Today I am writing to thank each of you for sharing in our collective journey in wood. Thank you for all your offerings of creativity and dedication, the hopes and intentions that connect you to our tradition.
To our most recent alumni, I have been honoured and humbled to work with such inspired folk as you. We are very grateful to have had you as students and friends this last session.
To JK, our ascended master, friend that I never met… thank you for being with us, through the wisdom and teachings that echo on. We are with you too through our journeys in this craft.
Inside Passage School of Fine Cabinetmaking is proud to present a slide show and talk with Juan Carlos Fernandez. Juan Carlos, a three year graduate of the program, who went onto assist with the teaching following his time as a student. Juan Carlos is not only one of the finest craftsman to come out of the school, but is one of the most creative souls I have ever had the pleasure of working with. Juan Carlos continues to work with wood, in its many forms and resides in Roberts Creek with his wife Beatriz. The talk is open to students, alumni, family and friends. Join us as we celebrate the work of this very talented and inspirational craftsman.
I’m just hanging out in the shop being a bit nostalgic at the moment, but I have to say again that everything I’ve learned here has had such a great impact on my life right now, and I’m super thankful. I’ve had very few teachers in my life that are able to to not only bestow knowledge but also a real love and joy of the material being taught, and Robert, you are among the very best! I very much look forward to returning in the future.
We have just finished our first week of the new spring session at the school. With five returning students in the advanced programs, collectively known as the Apprenticeship program, it is shaping up to be an exciting term with many different projects in the mix.
Jesse and Danielle on their Perfect Boards
For the Upward Spiral students, this week has been focused on reacquaintance with their hand planes, flattening and squaring a piece of Eastern Hard Maple by hand in the Perfect Board Exercise. It is a challenging and often frustrating task, but pays off with a deeper understanding and skill with our most essential of hand tools.
Jesse scrubs a piece of English Walnut for his cabinet
At the same time, material for projects is being pondered and selected, with the graphics of grain and colour the foremost consideration. It is a very exciting time with boards being opened up, first cuts being made. I am so looking forward to seeing these beautiful woods transform.
Rotating the grain – “Impractical Millwork”
As a central focus in our work, we introduce the concepts of grain graphics to our Impractical Studies students in their very first week at the school – how the different cuts of wood display their grain in various ways, and how to rotate the grain to yield graphics that work with our intentions for each piece.
Grain following the curve of the Gumby Leg
In the Gumby Leg exercise, the students straighten and rotate the grain of their leg blank, then cut the curves on two faces. The resulting grain lines flow with the curve, gently accentuating its shape. The leg is now ready for shaping with spokeshaves and chisels, a story all of its own…
Robert rotates the grain for a crest rail
Robert topped off the graphics lecture with a demonstration on the Vidar’s Chair crest rail. This part, though slender, curves up and back simultaneously, and was thought to require 12/4 stock. Several years ago, a spark of ingenuity led Robert to discover in his own shop that he was able to obtain the crest rail with just 8/4 stock while preserving ideal grain graphics – a moment of great creative triumph, the fruits of which we are very lucky to enjoy!
Thank you all for a great first week back in the shop!