Definition of Beading plane

1. Noun. A plane with a concave blade for making moulding with beadwork.


Lexicographical Neighbors of Beading Plane

beaded hair
beaded lizard
beader
beaders
beadery
beadful
beadhouse
beadhouses
beadier
beadiest
beadily
beadiness
beadinesses
beading
beading of the ribs
beading plane (current term)
beadings
beadledom
beadledoms
beadleries
beadlery
beadles
beadleship
beadless
beadlike
beadman
beadmen
beadroll
beadrolls

Literary usage of Beading plane

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Bench Work in Wood: A Course of Study and Practice Designed for the Use of by William Freeman Myrick Goss (1888)
"... Beading-Plane. down. i J-inch Beading-Plane. i Plow. i Miter-Box. I Grindstone. If provision is to be made for more than one student, the items printed ..."

2. Home Mechanic by John Wright (1905)
"It has been shown that the • can tongue and groove the edges of his boards ; he can ke the bead with a beading plane, which looks some- <ea rabbet plane, ..."

3. Jamieson's Dictionary of the Scottish Language: In which the Words are by John Jamieson, John Johnstone (1867)
"Л species of plane used by carpenters, which differs from the beading plane only In generally forming three rodt at once, S. REED-MAD, adj. ..."

4. Amateur Joinery in the Home: A Practical Manual for the Amateur Joiner on by George Ashdown Audsley, Berthold Audsley (1916)
"BEADING-PLANE.—This plane is used for forming small beads along grooved and tongued joints, as shown in Fig. 22. It may be obtained, in its simplest form, ..."

5. The Work of the Railway Carman by Edmond K. Hogan, Brotherhood Railway Carmen of America (1921)
"1 Expansion bit, 1 Large and 1 small jack plane, 1 Smoothing plane, 2 Rabbit planes, 1 Block plane, 1 Circle plane, 1 beading plane, Wood chisel, -ft", 54", ..."

6. The Boy Engineers: What They Did and how They Did It; a Book for Boys by James Lukin (1889)
"There is not much need to use such a tool, however, because a straight beading is more easily made by an ordinary beading-plane, such a* carpenters are ..."

7. The Amateur Mechanic's Workshop: a Treatise Containing Plain and Concise by James Lukin (1874)
"... reversed of the design to be cut), is required, and a beading plane or two, the irons of which have semicircular hollowed edges, forming a raised bead. ..."

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