Rosewood Infill Plane
Check out the front bun on this uniquely quirky rosewood infill plane. The bun looks like it was made from clay, molded to the user’s hand, and then painted to look like wood. Seriously, have you ever seen that shaped bun before? Can’t say we have. It’s different. And we’re not afraid of different. We embrace it.
And for that extra layer of historical insight, see how the prior user(s) smacked the holy hell out of the front bun with a hammer? That, ladies and gentlemen, is why they (someone other than whoever made this plane) invented strike plates. But what interesting battle scars from bygone days of beating the s#^t out of your plane to dislodge the stuck iron. Simpler times.
Check out the front bun on this uniquely quirky rosewood infill plane. The bun looks like it was made from clay, molded to the user’s hand, and then painted to look like wood. Seriously, have you ever seen that shaped bun before? Can’t say we have. It’s different. And we’re not afraid of different. We embrace it.
And for that extra layer of historical insight, see how the prior user(s) smacked the holy hell out of the front bun with a hammer? That, ladies and gentlemen, is why they (someone other than whoever made this plane) invented strike plates. But what interesting battle scars from bygone days of beating the s#^t out of your plane to dislodge the stuck iron. Simpler times.