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Thread: Canter or wayne

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2021
    Location
    Northern Michigan
    Posts
    15

    Question Canter or wayne

    Hi Friends,

    I am helping edit a booklet on a woodworking project. The author used the phrase "canter or wayne" - I am not super familiar with woodworking lingo and am having a hard time getting confirmation from google searching on this phrase. Am I spelling it right? Does anyone know the history behind this phrase?

    Thanks!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    Peoria, IL
    Posts
    4,528
    Lumber wane https://www.culpeperwood.com/resourc...des-of-lumber/
    Log cant https://woodmizer.com/us/sawmilling-...estry-glossary
    or a cant hook for rolling logs

    Wayne Canter may be a member here, I didn't look. LOL

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Location
    Providence, RI
    Posts
    520
    Quote Originally Posted by Nellie Skallerup View Post
    Hi Friends,

    I am helping edit a booklet on a woodworking project. The author used the phrase "canter or wayne" - I am not super familiar with woodworking lingo and am having a hard time getting confirmation from google searching on this phrase. Am I spelling it right? Does anyone know the history behind this phrase?

    Thanks!
    A couple of related definitions:

    Cant: a wedge-shaped block of wood, especially one remaining after the better-quality pieces have been cut off.
    "a squared-off cant remains, containing the knottiest wood"

    Wane: the amount by which a plank or log is beveled or falls short of a squared shape.
    "I cut the log into slabs without removing the outside wane" (Waney means "wavy edged")

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2021
    Location
    Northern Michigan
    Posts
    15
    Quote Originally Posted by Richard Coers View Post
    Lumber wane https://www.culpeperwood.com/resourc...des-of-lumber/
    Log cant https://woodmizer.com/us/sawmilling-...estry-glossary
    or a cant hook for rolling logs

    Wayne Canter may be a member here, I didn't look. LOL
    Wayne Canter is WAY more popular on google than the phrase "canter or wayne" ! lol. Thanks for pointing me to these resources!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Mar 2015
    Location
    SE Michigan
    Posts
    3,225
    Yes, as stated above, I believe the spelling is “wane”. The opposite of the term “wax”, which means to grow or increase.

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