a seat, a saw horse or a hop up on site.
I still own my one (varnished) and my father in laws black painted one, great bits of kit and so glad to see this one being used again.
Rob.

Must have taken my time with that reply as you covered some of the stuff I was on about as well.
 

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