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Rasps

(9 products)

Woodworking Rasps for Shaping, Carving, and Sculpting Wood

A rasp is a tooth-cut file designed to remove wood quickly and leave a rough surface that is easy to refine with a file or sandpaper. Unlike a file, whose teeth are in continuous rows, a rasp has individually raised teeth that each remove a small chip rather than a shaving—this prevents clogging and allows the tool to cut efficiently even in end grain, carved hollows, and tight curves.

Infinity Tools carries Narex premium rasps in flat, half-round, and full-round profiles, as well as hand-stitched rasps and rifflers for finer surface quality and specialized work. Machine-stitched rasps cut fast and are economical. Hand-stitched rasps have individually punched teeth that are irregularly spaced, which produces a surface that is significantly smoother than machine-stitched tools, and the irregular spacing prevents chatter marks.

Rasp Sets and Specialty Styles

The 10-piece Narex master rasp set is a comprehensive package covering all common profiles and cuts. The 6-piece Narex premium rasp set provides the essential profiles at excellent value. For fine detail work, the Narex hand-stitched riffler rasp reaches tight curves and inside corners that straight rasps cannot access. The Narex rotary rasp with 6mm shank fits a drill press or power drill for rapid material removal. Pair your rasps with tools from the carving tools collection and chisels collection for a complete hand shaping toolkit.

  • Flat rasps: general shaping on flat and convex surfaces
  • Half-round rasps: flat work on one face, concave shapes on the curved face
  • Full-round rasps: inside curves, holes, and narrow hollows
  • Riffler rasps: complex curves and tight interior work
  • Rotary rasps: power drill attachment for fast removal

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a rasp used for in woodworking?

A rasp is used for rapid material removal and rough shaping of wood, particularly on curved surfaces, sculpted forms, chair legs, and anywhere that a plane or chisel cannot reach. It is typically followed by a cabinet file and sandpaper to refine the surface the rasp leaves behind.

What is the difference between a rasp and a file?

A rasp has individually raised teeth cut one by one into the steel surface, each removing a small chip of wood. A file has rows of continuously cut teeth that shave the surface. Rasps cut faster and clog less in wood; files leave a smoother surface and are better for metal and final wood refining.

What is the difference between a hand-stitched rasp and a machine-stitched rasp?

Hand-stitched rasps have teeth individually punched by hand, creating irregular spacing that prevents chatter marks and leaves a noticeably smoother surface than machine-stitched rasps. Machine-stitched rasps have evenly spaced teeth and cut faster but leave a rougher texture. The Narex premium hand-stitched rasp demonstrates the quality advantage of hand stitching.

What profiles of rasp do I need for woodworking?

The most useful profiles are flat (for flat and convex surfaces), half-round (for both flat work and concave shapes), and full-round (for inside curves and holes). A riffler rasp adds capability in tight interior shapes. The 6-piece Narex premium rasp set covers the essential profiles in one purchase.

What is a riffler rasp and when do I use one?

A riffler is a double-ended rasp with curved or hooked profiles at each end, designed to reach inside tight curves, carved hollows, and complex shapes that straight rasps cannot access. The Narex hand-stitched riffler rasp is a versatile option for sculptural carving and detailed shaping.

How do I use a rasp correctly without damaging the surface?

Push the rasp forward across the wood at a slight diagonal to the grain direction, using consistent strokes and moderate pressure. Avoid pressing so hard that the rasp digs in or skips. Follow each pass of the rasp with progressively finer tools: a cabinet file to level the tooth marks, then sandpaper to bring the surface to finish quality.

Can rasps be used for carving green or wet wood?

Yes. Rasps perform well in green and wet wood where edge tools may tear or clog. The open tooth structure clears wet shavings effectively. This makes rasps a useful tool in chair making, spoon carving, and other green-wood disciplines alongside tools from the carving tools collection.

How do I clean a rasp that has become clogged?

Use a short-bristle brass brush or a file card to sweep across the rasp teeth in their direction to dislodge packed wood fibers. Avoid wire brushes with steel bristles, which can damage the tooth edges. Tap the rasp handle lightly on a bench to shake loose any remaining debris.

Are Narex rasps good quality for the price?

Yes. Narex rasps offer excellent value for woodworkers at all levels. The premium and hand-stitched lines use quality steel with good tooth geometry and are a significant step up from economy rasps in surface finish and cut quality. See the 10-piece Narex master rasp set for a comprehensive collection.

Does Infinity Tools price match on rasps and hand tools?

Yes. Infinity Tools offers price matching on qualifying products from eligible competitors. Visit the price matching page for terms and submission instructions.