#@!! $#@*! I'm on the cheap side of life at the moment and I consider a 50 dollar cabinet maker's rasp very expensive......But I do have one.
Most of the tools I use come from flea markets, garage sales or an occosional antique store. When I earned a decent paycheck before children came into the picture I would purchase one new chisel from a closed but popular woodworker supply store in Cleveland, with every paycheck. I managed to get a full set.
Recently, the Log Cabin Shop got ahold of some very good chisels from an estate...there were probably a couple hundred (still some left) and I managed to purchase 5 of those.
While watching Dennis Priddy at Frienship (as well as Dick Miller) I was surprised to see their tool selection: both men had a cigar box full of needle files turned into scrapers, small chisels and a hole host of tools that they were using very effectively. At that point I realized that both men were making a signiture via thier handiwork with the individual tools that they crafted from everyday items.......
.........so I have taken to making little scrapers, chisels, punches and all sorts of things from cast off items like saw blades, allen wrenches, broken screwdrivers, broken needle files.....It has gotten to the point where when I see something in the trash can in the shop I wonder "What can I make outta that?"
I remember working with a fantasic watercolor artist named Fred Leech (now dead) who with a handfull of other artist created the Ohio Watercolor Society....Fred was great when it came to manipulating his medium. I saw him make a painting using a feather, q-tips, a razor blade and one very large Haki brush. It was a fantastic painting that won him a felowship award, yet he did it with very common items.
So as far as tools are concerned I think it's our imagination and our ability to control our medium with watever tools we have at the moment.....and it never hurts to experiment. That is just my opinion.