What Do Chisels Do? | Cut Shape Finish

Chisels cut, pare, and shape wood, stone, or metal by driving a sharp edge into material to create clean surfaces and precise joints.

What Is A Chisel?

A chisel is a cutting tool with a sharpened edge at the end of a blade. You push it by hand or strike it with a mallet or hammer to remove material. Woodworkers use it for joinery and cleanup. Masons and metalworkers use tougher versions to split, score, or chip hard stock.

The tool turns hand power into a controlled slice. Use the flat back as a reference, guide the bevel, and let the edge do the work.

Common Chisels By Trade
Trade Typical Chisel Types Primary Jobs
Woodworking Bevel-edge bench, mortise, paring Trim joints, chop mortises, clean dados
Carpentry / Site Work Utility bench, firmer Hinge gains, fitting, general cleanup
Timber Framing Slick, heavy mortise Large tenons, housing shoulders
Carving Gouges, V-tools Relief cuts, lettering, curves
Luthiery Narrow bench, micro-paring Nut slots, brace carving
Masonry / Brick Bolster, plugging, cold Split bricks, remove mortar, chase lines
Stone Carving Point, tooth, pitching Roughing, planing, edge breaks
Metalworking Cold, cape, round-nose Cut bar, shear rivets, keyways
Plumbing / Electrical Bolster, cold Chase channels, notch block
Flooring / Tiling Bolster, scraper Lift tiles, scrape adhesive

For a wider view of the tool family and its long story, see the Encyclopaedia Britannica entry on chisels, which covers wood, stone, and metal variants.

What A Chisel Does In Practice

Every task falls into four moves: cut, pare, chop, and shape. Master these, and the tool earns a spot on every bench and in every kit.

Cut: Score And Sever

Use the edge to slice fibers cleanly. Score layout lines, define shoulders, and set crisp baselines. A light push with two hands gives control. For end grain, skew the blade and take thin shavings.

Pare: Shave To Fit

Paring removes whisper-thin slivers. Sneak up on a perfect fit for dovetails, tenons, and dados. Long paring chisels stay flat and ride a guide block, so the edge tracks true.

Chop And Split: Move Waste Fast

When you need depth, stand the chisel on the line and strike. Chop a mortise by working from both sides toward the center. For splitting with the grain, set the bevel in, then lever gently so the wedge opens the fibers.

Shape And Texture: Add Detail

Carving tools create letters, facets, beads, and chamfers. A sharp V-tool outlines; gouges sweep curves; a bench chisel kisses corners. Stone and metal versions leave a distinctive pecked or sheared face.

Keep the work steady. Support near the cut, not at the far end. Stand to the side so slips miss you. Stance changes improve sight lines and control.

Types Of Wood Chisels And When To Reach For Them

Bevel-Edge Bench Chisels

The everyday set. Thin lands reach into dovetail corners. Use them for trimming, light chopping, and general layout. Keep a small, medium, and wide size ready.

Mortise Chisels

Built thick and tough for prying and levering. The stout cross-section resists twist in deep slots. Strike with a wooden or urethane mallet, not a steel hammer.

Paring Chisels

Long, slender, and push-only. The length helps you steer straight with two hands. Perfect for end-grain cleanup and shooting tight shoulders.

Firmer And Slicks

Firmer chisels carry a square cross-section for heavy work. Slicks are giant paring tools for beams and shoulders; you guide them with the handle under your shoulder.

Carving Tools

Gouges cut scoops measured by sweep numbers; V-tools cut crisp lines. Match the sweep to the curve you need and keep edges honed to a mirror.

Masonry And Metal: When Wood Rules Don’t Apply

Brick And Block Chisels

A brick bolster carries a wide blade that cracks masonry along a scored line. Keep the blade square to the face and tap in a series to guide the break. Plugging chisels are narrow; they pick mortar from joints without chewed edges.

Stone Chisels

Use a point chisel to rough, a tooth chisel to plane, and a pitching tool to knock edges. Work from strong arrises and keep your blows light until the stone tells you where it wants to split.

Cold Chisels For Steel

Cold chisels shear rivets, cut bar, and open keyways. Cape and diamond-point profiles start grooves and corners; round-nose cuts oil passages. Wear eye protection and dress mushroomed heads before use.

Safety Notes

Dress mushroomed striking ends and wear eye protection. On job sites, the OSHA 1926.301 standard calls for impact tools such as chisels to be kept free of mushroomed heads. Keep handles tight and free of cracks.

Edge Angles And When To Use Them

Edge Angles And Typical Uses
Material / Task Bevel or Included Angle Notes
Paring wood 20–25° bevel Push only; finest finish
Bench work on wood 25–30° bevel Trim and light chops
Mortising wood 35–40° bevel Edge resists pry loads
Brick or stone 60°+ included Blunt, durable edge
Cold chisel on steel 60° included General cut on mild steel

Softer woods tolerate a keener edge; harder woods and rough blows call for a stouter angle. Many workers add a micro-bevel a few degrees steeper for fast touch-ups.

Sharpening That Pays Off

Stones And Grits

Start at 1000 grit to set the bevel, move to 3000–5000, then polish at 8000 or a strop. Waterstones cut; oilstones stay flat longer; diamond plates handle rough work.

Micro-Bevel And Burr

Hone the primary bevel, then raise five degrees and take a few strokes to form a micro-bevel. Flip, polish the back, and chase the faint burr until it vanishes.

Honing Guides And Freehand

A guide locks the angle for repeatable results. Freehand is quicker once muscle memory sets in. Either way, keep the back flat and the bevel square to the sides.

Stropping And Care

A leather strop charged with compound refreshes edges between stones. Wipe steel dry after use, add a thin coat of oil or paste, and cap the tips to prevent chips.

Use the marker trick to set angles. Color the bevel with a marker, take a light pass, and check where the ink fades. Adjust the guide until the scratch pattern reaches the tip. This saves time and keeps edges square across the width.

Handles, Strikes, And Grip

Tang Vs. Socket

Tang handles taper into a spike set in the blade. Socket handles sit inside a conical ferrule and pop out for fast swaps. Both styles serve; pick the feel you like and keep ferrules tight.

Mallet Vs. Hammer

Wood chisels like mallets made from wood or urethane. Metal chisels pair with steel hammers. Match the face to the work and swing under control.

Safe Hand Positions

Clamp the work. Keep the guide hand behind the edge. Never put fingers in line with the cut. On metal and masonry, wear glasses and sleeves.

Smart Workflows With A Chisel

Joinery Tasks

For dovetails, knife the lines, saw shy, then pare to the scribe. On tenons, use a block to guide cheeks and a shoulder plane for the last pass. Mortises go faster in steps: chop, lever, clear, then finish from both faces.

Site Fixes

Sink a hinge leaf by scoring the outline and paring the recess. Shave a swollen door with a skew cut across the end grain. Pop glue squeeze-out after it gels, then pare flush.

Stone And Brick Adjustments

Score a brick on every face, set the bolster, and tap around the score to guide the crack. For a clean arris, turn the blade with a slight skew and keep the face flat to the surface.

Common Mistakes And Easy Fixes

Dull edges crush fibers and skate. Sharpen sooner. Blows too heavy bruise shoulders. Lighten up and take more passes. If the edge chips, raise the bevel a few degrees. If it rolls, your angle is too low for the job. If paring scoops below the line, switch to a wider tool for better support.

Bevel Direction And Grain Sense

With wood, the bevel steers the cut. Bevel down lifts the edge for fast waste removal; bevel up lays the edge down for a tighter register. When paring to a line, place the flat back to the line and push from the waste side.

Pay attention to grain slope. If the edge dives, flip the work or approach from the other end. On end grain, skew the blade and use wax for an easier push. Across face grain, take short strokes and reset often to keep the edge tracking true.

Starter Sizes And Buying Tips

A small kit covers a lot of ground. Pick three bench chisels that match joinery: about 6 mm, 12 mm, and 19–25 mm. Add a mortise chisel that fits your go-to mortise width. If you cut lots of dovetails, choose a slim 3–4 mm for tails and a 10–12 mm for pin sockets.

Steel types vary. O1 sharpens quickly; A2 holds longer; powdered steels hold very long and like a steeper micro-bevel. Handles can be hornbeam, ash, beech, or plastic with caps. Choose what feels balanced in your hand and stays put under a mallet. If the tool comes with factory grind marks, lap the back before the first use.

Storage And Edge Protection

Edges bruise easily. Use tip guards or a wooden rack that supports the blade without rubbing the edge. Between jobs, wrap a roll with pockets so tools don’t knock together.

Rust creeps in from humidity and finger salts. Wipe blades after use and add a thin film of oil or paste. Ventilated storage helps. In a site box, keep silica gel packs next to the steel.