Sunday, June 30, 2024

great show and reception for residents

We had a great reception and show of work by participants in our two week woodworking residency at ESSA. I had the honor of observing growth.

Guests had the honor of meeting these fine artists, seeing their work, and buying some to keep. A portion from work sold will support future residencies.

The two week mentored woodworking residency was considered a great success.

There’s a theory in physics called quantum entanglement… that if two particles are introduced to each other, they can be thrust to the furthest corners of the universe and what’s happened with one is known to the other. I believe the same thing happens with people when our creative lives merge. Surely we will have occasions to remember our time together at ESSA and the things we’ve learned in each other’s company.

Make, fix, create and assist others in learning likewise.
 

Saturday, June 29, 2024

Make something with your hands even if it's hideous

 https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/28/well/mind/hand-crafts-creation-art.html?unlocked_article_code=1.3U0.Ysmx.QmV9TVwr2V2U&smid=url-share

Thursday, June 27, 2024

woodworking resident's show

I'm inviting you to the showing of works by our residents from a two week residency at the Eureka Springs School of the Arts. Woodworkers have been busy finishing works for display and sale.
Among the works are a variety of band sawn boxes, like my own that's shown. 

Make, fix and create...




 

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

Publication delayed

The release of my new book Designing Boxes has been delayed until October 2024 due to the change in ownership of Taunton Press. 

Earlier in the spring, Taunton Books, which had been sold to magazine publisher Active Interest Media, was then sold to Abrams book publishers, a larger press. It has been a bit confusing and disappointing. 

I'm keeping my fingers crossed that there are no further delays.

Make, fix and create...

Monday, June 24, 2024

A book to share with others

Joe Youcha, founder and director of Building To Teach wrote about my book, Wisdom of Our Hands: Crafting a Life in a review in wooden boat magazine as being a book he would want to share with the mentors from his own life and with his students. Amazon is making sharing just a bit easier with a discount price and an additional discount if you buy two or more copies. You could also, if you like, get a copy from your local library, or buy a single copy and share it with others.

John Ruskin has said that in taking a straight shaving from a plank you'll have learned a thousand things that the word of man cannot express. The Wisdom of Our Hands: Crafting a Life may make those things easier to express.

Make, fix and create....

Saturday, June 22, 2024

Woodworking residency at ESSA

I've finished the first week of my two week residency program for advanced woodworking students at ESSA. Between opportunities to help guide and encourage other woodworkers, I've been busy doing a few things to help the shop. For example I made seven new wooden mallets for student use, new backing boards for the two compound miter saws, and a newly invented hold down for use on sleds. 

In teaching I’ve noticed that not all students have the same hand strength so holding down both pieces while cutting on a sled can be a challenge. For beginners, knowing where to place their hands during the cut can be confusing at first.

The inspiration for this simple device came from Marc Adams school where students are advised to use simple similarly shaped but thin hold downs to keep fingers a safe distance from the blade when using a compound miter saw. For use on the table saw sled as shown, the tunnel underneath provides for passage of the blade without cutting the device. The outside, placed anywhere on the device guarantees that the hands are away from the blade. The extra thickness of this hold down being made from 4 thicknesses of MDF provides pressure over wider, thin stock as would be used in box making. It’s also useful for holding down smaller parts, again keeping the hands a safer distance from the cut.

I've submitted a tip on this device to Fine Woodworking for their consideration.

In the meantime, the August 2024 issue of Popular Woodworking arrived in yesterday's mail. It includes my 6 page article on making a Torsion Table.

Make, fix and create... Assist others in living and learning likewise.

Sunday, June 16, 2024

Box with legs

I like to finish what I start, and so a mitered finger jointed box I started as a demonstration last week now has hinges, a walnut lift tab and surface mounted hinges. An oil finish and lining will come next. I show a simple method for installing a lining on my youtube channel here:  https://youtu.be/qwOGNBmrOjk

Make, fix and create... Assist others in learning lifewise.




Friday, June 14, 2024

mitered finger jointed demonstration box

I've taken a few minutes today to move a demonstration box from my last week's box making class toward completion. This box is assembled with mitered finger joints, a more advanced box making technique. 

Today in the shop I added a floating panel lid. I then cut the lid from the body of the box, and as you can see, I've been shaping feet to give the box a lift. 

After sanding the legs will be glued to the corners of the box. Before the lid is hinged to the body of the box I'll add a walnut lift tab to the front.

Make, fix and create...

Monday, June 10, 2024

demo box

These are photos of a demonstration box, one of two designs made by each of my students before the floodgates were opened for them to spend the next three days working on boxes of their own design. This box is made of white oak and cherry. The unusual color of the white oak is due to a state of decay at the center of the log before milling.

Sunday, June 09, 2024

5 day box making class

I just finished a great 5 day box making class at ESSA. My 7 students made between 3 and 5 boxes of various designs. All claimed that they loved the class. 

In the past I've discussed the difficulties presented by unrestricted economic growth. That's the subject of this article in the New York Times that you can read as my gift.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/08/books/review/shrink-the-economy-save-the-world.html?unlocked_article_code=1.yE0.P4Am.Cx6g__KVMhDp&smid=url-share 

Statistics on economic growth only measure the flow of money from exercises of making and spending. I like to suggest that there are more important things than money that money offers no measure of. The care we offer each other is an example.

One simple way to gradually withdraw from the destructive economy would be to cease buying things made of plastic and to buy hand crafted things from wood instead. 

By doing so, we'll have invested in the learning and character of other human beings, and will acquire useful objects of greater lasting value.

Make, fix and create... 

Tuesday, June 04, 2024

Easy Sharp


Taytools.com has developed an easy way to sharpen chisels and small plane irons. I've tried it. It works. And while I had to make my own jigs to go on the drill press (I made three, one for ESSA, one for Clear Spring School and one for my home shop) Taylor Tool Company now sells the jig and supplies at a reasonable price.

https://lddy.no/1jwo9

Make, fix and create...

Sunday, June 02, 2024

entanglements

 Physicists have noted and proven that if you take two particles, introduce them to each other and then thrust them apart to the furthest reaches of the universe, what is done to one is noted within the behavior of the other. The phenomenon is called quantum entanglement and may someday help us to understand higher levels of human inter-connectedness and inner-connectedness.

Friedrich Froebel had been born the son of a Lutheran minister and his mother had died at a very early age. He was a bright child and cherished by his father's second wife until her own children came along. At that point he was left to fend for himself to obtain the emotional support every child needs. At an early age he was sent to live with an uncle and became apprenticed to a forester, and it was there in the Thuringian forest that Froebel discovered a love of botany and the seeds were planted for what would become Kindergarten, a garden of children. In witnessing the wonders of nature he likely gained a first glimpse of the inter-connectedness of all things.

In college Froebel had planned to become an architect but had an opportunity to work as an assistant to Christian Samuel Weiss, a leading authority on minerals and crystallography. Helping to organize the collection of minerals for Dr. Weiss, Froebel was to witness how things of great beauty grow from patterns inherent within. Should children, given the right circumstances, not grow in the same manner? You see the impact of his work with Dr. Weiss in Froebel's development of his gifts, one through 6 which were designed to lead the child into an exploration of the structure of the universe and through association with other Kindergarten activities, construct their own place within it.

Many of us have seen, even before the internet and before facebook and tik tok, evidence of our inter-connectedness and inner-connectedness. Living in a small town and knowing a few folks, I'll think of someone as I drive through town and then see them coming toward me in the next car. This is not always the case but happens often enough to make me wonder. Under such circumstances, we don't need facebook to remind us that we are a part of one another and that what we do reflects who we are and may be guided by unseen patterns within.

And so, what are we to make of all this? Froebel had suggested three uses for the Froebel gifts. One was to use blocks to create what he called forms of knowledge. Forms of knowledge were used to represent numbers and mathematical constructs important to the growth of the child. Another use was to create forms of beauty. These were to develop the child's design sense through representations of symmetry and rhythm. The third use was to create what Froebel referred to as forms of life, representing the objects to be found in everyday life, thus connecting with the child's natural inclination to serve others by making useful things. So you take these three things, development of intellect, artistic sense, and inclination to serve and you have the formula for growth.

It's ironic that Froebel did not become an architect of buildings, but instead an architect for a system of education that allowed the child to grow from within, as a crystal or flower might grow. In his autobiography Frank Lloyd Wright said about his play with Froebel blocks and their impact, "I can still feel those maple blocks in my hands to this day."

I've become fascinated of late, by the simple realization that when a light shines upon an object, its colors are reflected outward without limit into the whole of the universe. So where do we set the boundaries of self?

The illustration from wikipedia shows an experiment demonstrating quantum entanglement.

If you are reading this, we are entangled.

Make, fix and create...