Here are some scrapers I make....they work great, good for cheeck pieces, areas around the lock mortis, cuts against the grain well and they are simple to make.
I make them from worn out sawzall blades....grind off the teeth and square off the tip
Insert the tang into a hardwood drawer pull.......use epoxy to keep them secure,
heat up the tip and form a bend with pliers (linesman's pliers work great), propane torch can be used,
Sharpen the outside edge with bench grinder or preferably a combo disc sander. The shape or angle is important, it should not look like this:
......I will reshape this by heating and adjusting the angle.
These work (for me at least) due to the flexibility of the blade:
If you place your finger in the center of the scraper, you can apply pressure and can cut and scrape heavily, but if you place your finger at the tip you can polish the wood surface very fine, extremely fine:
Here is a sample....about 4 to 5 strokes with pressure on a forstock that has heavy rasp marks:
They are easy to resharpen, even I can do it (I'm just a few french fries short of a happy meal) by stoning the beveled edge, then I test it against my thumbnail: if I can cut or scrape my nail, I can scrape wood.
You can even get fancy and color the handles,
I get my blades from a local muffler shop, they go thru blades faster than Congress can spend our money and they simply throw them on the floor....I get them for free. The drawer pulls cost about $2.50 for two at any old Big Box Store and epoxy is pretty cheap. The best part is if I screw up the edge, I can easily re-shape or just start over.
I provide one of these to each student who takes the gun building class at the Log Cabin Shop, free of charge. We show them ways to put them to use and there are hundreds of ways to use them. Works pretty good on horns, scrape brass with them.....
So far as I can tell, I've probably made about two dozen or so. The folks I've given them to have pretty much given me positive reviews. Tim Crosby's got one, gave one to Dennis, one to Brian Barker and that maple sort of guy....Acer.
You can also make some real good scrapers with an old hand saw: cut the blade and roll an edge on it. The flexibility allows it to cut, scrape and remove wood well.
Allen wrenches can also be used, I use the same technique to use allen wrenches (small size) to make very small scrapers that can get into very small areas, great for lock inletting. Allen wrenches make pretty good tiny chisells as well and they can hold an edge and can get very sharp (watch your finger tips!)