- A Birmingham No.102 block plane
- A German wooden block plane
- A history of early block planes
- A novel Stanley block plane
- A smaller block plane by “The Boston”
- A steel block plane from Shelton
- A very strange block plane indeed – a Siegley No.18
- A weird aluminum plane
- All those planes in catalogs seemed *so* cheap.
- Aluminum block planes
- Anatomy of a block plane
- Another weirder aluminum plane – “THE BOSTON”
- Bailey’s “Little Victor” block planes
- Birdsill Holly – the first metal block plane
- Block plane depth-adjustment mechanisms (i)
- Block plane depth-adjustment mechanisms (ii) – early forms
- Block plane depth-adjustment mechanisms (iii) – the lever
- Block plane depth-adjustment mechanisms (iv) – weird mechanisms
- Block plane throat adjustment mechanisms (i)
- Block plane throat adjustment mechanisms (ii) – varied
- Block plane throat adjustment mechanisms (iii) – contemporary
- Block plane throat adjustment mechanisms (iv) – odd ones
- Block planes: Stanley No. 9¼
- Block planes: Stanley No.18 (and No.19) (i)
- Block planes: Stanley No.18 (and No.19) (ii)
- Defining the ubiquitous block plane
- Evolution of the knuckle lever-cap (i)
- Evolution of the knuckle lever-cap (ii)
- Evolution of the knuckle lever-cap (iii)
- Evolution of the knuckle lever-cap (iv)
- Further confusion with plane classification
- Hobbies block planes study
- Identifying Stanley block planes with knuckle lever caps
- Is a cheaper plane worth it?
- Is it a clone or a doppelgänger?
- Miniature or tiny planes?
- Not all planes are created equal
- One of these things is not like the other…
- Rehabilitating a Stanley No.15 (i): de-rusting (with Evaporust)
- Stanley foundry markings on block planes
- Stanley vs. Veritas block planes
- Streamlined block planes
- The block plane’s transition from trimming butcher blocks
- The block planes of superheroes (i)
- The block planes of superheroes (ii) – Sargent
- The block planes of superheroes (iii) – Stanley
- The block planes of superheroes (iv) – Miller Falls
- The block planes of superheroes (ix) – Twix
- The block planes of superheroes (v) – Shelton
- The block planes of superheroes (vi) – Hobbies
- The block planes of superheroes (vii) – Linford
- The block planes of superheroes (viii) – the others
- The block planes of superheroes (x) – GM Co. Man.
- The block planes of superheroes (xi) – Enterprise
- The block planes of superheroes (xii) – Stanley 12-101
- The block planes of Tower and Lyon (aka Chaplin)
- The Boston No.1 plane?
- The Boston trio
- The clone wars (part i)
- The clone wars (part ii)
- The clone wars (part iii) – A tale of three planes
- The conundrum of storing handplanes
- The early evolution of the metal block plane
- The jolly Christmas block plane
- The Mayo block plane
- The Millers Fall No.1455 block plane
- The Ohio Tool Co. No.9½ block plane
- The rarest of block planes?
- The Stanley No.101 block plane
- The tiniest of Veritas planes
- View of a block plane
- Weird German metal handplanes
- What does #9½ mean?
- Why are there no wooden block planes?
- Why dating block planes can be difficult