A complete survey of toolboxes for everyone who values tools. Popular Fine Woodworking author Jim Tolpin's illustrated guide shows tool storage solutions from rugged, old-time journeymen's chests to today's versatile truck boxes. Tool users learn to plan and design boxes to increase productivity, save time and prevent loss or misplacement of their most valuable assets.
Contains a surprising number of shockingly ugly and poorly constructed toolboxes as well as a few that are clearly just for looking at, but also a bunch that are good and wholesome and worth taking inspiration from. The crap ones are all modern ones and mostly made by people who are not woodworkers, so they're presumably included to pretend the book is a broad historical survey of major toolbox types from prehistory (the 18th century) through today (the 1990s), but I don't think anyone is really buying that—apart from anything else, the historical context Tolpin provides for the good toolboxes ranges from suspect to clearly bullshit. I'm still not sold on the concept of working out of a tool chest in your home workshop—neither were most craftsmen historically, as Tolpin himself was confronted with in one of his anecdotes—but if you want to build a decent one, this book is as good a place to start as any.
This book provides historical perspective, great design considerations and ideas, and detailed constructions information for some particular examples.
[Additional note: There are some books that just keep popping up into my brain. This is one. So while I originally read a library volume (thank you, Inter-Library Loan!), I bought a used hardback version a few months later.]
Good book for those woodworkers who have amassed a goodly collection of tools over the years and need intelligent storage solutions. I've read a good bit of Jim Tolpin, and I consider him a master craftsman as well as an experienced author. Recommended.