Provenance of 'tool' box - apprentice piece, maybe?

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Any thoughts here as to the provenance of this, just so I can make best use?
I thought it might be something a trainee would make, rather than a hobby item.
Some of the tools it originally had looked like they could be a farriers.
Not sure why it'd be lockable.
Ideas welcome!
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It was once quite common for some trades (e.g. carpenters, joiners, cabinetmakers, etc) to make their own boxes in order to store more expensive and less used tools, especially those with additional cutters, fences, etc. I have a number of more specialist planes (mainly router planes and shoulder planes) which came in home-made wooden boxes, presumably made by the owners to replace the cheap, low quality pasteboard boxes originally supplied by the manufacturers. So, it may or may not be an apprentice piece, but either way such boxes aren't uncommon and they can often end up being pressed into service for other purposes.

BTW apprentice pieces were generally made using a variety of "show" techniques such as dovetail joints, etc as they were essentially meant to show the skill level achieved. For example, I made a tool box with half-lapped dovetail joints, a piano hinge and a fitted interior with cleats to hold various tools. That box was made as a closed item and the opening side (basically 2/3 of one side) had to be hand sawn after the box was made. The real apprentice piece for me was a 1/3 scale oak part staircase complete with a kite winder - so not a tool box
 
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Thanks Guys - very useful responses & questions.
Tools are expensive to replace so lock not unexpected.
The lock seems very puny. A determined whatever could pinch the whole thing. Might stop pilfering if it contained stock of some kind.....

No carrying handle?

What dimensions?
No handle or obvious fixing mounts!

Ext dims are 15 3/8" x 6" x 2 7/8".
Int dims are 14 1/16" x 4 5/8" x 2 5/16" (approx)
Wall thickness ~ 5/8"
(Reporting inches as that is what it looks like. Can this site format fractions properly??)

It was once quite common for some trades (e.g. carpenters, joiners, cabinetmakers, etc) to make their own boxes in order to store more expensive and less used tools, especially those with additional cutters, fences, etc. I have a number of more specialist planes (mainly router planes and shoulder planes) which came in home-made wooden boxes, presumably made by the owners to replace the cheap, low quality pasteboard boxes originally supplied by the manufacturers. So, it may or may not be an apprentice piece, but either way such boxes aren't uncommon and they can often end up being pressed into service for other purposes.

BTW apprentice pieces were generally made using a variety of "show" techniques such as dovetail joints, etc as they were essentially meant to show the skill level achieved. For example, I made a tool box with half-lapped dovetail joints, a piano hinge and a fitted interior with cleats to hold various tools. That box was made as a closed item and the opening side (basically 2/3 of one side) had to be hand sawn after the box was made. The real apprentice piece for me was a 1/3 scale oak part staircase complete with a kite winder - so not a tool box

Yes something like a long-ish plane might be the sort of thing. Thank you!
Defo no show techniques here.

I had to look up kite winder in that context. Wow - very interesting :cool:
 

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