Woodworking on the Net
Over the last couple of years it seems to me that there
has been a great increase in the number of people who are
joining the ranks of the hobbyist woodworker. Here on
the net, there are many websites where folks show off their
handywork. There are any number of woodworking forums
where amateurs and not so amateurs go to discuss their hobby
and to help each other with problems and how-tos. What
has created this renewed interest in woodworking?
I have some thoughts on the subject, and, you guessed it,
I'm gonna impart them now. So many of the things we buy
are made with the idea that they will be replaced within the
next few years or even months. Real wood furniture has
become a thing of the past, at least that which we buy in the
typical furniture store. Particle board with plastic
veneer is generally what you find, even in the so called
"upscale" stores. We are expected to remodel our homes
on a continueing basis, and when we remodel, we throw out the
old furniture and buy new. Time was that furniture was
something that was passed down from one generation to the
next. We see that type of furniture in antique
stores. Furniture that is two and three hundred years
old. That furniture was made one piece at a time.
You didn't go down to your local furniture store, you went
directly to the craftsman and told him what you wanted, a
piece or two at a time. Then you lived with that
piece of furniture and when your kids grew up and moved on to
their own lives, they took a few pieces with them. I
think that a lot of the people getting into woodworking are
looking for timeless pieces. They are tired of replacing
furniture that falls apart about the time that they are
finished paying for it. They want to renew that
connection with future generations. They want a piece
that they can look at 40 or fifty years down the road and
remember when little junior put that scratch on it, or spilled
that paint on it. They want to have memories in their
furniture. You don't get that with particle board and
plastic veneer.
Something I have noticed from spending time on the forums
is that a very high percentage of the people just entering
this hobby are Information Technology professionals.
That could be because the forums are on the internet and thats
where IT people hang out. It could be the engineering
connection, too. I've seen threads on woodworking forums
in which physics and engineering terminology is tossed about
like so much sawdust. Ask about whether to get a 6" dado
set or an 8" one and you're liable to learn more about
mechanical physics than you ever wanted to know.
But I think it goes deeper than that. I
think that IT people hunger for creation of something in
the real world, not just in the world of bits and bytes and
networking and artificial intelligence. They want to
make something that they can hold in their hands. And
they want to go back and study the methods of of their fathers
and grandfathers. They want to know about oil finishes
and old varnishes. The poly finishes of today are not
satisfying their search for beauty. They want to learn
about hand planes, and scrapers and hand rubbed
finishes. There is an essence of quality in the old
finishes that they can't find in the new ones. They want
to experience the days before sandpaper, and power tools when
so much was done with skills that take years to perfect.
They want to hand cut dovetails, and joint the edge of a board
with a Number 7 Stanley jointing plane.
And the Engineers want that too. Folks go to school
for years and years to become Engineers to be in on the design
and developement of things. I've heard more than one
Engineer complain that they are really not doing what they
dreamed of. Many are in administrative positions and
things are so complex that everyone works on such miniscule
parts of the whole, that they don't get the creative
bug quenched and turn to making things as a hobby.
And the web sites out there are fantastic. Anything
you want to know about any aspect of woodworking can be found
out there with just a couple minutes on a search engine.
And the information is generally free. Even the tool
makers and the retailers selling stuff for woodworking are
setting up demo sites and sponsoring forums, and they pretty
much let the forums go where they may. Sure, they've got
little pop-up advertisements, but most are not so obnoxious as
to interfere with getting what you want from the
location. And the magazine sites, another fantastic
source of how-tos.
One of these days I'm gonna connect a bunch of my
favorite links here, but there are so many that it will be a
daunting task. My favorites are the sites put up by
individuals. I like to look at what other folks are
doing, and how they are doing it. Everything out there
is so freely given. And like me, I think it is an ego
thing. It's neat to be on one of the forums and have
someone ask a question about how to do something and to be
able to drop a ling to one of my pages and say, "Hey, I got
just the thing you're looking for over here at my web
site. Go on over and have a look." Woodworkers
have a fairly small audience for their projects outside of the
net, and I think most want to give back what they have learned
to others. Even the few who have the talent and tenacity
to make a living out of a small shop doing custom work freely
give of their knowledge and, more importantly, their
time. I think this giving is a cultural thing in the
woodworking culture going back to the days not so long ago
when a furniture or cabinet maker, or any of the dozens of
other specialized trades involving the making of things from
wood, learned their trade at the shoulder of a master.
And it is a darn good thing that this internet thing came
along when it did, because so much of the trades are already
lost, and more is lost every day as the masters go off to that
great big wood shop in the sky, taking with them the secrets
passed down from master to apprentice over generations of
people who have found joy in smelling fresh cut cedar or
walnut or oak.