I started by tracing the patterns onto the poplar board. Why poplar??? Because it is the only hard wood board of enough width in the shop... so use what youve got I guess. Well see how it holds up and if it fails then well consider this a test run. You can see from the changing pencil lines in the pic that I took the original templates and modified them a bit to fit the size of my meat hook hands. I chopped off the larger blank chunks in the board with the backsaw, split between the two handle blanks with the coping saw and then systematically went to work working the shapes from the blanks. One based on an open handle Lie Nielsen dovetail saw and a the other based on a early 1900s Henry Disston & Sons "D" handle tenon saw. Thank god for the internet that helped me find several usable templates
To cut out the opening in the "D" handle, I clamped the piece to the bench and pulled out the brace and bits to keep with the hand tool mojo. The you disassemble the coping saw, string the blade through the drilled hole and reassemble the saw. That was it for the evening. I decided to stop there with the blanks and continue to work on the shaping and setting tomorrow.
In the end the bandsaw did turn out to be some help. It worked great to set both pieces on to catch the final pic.
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