Small treasures at antique tool show

FALLS VILLAGE — The ultimate Stanley plane tool, the Holy Grail of this highly specialized field of collecting, is the Stanley No. 1.

Alas, Jon Orser of Wingdale, N.Y., didn’t have one handy. But he had rows of less exalted specimens on his table at the Falls Village-Canaan Historical Society antique tool show on Saturday, Oct. 2.

A Stanley No. 1 can fetch anywhere from $800 to several thousand dollars, Orser said.

He’s been in the construction business for 20 years. “I’ve always been interested in hand tools,� he said.

He started picking them up at tag sales. Now he’s got dozens, including some that he was selling on Saturday, many priced under $20.

“One thing led to another,� he said “It kinda snowballed.�

He enjoys collecting and selling, especially when he buys a tool from the original owner. “Then that tool’s got a story.�

Joe Brien had a Stanley tool kit, the contents of which had been added to over the years.

Still, the old Stanley logo on the inside of the lid — Brien guessed it was made somewhere between the 1930s and 1950s — had onlookers thinking seriously about picking it up.

As it was, one fisherman found a small pair of pliers — perfect for flattening the barbs on the hooks of trout flies.

“That’s yours for a dollar,� said Brien.

“Sold,� said the angler, who had that air of slight derangement common to his species. Brien permitted himself to look relieved as the transaction was concluded.

Meanwhile William Blass from Battle Hill Forge kept his fire stoked — and was stoked in turn with coffee and sandwiches from the nearby Toymaker’s Cafe — and various members of the Downs family cut logs on a 1915 International six-horsepower saw.

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