IN 1760, John Spilsbury, apprenticed to a map maker and engraver in Worcester, set about mounting maps of England on to sheets of thin wood and then cutting around the county boundaries with a fretsaw. The maps were boxed and sold to children to assemble and the jigsaw puzzle was born.
Also terra-cotta The sky was still a terra-cotta frieze over which her grandfather still held sway with the set square, fretsaw, stencil, plumb line, and carpenter's pencil his grand father brought from Roma.
In contrast, the even narrower features on the right are characterised by faint longitudinal grooves, consistent with the use of a saw to enlarge the drilled hole, in the manner of a fretsaw.
FUW county executive officer Sin Llwyd's boyfriend, Ifor Jones, spent a couple of hours shaping it with a fretsaw before she painted it black and white.
Sometimes his puns turn into mere language games: the only point of the poem on page 17 is that it starts with the word lobzik (fretsaw) and ends with lob bzik (front quirk).
They were also times that included Anne Cronin Mosey's 'activity analysis' and 'conscious use of self ', macrame, collage, and even the bicycle fretsaw, as well as the early editions of 'Willard and Spackman's Occupational Therapy' and, not to mention the big shoulder pads, 80's music, and whacky hairdo's.