Replacing the Lost Tools

I have yet to find my lost box of intaglio tools. While I’m sad about the missing tools I can’t just sit around and wait for them to reappear. Instead I’ve been seeking out things and making stuff to replace the missing tools.

One of the things I have not been able to find a suitable replacement for is the plastic clamshell box I was using. It was just the right size to hold a traditional etching needle and various other thing without being ridiculously bulky.

Currently I’m using an old Zoom H4 microphone box that I saved from the trash at work. It is too short and too fat. Though it does hold a nice amount of shorter implements safely and doesn’t allow points to poke through. It’s adequate.

It is not like the old clamshell that I had.

I looked at a box that my wife’s electric toothbrush arrived in and is for travel. She’s got 2 of these boxes. I think with modification it would work, and it would hold the etching needles but not a whole lot else. It’s rather thin.

It’s also plastic.

I started looking through my collection of tins and what not I’ve collected over the years. None of them quite fit, but many gave me ideas.

So I ordered these. First, they are steel. They are wide but quite flat. And they are tall enough to hold my etching needles. I am planning on some modifications with pop rivets and leather to further make the case solid. Another item will be to line at least part of the case with craft foam and expanded foam as a protection for the etching needles and engineer’s scribe.

I have ordered a set of cheapie slip and scoring tools. Which are okay. I found a rather beat up but very nice pin vise at the thrift store in a bag of odds and ends. It was a good score, but needs love. The aluminum handle was caked with what looks like clay or plaster. That said inside the handle there are 4 brash collets, which means it can hold a HUGE range of bits and needles. This is an epic score. (This is the closest thing I can find to it on Amazon.)

Between these few items, I’ve also made a few where I’ve set some brads into corks and these have proven to be quite amazing for making pin pricks in plates and parallel lines. I’m definitely thinking about more stuff I can do with corks.

Anyway, it’s a start. I’m sure that once the metal tins show up the old set will reappear. (Or not, it may be completely lost at this point.)