Filed under: hand crafted furniture

Where have all the WoodShop Classes gone?

The Making of a checker board is really a beginning woodworking project taught to kids in wood shop classes around the age of 15.  Oh, hang on, what wood shop classes?  There are very few nowadays due to budget cuts or  liability or whatever reason.  What a shame.  Not all kids are University bound nor should they be.  There is a Proverb that says something like, "Raise up a child in the way they should go."  I used to think the parents were the ones who determined the best course for their kids, but I've been enlightened.  The Proverb says, "...the way THEY should go." not the way we think they should go.  Ya Ya you want your kid to do something considered a part of the intelligentsia like those in the current big banking industry.  Who do you think designed and fabricated the desk and office they work in?  And where will the next designers and builders come from?  I think it might be time to reinstate the old wood and metal shop classes.

In this video of the Game On series I show how the checker board is laminated to a core material.  The backgammon board is laminated to the other side of the same core.  As I mentioned, a checker board is a beginning wood shop project so portions of the video take me back to "wood shop 101" or age 15. Wow that was a long time ago, as I will soon be 54. 

So, where have all the wood shops gone? As a result of the ever fading Industrial Arts classes, as they once were, I believe there will be some developmental stuff that just won't happen.  Kids won't learn a lot of stuff.  Making a wooden chess board (or something similar) and the problems that are solved in the process, is just a tiny precursor to the bigger issues in life. 

Now I'll get off of my soap box (which is made of wood incidentally) and refer to a couple of articles that give some hope that the wisdom of the ages is still relevant.  The Economist recently wrote an excellent article on this. Check out "Wisdom of the Hands" blog and finally another great article from the New York Times entitled "Kindergarten Shop Class" which I found very inspirational.

So there you have it!  This is Dan Rieple. Believe it!

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The Foundational Stuff

Things are a bit out of sequence in this video but I'll try to briefly sort it out. To recap, the mould is the tool which was created to produce the curved component of the game table (as well as the desk). The last video shows how we adhered the oyster veneer onto this core. 

This video starts out with me making the top half of the mould. Then the video switches to making that core for the game table and then again switches back to the making of the top half of the mould where I am attaching the steel bolting angles.  It is a bit long but not nearly as long as it actually took.

These TV shows where they make a desk or a table in an hour is bull-ony.  They don't show the many set-ups or trial runs.  That has already been done.  If they have to do an operation ten times they only show you once.  And they never show you a wreck.  They don't have a 40 year old wide belt sander that destroys a belt once in a while.  Now that would be some quality viewing.  I hate it when that happens and don't think of it as quality viewing, but it is real life.  Hence the bumper sticker, "..it happens."

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