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Plane Wood Working
 Old Ways of Working Wood by Alex W. Bealer, A revised edition of a classic guide to woodworking methods provides valuable information on the evolution of wood products, the types and characteristics of wood, essential tools, and such techniques as planing, splitting, boring, chiseling, and shaping.
 Gung Ho!: How to Draw Fantastic Military Comics War offers compelling subject matter for artists; life-or-death battles, conflict, bravery. For sixty years, war comics have attracted the biggest names in the industry, including Jack Kirby, Will Eisner, Harvey Kurtzman, and Wally Wood. Gung Ho! How to Draw Fantastic Military Comics offers an introduction to war comics, then goes on to page after page after page of essentials for drawing accurate military personnel (including infantry, Navy SEALs, Green Berets, and more); military vehicles (jeeps to M1-A1 tanks and beyond), military planes (F-14s to stealth planes), military boats (rafts, submarines, aircraft carriers, more), and military armory (knives, pistols, antiaircraft guns, and many others). Featuring the work of a team of DC/Wildstorm comic-book top guns, Gung Ho! is essential for any artist who wants to be fully prepared for battle.
Smoothing plane - A smoothing plane or smooth plane is a type of bench plane used in woodworking. The smoothing plane is typically the last plane used on a wood surface before scraping and sanding. Rebate plane - The rebate plane (also known as the rabbet plane) is a hand plane designed for cutting rebates in wood. John Wood, the Younger - John Wood, the Younger (February 25, 1728, Bath-June 18, 1782, Batheaston) was an English architect, working principally in the city of Bath, England. He began his work as an assistant for his father, the architect John Wood, the Elder. Scrub plane - The scrub plane is a type of plane used to remove large amounts of wood, such as eliminating cup or twist in the first stages of preparing rough stock, or when reducing the thickness of a board significantly. Scrub planes generally have a short soles, a relatively narrow but thick blade, a very wide mouth, and a deeply curved edge (of about a 3 inch radius) to make a deep, gouging cut.
planewoodworking
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