Monday, March 10, 2025
HomeSummarySimplifying the Skew

Simplifying the Skew

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For many woodworkers, using the skew can be quite daunting. This type of chisel seems difficult to master, but in reality, most of the knowledge you need to handle it properly is learned in the early years of our childhood. The only cuts you can do with it are point and edge cutting. Unlike other chisels, the bevel shouldn’t be rubbing the work piece. The actual motion is more of a glide than anything else. This tool opens many opportunities in your work, and neglecting to learn how to use it limits your output and creativity.

Key Takeaways:

  • Unlike with bowl turning, using a skew chisel requires moving one’s body.
  • Skew turning involves lightly gliding the bevel over the wood’s surface.
  • All four surfaces must be honed so that the skew edge is razor sharp.

“There are only three profiles, or shapes, you can cut on a spindle with a skew: straight lines (cylinders or tapers), shallow concave (long coves), and convex (beads).”

Read more: here

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Staff Writer
Staff Writerhttps://woodcures.com
As Staff Writer I am or we are the writers bringing inspiring and uplifting news of the Woodworking World to those of us seeking a way to disconnect from all virtual realities and rediscover ourselves through aligning our brains with our hands! It is a curing way to use wood to rediscover the real world. And of course, we make something that actually exist in the real world!
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