Popular Woodworking

Buchanan-smith’s Axe Handbook.

- BY ANDREW ZOELLNER

Abrams Image / 240 Pages / $24.99 / abramsbook­s.com

I’m a sucker for tools and good design, so Buchanan-smith’s Axe Handbook was immediatel­y added to my preorder list when I found out about it. Simply put, it’s a book about axes, written by a person who helped reignite interest in the tool as a symbol of both survival and hipster status. Peter Buchanan Smith, the author, built an entire high-end store around useful, high-quality tools and clothing, and it all started with an ax, painted with purpose.

While he does present a brief history of the tool and its modern-day uses, the bulk of the book is devoted to understand­ing how axes are made and designed to be used today (including buying and restoring vintage axes, safety and sharpening). The section on axes in use was particular­ly enlighteni­ng, talking through proper form and technique for limbing and bucking trees with an axe, why you should never chop down a tree with an axe (use a saw!) and just how useful and precise a small ax can be.

The real gems in this book come in the restoratio­n portion. The Dudley ax vice, named for the former head of the Best Made ax shop, is simple yet incredibly useful jig for holding an ax during sharpening and restoratio­n. There are some best practices for removing rust while keeping patina (it is a tool, after all), and advice on buying old axes.

The section on adorning an ax was very interestin­g. There are completely practical reasons to use bright colors on a tool: easy to identify in woods filled with browns and greens and a way to signal ownership of a tool. And there are reasons completely unrelated to practicali­ty. And therein lies what was so inspiring about this book: there’s so much joy tied into this simple object for the author, a designer who wanted to reconnect with the nature while living in a big city. So he painted ax handles. PW

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