Water-Base Lacquer

David M. Porritt dm.porritt@verizon.net
Tue, 04 Jun 2002 16:48:50 -0500


Jon:

Actually the word is "swath" but you spelled it as a New Englander
would pronounce it.

dave

*********** REPLY SEPARATOR  ***********

On 6/4/02 at 3:37 PM Kdivad@AOL.COM wrote:

>In a message dated Tue, 4 Jun 2002  3:24:23 PM Eastern Daylight
Time, Jon
>Page <jonpage@attbi.com> writes:
>
>>At 01:40 PM 6/4/2002 -0400, you wrote:
>>>Hmmm. I was hoping for a little more. I use the Sandvik brand flat

>>>scrapers but I don't have the curved, yet. I have had the trouble
of a 
>>>corner digging in.
>>>Is there a way to avoid this?
>>>Greg
>>
>>Careful manipulation and not taking too wide of a swarth (is that a
>word?).
>>Regards,
>>
>>Jon Page,   piano technician
>>Harwich Port, Cape Cod, Mass.
>>mailto:jonpage@attbi.com
>>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
>
>Yes it is a word Jon, another example of its use would be; Arrrgh,
yee
>scallywag, move yer bones as I be cutting a swarthy path to the bar.
 I
>personally use it in that context all the time.
>David Koelzer
>Vintage Pianos
>DFW


_____________________________
David M. Porritt
dporritt@mail.smu.edu
Meadows School of the Arts
Southern Methodist University
Dallas, TX 75275
_____________________________




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