Menushopping cart
Tools for Working Wood
Invest in your craft. Invest in yourself.

JOEL Joel's Blog

Seek and Ye Shall Find (perhaps)

03/25/2026

 E. Hoppus
E. Hoppus, "Mr. Hoppus's Measurer", London, 1777


Before the internet, finding things in a book could be challenging. A library with a good librarian could be essential for success if your topic was obscure. But even with the book in hand, a table of contents only got you to the general neighborhood and you might need an index for the actual item. Library indexes date from ancient Greece and Egypt but the indices at the end of the books are a thirteenth century innovation. Tool catalogs really are a late 18th century invention (not entirely). In the picture at the top, we have an 1777 edition of "Mr. Hoppus's Measurer," a book mostly of tables and formulas for computing the value of timber and other items. But the back has a more narrative look at some useful items likes saws and their prices. Hoppus also has a table of contents at the beginning of the book - but no index.

Why am I thinking about the quest for knowledge? It's because I think all time how hard it is for people to find us, and how hard it may be for them to find the things they want from us. My favorite job at Tools for Working Wood is interacting with customers in person. Unfortunately I don't spend most of my time doing that. My main jobs are as follows: paying bills, doing all the bookkeeping, figuring out how to make tools, designing tools based on what I figured out, writing a blog, and caring for and maintaining our website.

I realize I am no damn good at some of these tasks - as many of you know, when you are a small business owner, you still have to do a task even if you are no damn good at it - but I’ve actually developed competence at some of them. Competent enough? It’s hard to know. We occasionally hear from customers when something really really good happens, but we always hear from some customers when something bad happens.

“Bad” can mean a lot of things, both to our customer and to us. The nature of complaining is that most complaints are aired to people who can’t do much about them - typically whoever is there at the time. As a merchant, I know we are probably not going to hear complaints from people who are new to our site or casual browsers. They will just leave if they can’t find what they want.

So the thing I am concerned about and we don't really hear from you enough about is, can you find the things you want to get on our website? We are particularly attuned to this topic because we just changed the website’s search engine. (This is why the words “enhanced by Google” now appear in the search box in the upper right hand corner.) The search engine covers products for sale as well as information in the blogs. So I have a question for you: when you look at our website, can you find what you're looking for? I mean either by typing in a product in the search box, or by drilling down in the list of departments or links from products to products? When you get there, do you find what you're looking for? Between tariffs and high fuel costs, we are out of certain items, and Ashley Iles and Ray Iles products have always been a challenge to have in full stock. But we do have a lot of items that you nevertheless can’t find and you may just think we don't stock it. It is those items that concern us the most. We are also interested in products you wished we carried but don’t. (Customer requests are literally why we carry Odie’s Oil, Pica pencils and Fastcap; we look into all customer suggestions but sometimes the wholesale terms are too unfavorable to a little guy like us to consider.)

So we welcome your thoughts about how to make search better. Please add your comments below. And we - and many strangers - thank you.

The picture below is from the index at the end of Randle Holme's 1688 “The Academy of Armory” (York, England). Not a catalog but full of useful information. The index is invaluable. 19th and 20th century tool catalogs moved the index to the front so you could easily find what you were looking for.
Randle Holme
Randle Holme, "The Academy of Armory," York, England, 1688


Join the conversation
03/25/2026 Garret
I actually have had some difficulty for a while with the website's search capabilities, not so much with finding a specific item I knew you had but not being able to find and browse other items that might also be useful and related to the projects on which I'm working or will work. It'd also be (as I've said before) very helpful to have some sort of way to archive/store desired items in a kind of wish list on the website, for later purchase (or for gift ideas). You really are a very special business, offering excellent products no one else offers, and educationally essential articles (and customer reviews) that help me know why I should buy a certain product (or not). For hand tool woodworkers, your business, to my mind, is truly irreplaceable. The integrity you show in the products you offer and the reasons for their being offered is exceptional. With a more interconnected website, I'd like to think the number of products you could sell would hopefully grow.
03/25/2026 Robert Sheipe
Your new/upgraded website is not an improvement. The photos are too small and there are too many layers to get to what one is looking for. There are a lot of good website examples out there. You should pick the best attributes of them and use them at TFWW.
03/25/2026 Wink
Joel! Tried looking for the Ashley Iles Gonzalez short-stemmed in the block cutters but couldn’t find it. Backed up to specialty tools and found it there. Glad you have them in stock, as I’ll pick up one when I’m in town (I have in mind a slight modification that I’ll tell you about). Speaking of which, I’m not going to make it to the Big Apple until the second week of April. I’m plotting putting a treadle lathe in the bed of my pick- up. Can it be broken down so that no part is higher than 17”? That’s the clearance on my tonneau cover…
See you soon,
Wink
Wink,
When I put "Ashley Iles Gonzalez short-stemmed" or even just "Gonzalez" in the search box and hit enter it cam up first thing so I am not sure why you are having issues. As for the lathe, folded with the tailstock and toolrest removed (they get packed for travel in a separate box anyway, height will be 17" (or a little less if we remove the levelers. ) So you might not be able to pack it in a box (24" tall without pallet feet) but you will be fine.
Name:
Email (will not be published):
Website (optional):
Please enter your comment (HTML is not allowed):
The opinions expressed in this blog are those of the blog's author and guests and in no way reflect the views of Tools for Working Wood.