I just read Roger Deakin’s Wildwood: A Journey through Trees (Penguin, 2007). I give it my highest recommendation. Calling this book “nature writing” is like calling Bruce Chatwin's
Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
2020-07-26
2018-09-22
It's Satire, Folks
I have posted a new video on YouTube. It is a joke (literally), but there's a serious point behind it. Lately I've seen a lot in the social media woodworking world about whether somebody's work is "art" or "craft" and even some stuff about what art is.
Here's the link: https://youtu.be/rclk1Sqbbt8
And almost always, the person making the pronouncements as though they're deep original thoughts has never read anything on the subject, let alone spoken with anyone halfway informed.
It bugs me, so I made this video.
Here is the description I put on the video:
Here's the link: https://youtu.be/rclk1Sqbbt8
And almost always, the person making the pronouncements as though they're deep original thoughts has never read anything on the subject, let alone spoken with anyone halfway informed.
It bugs me, so I made this video.
Here is the description I put on the video:
Labels:
book review,
Everyman,
Jim Dillon,
Soapbox,
video,
YouTube
2018-01-02
Video Worth Watching: Wille Sundqvist on YouTube
My teacher Drew Langsner has posted a video I love on YouTube. On several of my visits to Country Workshops, I have watched this on a VHS copy Drew has in the shop's video library.
This is basically raw, unedited footage made in 1982 by Rick Mastelli for a projected video by Taunton Press. For reasons I don't know, the project wasn't completed. I believe several black and white stills from these sessions were used in a Fine Woodworking article on the basic knife grasps.
I assume this was Wille's second trip to the U.S., when he taught the first spoon and bowl course at Country Workshops. Here you see a craftsman at the height of his powers, working in a new environment and explaining what he's doing and why in his second (third?) language. Clearly he's a master of both the work and teaching it.
Along with Wille's book, Swedish Carving Techniques, and the later Taunton video by his son Jögge, this video will give anyone interested in carving with hand tools, beginner or more advanced, plenty of food for thought. I still have new "aha" moments every time I look these over. Wonderful "ahas" I feel not just in the brain, but in the hands: one of life's great pleasures!
This is basically raw, unedited footage made in 1982 by Rick Mastelli for a projected video by Taunton Press. For reasons I don't know, the project wasn't completed. I believe several black and white stills from these sessions were used in a Fine Woodworking article on the basic knife grasps.
I assume this was Wille's second trip to the U.S., when he taught the first spoon and bowl course at Country Workshops. Here you see a craftsman at the height of his powers, working in a new environment and explaining what he's doing and why in his second (third?) language. Clearly he's a master of both the work and teaching it.
Along with Wille's book, Swedish Carving Techniques, and the later Taunton video by his son Jögge, this video will give anyone interested in carving with hand tools, beginner or more advanced, plenty of food for thought. I still have new "aha" moments every time I look these over. Wonderful "ahas" I feel not just in the brain, but in the hands: one of life's great pleasures!
2016-02-09
Ian Kirby's Sharpening with Waterstones
In the
time I've been writing this blog, I have shied away from doing book
reviews, because I want this blog to tell you what's going on in MY
shop. But sometimes, what's going on in my shop is that I'm reading,
to help jog my memory about a technique or construction method or
tool setup that I want to use. For me, woodworking and reading about
it have always been paired activities which make each other more
interesting and rewarding. It's about time I shared some of my
thoughts on a few books, blogs and magazines.
I
Some
Books I Like
In
1998 and 1999, Cambium Press (later taken over by Linden Press)
issued four books by Ian Kirby: The Accurate Router, The Accurate Table Saw, Sharpening with Waterstones,
and The Complete Dovetail. These books are physically
different from typical woodworking books, with a smaller format: 6 by
9 inches and 140 pages, compared with 9 by 12 and around 200 pages
for most woodworking offerings from publishers like Taunton,
Sterling, Fox Chapel, Popular Woodworking; and other titles from
Cambium/Linden. So they're half the usual size, but also half the
usual price, at $14.95. I like them all, and they're among the books
I recommend students in my classes read.
The
illustrations are all
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