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  2. Trowel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trowel

    Notched trowel is a rectangular shaped tool with regularly spaced notches along one or more sides used to apply adhesive when adhering tile, or laying synthetic floor surfaces. Other forms of trowel include: Garden trowel, a hand tool with a pointed, scoop-shaped metal blade and wooden, metal, or plastic handle.

  3. Marshalltown Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshalltown_Company

    An advertisement for a Marshalltown Trowel from 1912. The origins of Marshalltown can be traced back to the American inventor and entrepreneur Dave Lennox.While working in his machine shop in the mid-1880s in Marshalltown, Iowa, Mr. Lennox received a visit from a stonemason who asked him to make a better plastering trowel [7] while working on the construction site of the Marshall County ...

  4. Garden tool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garden_tool

    Garden tools, including various spades, garden forks, a leaf rake, and a garden trowel. A garden tool is any one of many tools made for gardening and landscaping, which overlap with the range of tools made for agriculture and horticulture. Garden tools can be divided into hand tools and power tools.

  5. Hawk (plasterer's tool) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawk_(plasterer's_tool)

    A plasterer covering a wall, using a hawk (in his left hand, carrying some plaster) and finishing trowel (in his right hand, applying plaster to the wall). A hawk is a tool used to hold a plaster, mortar, or a similar material, so that the user can repeatedly, quickly and easily get some of that material on the tool which then applies it to a surface.

  6. William Hunt and Sons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Hunt_and_Sons

    A WHS trowel. The WHS pointing trowel is prized amongst archaeologists in the United Kingdom who find its strength useful in digging heavy deposits. In his 1946 book Field Archaeology, Richard J. C. Atkinson (best known for excavating Stonehenge), "unequivocally" recommended the use of a trowel for archaeology; during the postwar era, WHS and a competing brand from Bowden were predominant.

  7. Plasterwork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasterwork

    The quirk will hide the eventual small crack that will form between the staff bead and plaster. Set up tools; The plasterer needs to fill a 5-gallon bucket partway with water. From this bucket he hangs his trowel or trowels and places into it various tools. Normally a plasterer has one trowel for "laying on" (the process of placing mud onto the ...