An Internet Discussion Plants a Seed
But no matter how hard he tried, Jeske couldn’t figure out how to make his tool-making enterprise into a full-time business that could support his family. He and his wife prayed for guidance. And it came in the form of John Economaki, the founder of Bridge City Tool Works.
The Bridge to a New Career
Jeske and Economaki started a friendly relationship that would seem odd to observers of the tool-making world. Economaki is outspoken, demonstrative and (I know this from personal experience) quite hilarious when unleashed on a group of people. Jeske is just as friendly, but in a low-key way. But both men love making tools, and so they decided to make a marking knife together for the Bridge City catalog.
Jeske presented his idea for a marking knife with replacable blades. Economaki liked the concept but wanted a different aesthetic.
“I said, ‘John, you need to put your John Economaki signature design stamp on the tool, but I can manufacture these for you,’” Jeske says. Economaki ordered 500 sets of knives. That was in 2004, and David H. Jeske was making the leap to full-time toolmaker. He left his comfortable job (his salary is now one-third of what it was). He evicted his wife’s car from the family garage, and he moved some serious machinery into the space.
Jeske built a CNC wood lathe from parts he had lying around and got to work. After the marking knives, the relationship with Bridge City continued. As Jeske made knives under his own brand, he also was helping manufacture a deadblow mallet and the handles for Bridge City’s anniversary chisels. The order was for 4,000 assembled and packaged chisels handles.
Jeske works alone in his small shop, which is divided into two rooms. One area is for woodworking; the other for metal (though there is a radial arm saw and CNC wood lathe in the metal room). The woodworking side is filled with mostly vintage machinery: a Walker-Turner 16” two-speed band saw and powered-downfeed drill press. A Davis & Wells horizontal boring machine and a Yates-American lathe with leather belts. Plus a Powermatic table saw, Delta planer, nice workbench and an assembly table with an ultra-high molecular weight top. And if that’s not enough, every cranny of the shop is stuffed with odd wood – manzanita bush wood from his parent’s house, wood from a plum tree from a friend, spalted oak from the firewood pile.
The metal shop is also crammed with equipment: a CNC gang-tool lathe, a CNC 3-axis milling machine, grinders, buffing machines and a four-disc wet-platter system for grinding tool bevels.
The irony of it all is how machine-oriented things are to manufacture hand tools.
“I wear earplugs and headphones over those earplugs,” he says. “It’s kind of stinky, the coolant mist. My daughter won’t come in the shop when I’m working.
“And so when I do my woodworking, I retreat into solitude and use primarily my hand tools.”
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