solliden style chisel handles rn v1 -...

12
1 “Solliden Style” Chisel Handles: A Swedish Mystery by Randall Nelson Swedish chisels, epitomized by the production of the EA Berg Company, are worldfamous for their superior steel, amazing cutting ability and edge retention. To wood workers and tool collectors, they are equally well known for the handsome design of the wooden handles found on the late 19 th and early 20 th century tools, which featured a standardized, yet complex turned pattern of plain Birch or highlyfigured Masur Birch, as well as a fancy brass ferrule with decorative lines of knurling and a hammer ring at the top, to prevent splitting of the handle during use. When new, they also had a golden color from the shellac finish. Two golden handled Bergs My introduction to these tools, in the early 70’s, was when I started my apprenticeship with a Japanese sculptor who had been one of my professors in college. He had several EA Berg chisels and regarded them highly. I remember how those golden Birch handles stood out from the other chisels on the rack in his studio. As a boy, I had heard stories about my greatgrandfather, Oscar George Nelson, who had been a finish carpenter in Sweden (somehow, the possibility of a Swede being a Finn always made everyone laugh). Now, I imagined he must have used such tools and I wanted some of my own, but as soon as I started inquiring about them, I was told I was wasting my time, since “the factory had burned down in the 50’s and they were no longer available”. I heard this same story from hardware store owners and from other wood workers, but I kept looking. At a flea market, I found a couple of old, short butt chisels marked Gensco the handles were the right shape, but they were a yelloworange plastic! I bought them anyway and they worked OK, but I lusted for the longbladed Berg chisels with the Birch handles like my teacher had.

Upload: phamkiet

Post on 07-Jul-2018

227 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Solliden Style Chisel Handles RN v1 - galootopiagalootopia.com/.../uploads/Solliden-Style-Chisel-Handles-RN-v1.pdf“Solliden"Style”Chisel"Handles:"A"Swedish"Mystery"""""Randall"Nelson""

1  

“Solliden  Style”  Chisel  Handles:  A  Swedish  Mystery  by  Randall  Nelson  

  Swedish  chisels,  epitomized  by  the  production  of  the  EA  Berg  Company,  are  world-­‐famous  for  their  superior  steel,  amazing  cutting  ability  and  edge  retention.  To  wood  workers  and  tool  collectors,  they  are  equally  well  known  for  the  handsome  design  of  the  wooden  handles  found  on  the  late  19th  and  early  20th  century  tools,  which  featured  a  standardized,  yet  complex  turned  pattern  of  plain  Birch  or  highly-­‐figured  Masur  Birch,  as  well  as  a  fancy  brass  ferrule  with  decorative  lines  of  knurling  and  a  hammer  ring  at  the  top,  to  prevent  splitting  of  the  handle  during  use.  When  new,  they  also  had  a  golden  color  from  the  shellac  finish.    

 

Two  golden  handled  Bergs  

My  introduction  to  these  tools,  in  the  early  70’s,  was  when  I  started  my  apprenticeship  with  a  Japanese  sculptor  who  had  been  one  of  my  professors  in  college.  He  had  several  EA  Berg  chisels  and  regarded  them  highly.  I  remember  how  those  golden  Birch  handles  stood  out  from  the  other  chisels  on  the  rack  in  his  studio.  As  a  boy,  I  had  heard  stories  about  my  great-­‐grandfather,  Oscar  George  Nelson,  who  had  been  a  finish  carpenter  in  Sweden  (somehow,  the  possibility  of  a  Swede  being  a  Finn  always  made  everyone  laugh).  Now,  I  imagined  he  must  have  used  such  tools  and  I  wanted  some  of  my  own,  but  as  soon  as  I  started  inquiring  about  them,  I  was  told  I  was  wasting  my  time,  since  “the  factory  had  burned  down  in  the  50’s  and  they  were  no  longer  available”.  I  heard  this  same  story  from  hardware  store  owners  and  from  other  wood  workers,  but  I  kept  looking.  At  a  flea  market,  I  found  a  couple  of  old,  short  butt  chisels  marked  Gensco-­‐  the  handles  were  the  right  shape,  but  they  were  a  yellow-­‐orange  plastic!  I  bought  them  anyway  and  they  worked  OK,  but  I  lusted  for  the  long-­‐bladed  Berg  chisels  with  the  Birch  handles  like  my  teacher  had.  

Page 2: Solliden Style Chisel Handles RN v1 - galootopiagalootopia.com/.../uploads/Solliden-Style-Chisel-Handles-RN-v1.pdf“Solliden"Style”Chisel"Handles:"A"Swedish"Mystery"""""Randall"Nelson""

“Solliden  Style”  Chisel  Handles:  A  Swedish  Mystery                                                                                                                                            Randall  Nelson  

  2  

 

Plastic  handled  Gensco  Chisels  

 Eventually,  I  found  a  few  wooden  handled  Swedish  chisels  in  a  surplus  tool  shop  on  Canal  Street  in  NYC.  They  were  all  butt  chisels  and  each  had  a  golden  sticker  on  the  handle  that  said  Solliden  Sweden  SAB.  

 

A  Solliden  chisel  group  

Page 3: Solliden Style Chisel Handles RN v1 - galootopiagalootopia.com/.../uploads/Solliden-Style-Chisel-Handles-RN-v1.pdf“Solliden"Style”Chisel"Handles:"A"Swedish"Mystery"""""Randall"Nelson""

“Solliden  Style”  Chisel  Handles:  A  Swedish  Mystery                                                                                                                                            Randall  Nelson  

  3  

I  was  so  pleased  with  them  that  I  couldn’t  wait  to  show  them  to  my  teacher.  He  took  one  look  at  them  and  said  “Cheap,  not  the  best  quality  steel.  Soft  Beechwood  handles,  they  won’t  last.  These  are  tools  made  for  the  amateur-­‐  just  Handy  Andy  grade.”  

 His  assessment  that  day  of  my  Solliden  chisels  seems  to  have  been  echoed  by  the  greater  tool-­‐using  and  collecting  public  for  everything  that  wasn’t  stamped  EA  Berg.  When  it  comes  to  Swedish  chisels,  in  most  people’s  minds  there  is  EA  Berg  and  then  there  are  just  some  other  tool-­‐making  imitators.  However,  I  still  have  those  Solliden  chisels  I  purchased  so  many  years  ago  on  Canal  Street  and  have  used  them,  quite  successfully,  on  many  projects.  Still,  for  many  years,  all  I  wanted  was  Berg  chisels  and  I  sought  them  avidly,  at  flea  markets  and  old  tool  shops  and  I  slowly  added  to  my  collection.  Then  along  came  Ebay  and  the  ability  to  find  and  purchase  old  tools  constantly!  With  time,  I  started  to  appreciate  what  a  wide  array  of  different  Swedish  chisel  makers  there  must  have  been,  since  I  was  constantly  seeing  unknown  brands  of  Swedish  chisels  available  on  Ebay.  Many  had  colorful,  interesting  stickers  on  the  handles.  

 

A  wide  array  of  brands  using  Solliden  style  handles    

The  pursuit  and  study  of  Berg  tools  started  to  slip  into  the  background.  I  began  actively  collecting  as  good  an  example  of  each  different  brand  as  I  could  find  and  afford.  As  I  acquired  more  tools  I  started  comparing  blade  designs  and  sticker  designs,  looking  for  similarities.  

 I  was  looking  at  a  Beaver  brand  chisel  and  a  Castor  brand-­‐  the  stickers  are  almost  identical,  but  the  Castor  is  in  different  colors  and  in  Spanish.  Then  I  started  actually  looking  at  the  handles-­‐  they  were  also  identical.  When  put  side  to  side,  everything  lined  up  perfectly.  These  handles  had  obviously  been  made  on  the  same  machine,  using  the  same  pattern  cutter.  I  looked  closer  and  then  noticed  something  else-­‐  

Page 4: Solliden Style Chisel Handles RN v1 - galootopiagalootopia.com/.../uploads/Solliden-Style-Chisel-Handles-RN-v1.pdf“Solliden"Style”Chisel"Handles:"A"Swedish"Mystery"""""Randall"Nelson""

“Solliden  Style”  Chisel  Handles:  A  Swedish  Mystery                                                                                                                                            Randall  Nelson  

  4  

they  looked  very  similar  to  the  handles  on  my  old  friends.  I  got  out  my  Solliden  chisels  and  lined  them  up  with  the  Beaver  and  Castor-­‐  the  handles  were  all  identical.  I  now  call  this  style  of  handle  Solliden  Style,  for  want  of  a  better  name.  I  started  laying  out  all  the  different  brands  I  had  collected  that  still  had  the  original  handles.  I  was  surprised  at  how  many  were  identical,  or  nearly  so.  This  could  not  just  be  a  coincidence.  I  was  even  more  surprised  to  discover  slight  variations  from  one  handle  to  another,  even  within  the  same  brand  of  tool.  But  this  should  be  expected  also,  since  wooden  handles  would  have  much  more  possibility  of  slight  variations  than  a  plastic  handle,  because  of  the  complex  elements  that  must  come  together  to  make  a  Swedish  style  wooden  chisel  handle  that  works  properly.  When  compared  to  the  relatively  simple  task  of  injection  molding  a  plastic  handle  you  soon  realize  why  the  wooden  handle  disappeared  from  Swedish  chisels  once  plastic  technology  became  readily  available.  

After  looking  at  many  chisel  handles,  there  seem  to  be  three  basic  mass  produced  variations  on  the  standard  Swedish  wooden  chisel  handle  type,  plus  a  few  that  seem  to  have  been  more  idiosyncratic,  so  possibly  they  were  user-­‐made  or  made  in-­‐house  by  a  small  company  as  part  of  their  own  production.  The  three  basic  types  are:  #1.  Berg/Jernbolaget,  #2.  Solliden  and    #3.  Gensco.    Each  type  has  a  few  basic  characteristics  that  help  to  make  it  recognizable.  There  are  also  several  specialty  handles  designs  that  I  may  get  into  at  a  later  date,  but  let’s  stay  with  the  standard  handle  pattern  for  now.  

 The  first,  #1.,  should  rightly  be  called  Jernbolaget/Berg,  since  the  Jernbolaget  Company,  which  started  in  1811,  is  far  older  than  Berg,  which  started  up  in  1879.  Jernbolaget’s  handle  design  was  probably  copied  by  Berg  when  they  went  into  wooden  chisel  handle  production  for  their  tools.  I  have  seen  a  few  very  early  Berg  chisels  and  the  handles  were  either  Boxwood,  in  the  semi-­‐octagonal  design  popularly  called  the  London  pattern,  or  are  turned  from  what  looks  like  English  Oak.    

 

Three  early  Berg  chisels,  the  top  one  has  a  handle  of  English  Oak  

Page 5: Solliden Style Chisel Handles RN v1 - galootopiagalootopia.com/.../uploads/Solliden-Style-Chisel-Handles-RN-v1.pdf“Solliden"Style”Chisel"Handles:"A"Swedish"Mystery"""""Randall"Nelson""

“Solliden  Style”  Chisel  Handles:  A  Swedish  Mystery                                                                                                                                            Randall  Nelson  

  5  

This  would  make  some  sense,  since  I  recall  reading  that  the  early  Swedish  edge  tool  manufacturers  used  the  industry  in  Sheffield,  England  as  their  model.  However,  I’m  not  sure  why  would  Berg  would  need  to  import  handles  from  England  for  their  early  tools.  Anyway,  Jernbolaget  handles  and  Berg  handles  are  virtually  indistinguishable  in  overall  design.  

The  typical  #1  handle  comes  in  six  graduated  sizes,  has  three  pairs  of  finely  cut  grooves  and  has  a  slightly  “squashed”  appearance  to  what  I  call  the  pillow  area,  the  rounded  swelling  just  above  the  ferrule;  as  if  the  handle  had  been  hit  quite  hard  and  had  compressed  this  area  down  just  a  bit.  This  “squashed”  effect  is  even  more  pronounced  in  the  pattern  for  the  socket  chisel  handles.  The  transitional  shaft  between  the  Pillow  and  the  Upper  Barrel  is  quite  robust,  hopefully  giving  plenty  of  wood  for  holding  the  tang  of  the  chisel  without  the  wood  cracking.  They  are  all  made  of  Birch,  either  Masur  Birch  or  plain  Birch.  I  have  never  seen  a  single  chisel  from  either  company  that  has  an  original  factory  handle  that  is  made  from  Beechwood.  The  ferrules  always  have  two  rows  of  slightly  angled  knurling,  with  the  lines  cut  very  fine.  These  lines  can  be  angled  to  the  left  or  to  the  right;  I  have  examples  where  the  two  bands  go  in  opposite  directions.  I  have  also  seen  many  examples  where  the  ferrules  are  not  the  regular  brass  but  are  steel  or  chromed  brass.  For  either  company,  the  hammer  ring  at  the  top  of  the  handle  can  be  held  on  with  two  brads  through  holes  in  the  ring  or  (usually  later)  dimpled  into  the  wood.  When  you  find  a  tool  that  has  two  small,  headless  brads  driven  in  above  the  ring,  clamping  it  in  place,  this  is  usually  an  indication  of  a  Jernbolaget  tool,  or  a  very  early  Berg  tool.  Another  indication  of  maker  is  the  stamp,  in  the  wood  of  the  handle,  “Made  in  Sweden”.  I  have  only  seen  this  on  Berg  chisel  handles.  

 

An  early  2”  Berg  chisel  with  a  Jernbolaget  style  handle    

 

Page 6: Solliden Style Chisel Handles RN v1 - galootopiagalootopia.com/.../uploads/Solliden-Style-Chisel-Handles-RN-v1.pdf“Solliden"Style”Chisel"Handles:"A"Swedish"Mystery"""""Randall"Nelson""

“Solliden  Style”  Chisel  Handles:  A  Swedish  Mystery                                                                                                                                            Randall  Nelson  

  6  

 

A  group  of  Berg  tanged  chisels  

 

 

A  group  of  Berg  socket  chisels  

Page 7: Solliden Style Chisel Handles RN v1 - galootopiagalootopia.com/.../uploads/Solliden-Style-Chisel-Handles-RN-v1.pdf“Solliden"Style”Chisel"Handles:"A"Swedish"Mystery"""""Randall"Nelson""

“Solliden  Style”  Chisel  Handles:  A  Swedish  Mystery                                                                                                                                            Randall  Nelson  

  7  

The  characteristics  of  #2.,  the  Solliden  type  handle,  first  start  with  the  material,  Beechwood.    

 

Solliden  handles  close  up  

Overwhelmingly,  the  Solliden  style  handle  is  made  of  this  wood,  although  upon  closer  examination  I  have  found  a  few  that  are  made  of  Birch,  usually  in  the  larger  handle  sizes.  The  next  thing  to  look  at  is  the  brass  ferrule-­‐  if  it  is  brass  with  two  lines  of  coarse,  vertical  knurling,  then  the  handle  is  Solliden  style,  no  matter  what  the  blade  style  or  maker.  The  typical  Solliden  style  handle  has  a  very  “globular”  pillow  above  the  ferrule  and  a  slightly  thinner  transitional  shaft.  The  grooves  are  also  done  in  three  pairs,  but  are  typically  cut  deeper  than  will  be  seen  in  a  Berg  or  a  Jernbolaget  handle.  The  hammer  rings  are  usually  shiny  black  and  are  held  on  by  two  small  brads  through  holes  in  the  ring.  They  typically  come  in  only  four  graduated  sizes,  to  accommodate  any  chisel  from  1/8”  up  to  2”,  which  often  results  in  some  tools  where  the  blade  and  the  handle  looked  slightly  out  of  proportion.  Berg  would  make  much  larger  handles  for  their  larger  chisels  and  gouges,  typically  using  six  graduated  sizes  for  their  handles.  I  have  only  one  Solliden  style  handle  that  was  made  for  a  socket  chisel-­‐  this  is  for  a  Wallins  chisel,  which  is  only  marked  Wallins,  Sweden.  I  have  a  later  Wallins  chisel,  with  a  red  plastic  handle,  that  is  marked  Wallins,  Lidkoping,  Sweden.    

I  bring  this  up  because  both  Berg  and  Jernbolaget  always  included  Eskilstuna  in  their  blade  stamps,  whenever  there  was  room.  Tools  using  Solliden  style  handles  often  have  no  indication  of  where  or  by  whom  they  were  produced,  other  than  the  generic  “Made  in  Sweden”  stamp.  

 

 

 

Page 8: Solliden Style Chisel Handles RN v1 - galootopiagalootopia.com/.../uploads/Solliden-Style-Chisel-Handles-RN-v1.pdf“Solliden"Style”Chisel"Handles:"A"Swedish"Mystery"""""Randall"Nelson""

“Solliden  Style”  Chisel  Handles:  A  Swedish  Mystery                                                                                                                                            Randall  Nelson  

  8  

 

Red  plastic  Wallins  handle  

The  third  mass-­‐produced  style  is  for  Gensco,  which  stands  for  General  Steel  Company  and  was  an  American  company  based  in  Chicago.  

 

Gensco  wooden  handles  

Page 9: Solliden Style Chisel Handles RN v1 - galootopiagalootopia.com/.../uploads/Solliden-Style-Chisel-Handles-RN-v1.pdf“Solliden"Style”Chisel"Handles:"A"Swedish"Mystery"""""Randall"Nelson""

“Solliden  Style”  Chisel  Handles:  A  Swedish  Mystery                                                                                                                                            Randall  Nelson  

  9  

This  company  manufactured  pre-­‐fabricated  steel  buildings  after  WW2,  but  they  also  imported  Swedish  chisels  to  the  US.  Gensco  chisels  with  wooden  handles  say,  on  the  bottom  of  their  label,  in  tiny  print,  “printed  in  USA”.  Gensco  chisels  had  very  nice  Masur  Birch  handles  that  were  identical  to  Berg  handles,  except  they  are  typically  shorter  in  the  barrel-­‐  the  handle  for  a  Gensco  2”  butt  chisel  is  ¾”  shorter  than  a  Berg  handle  of  the  same  diameter.  Gensco  tools  were  made  by  the  Eskilstunasteel  Company,  which  also  made  the  Esteel  tools,  but  I  have  yet  to  acquire  any  chisels  still  with  their  original  handles  from  those  two  brands  to  use  as  references  for  any  further  comparisons.                                

To  make  a  wooden  chisel  handle,  pieces  of  wood  the  proper  size  and  quality  must  first  be  chosen  and  roughly  shaped  into  blanks,  then  cut  to  length,  chucked  into  a  lathe  and  turned,  either  individually  or  in  a  gang,  depending  on  the  type  of  equipment  available.  A  commercial  duty  lathe  will  use  a  purpose-­‐made  pattern  cutter  to  form  the  handle  profile  in  one  step,  unlike  the  series  of  cuts  with  different  lath  chisels  an  individual  would  need  to  do  to  produce  such  a  handle  on  a  regular  shop  lathe.  The  tooling  needs  to  be  quite  precise,  so  that  the  brass  ferrules  and  steel  hammer  rings  fit  snuggly  when  the  handle  is  assembled.  When  making  comparisons  between  different  handles  of  the  same  general  design,  the  place  where  I  found  the  most  variation  was  in  the  placement  and  depth  of  the  horizontal  grooves  that  typically  appear  in  pairs  in  3  different  places  on  the  standard  Swedish  chisel  handle.  Sometimes  the  grooves  are  heavily  cut,  sometimes  they  are  barely  visible  or  are  more  widely  spaced.  I  would  imagine  the  pattern  cutters  probably  got  dull  rather  quickly  and  needed  to  be  re-­‐sharpened,  which  could  soon  lead  to  minor  variations  in  the  spacing  of  grooves,  depth  of  the  shoulder,  etc.  These  are  the  typical  variations  that  show  up  most  frequently.  I  think  that,  when  handles  match  exactly  in  length,  profile  and  grooving  pattern,  it  is  safe  to  assume  that  they  were  probably  made  at  roughly  the  same  time,  on  the  same  machine,  in  the  same  factory.  

The  obvious  questions  are:  where  was  that  factory,  who  owned  it  and  what  was  its  name?  Is  there  any  truth  in  the  story  I  was  told  nearly  40  years  ago,  that  the  handle  factory  burned  down  in  the  1950’s?  A  later  clarification  that  I  heard  of  this  story  was  that  it  was  the  Berg  handle  factory  that  burned,  and  that  it  had  made  all  the  wooden  handles,  for  Berg  as  well  as  all  the  others.  My  research  would  indicate  this  idea  isn’t  true,  since  I  have  never  seen  any  Berg  tool  that  had  an  original  Beechwood  handle  with  a  Berg  sticker  on  it.  Also,  the  patterns  between  styles  #1  and  #2  are  just  too  dissimilar,  the  brass  ferrules  are  not  the  same,  the  sizes  are  different-­‐  all  of  this  would  indicate  a  separate  factory  that  was  producing  lower  cost  handles  for  the  second  tier  tool  producers.  In  Sheffield,  England,  there  were  traditionally  always  smaller  companies  making  limited  production  runs  of  tools,  known  locally  as  the  “little  masters”.  I  suspect  this  was  also  the  case  in  Sweden,  and  the  Solliden  Style  handle  factory,  whoever  and  where  ever  they  were,  produced  the  handles  for  the  Swedish  “little  masters”.  

This  is  a  list  of  the  different  chisel  brands  that  I  have  compiled,  from  my  own  collection  and  from  looking  at  examples  I  can  find  on  line,  of  companies  that  used  the  Solliden  style  handle.  This  is,  of  course,  only  a  partial  list,  since  new  Swedish  chisel  brands  seem  to  pop  up  every  few  weeks!  Each  “little  master”  chisel  maker  probably  purchased  the  handles  as  they  needed  them,  so  these  handles  are  found  on  all  types  of  chisels.  Some  are  long  paring  chisels  or  firmers,  but  most  were  produced  as  butt  chisels.  For  example,  I  have  never  seen  any  actual  Solliden  stamped  chisel  that  is  not  a  butt  chisel.  The  quality  of  the  tools  is  also  varied-­‐  my  teacher  was  probably  not  too  far  off  when  he  evaluated  my  Solliden  chisels.  However,  I  have  seen  some  tools  that  use  these  handles  that  are  of  superior  quality-­‐  the  set  of  Svea  chisels  I  have  are  beautifully  made  and  most  of  them  were  made  with  Birchwood  handles,  while  the  

Page 10: Solliden Style Chisel Handles RN v1 - galootopiagalootopia.com/.../uploads/Solliden-Style-Chisel-Handles-RN-v1.pdf“Solliden"Style”Chisel"Handles:"A"Swedish"Mystery"""""Randall"Nelson""

“Solliden  Style”  Chisel  Handles:  A  Swedish  Mystery                                                                                                                                            Randall  Nelson  

  10  

Agersta  and  Handy  chisels  I  have  are  a  study  in  how  many  corners  you  can  cut  and  still  put  something  out  for  sale!  

 

  Group  of  Svea  chisels  

 

Stamps  on  Svea  chisel  blades  

Page 11: Solliden Style Chisel Handles RN v1 - galootopiagalootopia.com/.../uploads/Solliden-Style-Chisel-Handles-RN-v1.pdf“Solliden"Style”Chisel"Handles:"A"Swedish"Mystery"""""Randall"Nelson""

“Solliden  Style”  Chisel  Handles:  A  Swedish  Mystery                                                                                                                                            Randall  Nelson  

  11  

 

Group  of  Agersta  Chisels  

 

 

Comparison  of  2”  Agersta  (top)  and  2”  Solliden  chisels  (bottom)  

Page 12: Solliden Style Chisel Handles RN v1 - galootopiagalootopia.com/.../uploads/Solliden-Style-Chisel-Handles-RN-v1.pdf“Solliden"Style”Chisel"Handles:"A"Swedish"Mystery"""""Randall"Nelson""

“Solliden  Style”  Chisel  Handles:  A  Swedish  Mystery                                                                                                                                            Randall  Nelson  

  12  

Anyway-­‐  the  list  of  tools  that  I  have  found  that  used  the  Solliden  style  handle:  Toledo,  Tecomaster,  Beaver,  Castor,  Krona,  Waern,  Asab,  Svea,  Svalling,  Handy,  Janport,  Wallins,  Swallow,  Homestrand  and  of  course,  Solliden.