Category: Uncategorized

  • Katie Billo – Toronto Ontario

    Robert, 
    I am so grateful to you for your kindness, patience, assistance, and good humour these past ten weeks. 

    Coming out to the school was probably the biggest-and best decision I’ve made in my life so far. Thank you for inspiring me and helping to cultivate a passion in me that I know will continue to grow and set me on an exciting path.

    Thank you for giving me the knowledge and confidence to become a woodworker despite my distaste for measuring tapes and a poor hand at drawing. And, very importantly, thank you for sharing JK’s wisdom and work with us, and passing on his spirit in your teaching.

    I very much hope to return for another term in the not-too-distant future!
    Katie Billo

  • Celebrating a Decade of Craft Education

     Celebrating a decade of craft education at IPSFC (missing a few...sorry)
    Celebrating a decade of craft education at IPSFC (missing a few…sorry)

    It has been three weeks since we were joined by friends and family where we celebrated a decade of craft education for the aspiring amateur at IPSFC. I must say, that I was overwhelmed at the response, with several students from each of the first ten years of the school, including students from the northern Canada, the eastern seaboard, southern California, and everywhere in between. Eupho, a two year graduate of the program, joined us all the way from Japan for the weekend. It was so good to reconnect with so many old friends, including a few we have lost touch with over the years. And yes, I did say the first ten years. 

    Leading up to the exhibition, we were informed the the complex where the school has been located since its inception, is up for sale. While we have a lease that will withstand a change in ownership. It was this, combined with my desire to return to my own work, had me thinking that perhaps it was time to step aside, and let someone else take the reins for a while. As I stood before a packed house at the exhibition, I suggested that in another ten years, I hoped that it would be Caroline, and not me standing at the front of the room.

    The truth is I love teaching, and while it has become, and cherished part of my life, I have felt something missing in my life for some time. After returning from our five day retreat, I returned to my shop with a new found energy, perhaps even passion and realized that the time has come. We have been preparing the school for this for a while now. Caroline has been with us for three years, and has been assisting with our program for the past year. Later this fall she will be easing into a teaching role at the school. Each afternoon following my afternoon lecture, she will assist students in there work, and in time allow me to return to my little shop each afternoon to rekindle my passion for the craft.

    If I have learned anything in the last ten years, life is about finding a balance that works for you. Each year at the beginning and the end of the program, I make reference to the John Brown quote, “I live in a beautiful place, I work at something I love, I make enough money to live and my demands on the worlds resources are very meagre.” I have always felt that these are words to live by, and as a teacher they have always embraced my hopes, for all the who have passed through our doors. While there are many moments that will stand out for me from the weekend, I will always cherish a late night conversation I had with Don Stenner. He made reference to the quote and suggested that he was doing just that. I thought to myself, this is the greatest gift a teacher can ever receive.

    Yvonne and I would like to take this opportunity to thank all of those who joined us for the celebration, and those who joined us in spirit. I remind you that this school not only exists for you but because of you. In the past ten years, you have shaped the school and our lives, and we are so very grateful for the memories.
    with peace & love,
    Robert

  • Spring 2015

    Vidar’s Chair

    Jake Maughan – Canada
    Andrew McKay – Canada

    UPWARD SPIRAL

    Spencer Barnard – Canada 

    IMPRACTICAL STUDIES

    Katie Billo – Canada
    Michael Lindsey- Canada
    Cal Burnouf – Canada
    Chad Harris – Canada

    RESIDENT CRAFTSMAN & TEACHER

    Robert Van Norman

    ADMISSIONS & STUDENT SERVICES

    Yvonne Van Norman

    TEACHING ASSISTANT

    Caroline Woon

    RELIEF TEACHER

    Gary Kent

  • Tree of Knowledge School – Israel

    “The moment you think about giving up, think of the reason you held on for so long.”

    After finishing up our winter term at the school, Yvonne and I traveled to Amsterdam for a few days, before heading to Israel, where I taught a six day class on the subtitles of making and fitting a drawer on the curve.

     Robert & Oren assembling Robert's drawer
    Robert & Oren assembling Robert’s drawer

    The Tree of Knowledge School was founded by IPSFC alumni Oren Feigenbaum and Nathan Vanthof. The school is nestled in a beautiful area between the sea of Galilee and the Mediterranean Sea, and has fostered a wonderful community of woodworkers. 

     Sea of Galilee
    Sea of Galilee

    This was my second visit to the school, in as many years. The class consisted of fifteen students with three of the schools teachers also participating in the class. While Oren and Nathan continue as the primary teachers at the school, they have enlisted the assistance of Amir Aharon, a graduate from the Tree of Knowledge’s first long program and Chen Lekach, a graduate of the College of the Redwoods. The school has created a creative and supportive environment with a strong reverence for the teachings of James Krenov. 

     

     morning lecture
    morning lecture

    Following the program, Yvonne and I joined Oren and Nathan and their lovely families for a wonderful meal in the ancient seaside port of Akko, which for me is a very special place. The next morning we all traveled to Golan Heights where from atop of Mount Hermon, we could see the green orchards of Syria to the east.

     

     Mount Hermon
    Mount Hermon

    We traveled further south and stayed in a yurt overlooking the Sea of Galilee, and enjoyed a traditional meal over a fire. The next morning we traveled south to the Dead Sea stoping by a desert monastery where the restoration of several buildings and mosaics where underway. Swimming in the Dead Sea and enjoying the natural hot springs adjacent to it will be something that Yvonne and I will not soon forget. We then traveled to the south of the Dead Sea where we spent the night in one of the most unique places we have ever experienced. The vibe there was very Sababa. Sababa is a hebrew word meaning relax or chill. We found that the people of Israel, are a very soulful group of people. The next morning we began our journey home stopping by David’s Falls and  back to the Kibbutz where we were staying for one more night. The next day I spent at the school before boarding the train from Nahariya to Tel Aviv. After nearly twenty four hours later, we arrived home in Roberts Creek and after a few days of rest, began preparing the school for the spring session which begins on Monday. 

     Drawer Making & Fitting on the Curve
    Drawer Making & Fitting on the Curve

    The beauty of this small country on the Mediterranean is only surpassed by the beauty of their people. We very much look forward to our next visit.

     my bench mate Amir, a very sweet man
    my bench mate Amir, a very sweet man
  • Henry Tsang – Toronto Ontario

    Henry joined us for the first two weeks of our Impractical Studies Program, and posted a blog sharing his experience here. Our Impractical Cabinetmaker Program consists of four eleven week sessions, the first of which is, Impractical Studies.

  • Winter 2015

     Winter 2014

    Resident Craftsman & Teacher

    Robert Van Norman

    Admissions & Student Services

    Yvonne Van Norman

    Teaching Assistant

    Caroline Woon

    Relief Teacher

    Gary Kent

    Upward Spiral

    Jake Maughan – Canada
    Andrew McKay – Canada
    Mike Noble – Canada

    Impractical Studies

    Spencer Barnard – Canada
    Will Yarrington – United States
    Mike Bodnar – Canada

  • Exhibition & Guest Faculty Programs

     Marquetry Cabinet by Barbara Shelton photography by Ingeborg Suzanne
    Marquetry Cabinet by Barbara Shelton photography by Ingeborg Suzanne

    Friends,
    As many of you are aware, our school is in it’s tenth year of providing craft education for the aspiring amateur. We would like to invite each of you to join us for a weekend of celebration, May 1-3, 2015 as we look back on the journey. It has been a decade of highs and lows, trials and triumphs. We have made many friends, and lost influential people in our lives. We have watched relationships foster, children grow and babies born. I am grateful for it all. It has shaped our school, and our lives. We are reminded every day that our school exists not only for you, but because of you. Each of you have made a profound impact on our lives.

    On Friday May 1, 2015 at 5pm a Welcome Elephant will be held at the school, with a keg of local craft beer on tap. On Saturday May 2, 2015 from 6-9pm, we will be presenting a retrospective Exhibition of work from our students, alumni and faculty. Refreshments will be provided and an informal gathering for our alumni, family and friends will follow. On Sunday an alumni brunch will take place at the Gumboot Cafe. Following brunch, for those interested, I will be providing a tour of my new home shop, which is now home to JK’s handtools and original Swedish machines.

    On the following Monday we are pleased to announce that Jacques Breau 2006-2007,  will be kicking off our Guest Faculty programs for 2015.  Jacques will be offering a program on Curved Joinery May 4-15, 2015. Lael Gordon  2006-2007, will be presenting Parquetry August 3-15. If you are interested in attending either class, please contact the Yvonne for more details. 

    As there is much planning to be done, please let us know if you plan to attend, and how many pieces if any you intend to bring. These pieces may include pieces made as a student at the school, as well as work done after graduation. This will be a wonderful opportunity to catch up with old friends, and meet like minded craftsman, their families and friends.  Yvonne and I would be most grateful if you could join us for this celebration.
    Be well and enjoy your work,
    Robert & Yvonne 

  • the other end of the plank

    In the fall of 2009, I lost two very influential people in my life. I felt my passion for the craft and life for that matter fade. I struggled, and allowed traditions once dear to me, slip through the cracks. 

    After Jim passed, I found it difficult to listen to Jim’s voice, and the lectures he provided me to pass along to our students, were set aside, waiting for the right time. At the beginning of Caroline’s second year, I recognized a spark, one that needed to be kindled. We began listening to Jim’s lectures again, each Friday after class. I later added a slideshow from the archive he passed along to the school. Gradually, I found it was easier to listen, and my feeling of loss was replaced with that of healing and hope.

    There is a passage in A Cabinetmakers Notebook that has always been very dear to me. On page seventy three, third paragraph, it reads:

     “ Looking back on it, I realize that not everyone would have done it so consistently. I survived by simply refusing to do things because people wanted me to do them, or resorting to some sort of small series production and doing things multiply – two or three or four at a time. I made one object at a time because of the wood, because of the tools, with a certain idea and hope, and somehow these objects won friends and gradually, gradually, my confidence and experience increased. But for a very long time, it was touch and go. Even now, although people may think that I’ve got it made and things are going fine, even now I am only carrying my end of the plank. Someone else who is sharing life with me and has believed from the beginning in what I am trying to do is carrying the other end of that plank.”  – James Krenov

    I read this passage when I presented my first piece, as a student at the College of the Redwoods, in honour of my soul mate, who has encouraged and supported me my entire life as a craftsman. When we set up the school, I felt it important to formally acknowledge the significant others in our lives, those who support us as we followed our dreams. At the end of each program, I would ask a student to read the passage. A few years ago, this tradition too had managed to slip through the cracks. 

    Nondas and his wife Melissa visited our school a year ago this past fall. When they contacted the school, and suggested their schedule, Yvonne suggested they join us for our Friday Elephant and Jim’s lecture. I immediately recognized Nondas’s reverence for the craft, and JK. I remembered how carefully he handled one of Jim’s planes, as I handed it to him. This past February Nondas returned and joined us for Impractical Studies, and stayed on for Vidar’s Chair in the summer term. Melissa, spent much of the time commuting between Roberts Creek and Alaska, enabling Nondas to continue his studies. It was on a Friday evening during one of her visits, Melissa said to me, that she had recognized that evenings lecture as the one they had heard during their first visit to the school. It occurred to me then, that it was time to bring back another tradition. At the end of the summer term, students, alumni, family and friends, gathered in my shop to listen to one of Jim’s farewell addresses after which time, I called upon Nondas to read the passage. 

     John's composing piece nearing completion
    John’s composing piece nearing completion

    At the end of this past term, I asked John to read the same passage. This was John’s third term at the school in the past year. John arrived with very little experience in the craft, it has been a real pleasure to watch his progression as a craftsman, his focus and dedication to the craft has been an inspiration to witness. John’s lovely wife Haydee joined us for a couple of days in each of his last two terms and kept the home fires burning while John pursued his craft education. John’s fine cabinet in spalted big leaf maple on a stand of kwila is shown nearing completion.

    Having completed Impractical Studies this past summer, Alberto returned for the Upward Spiral program and completed a fine reproduction of JK’s pipe cabinet in Garry oak. The wood was harvested locally and was selected by Caroline and myself, with this cabinet in mind. Alberto is in his third term at the school and making templates and selecting the material for Vidar’s chair.

    In this past fall term, we had three students complete the Impractical Studies program. We are grateful that all three will be staying on at the school to complete the Upward Spiral program this term. Andrew and Jake will be making JK’s pipe cabinet and Mike will be making JK’s jewelry box.

    Caroline is in her third year of study at the school. In the past term she provided our students with an afternoon consult each week, and on occasion supplemented Robert’s lectures with demonstrations of her own. In the coming term, while continuing work on her boxwood and beech cabinet, she will be offering our students two afternoon consults each week. As a teacher I am filled with a deep sense of pride watching her work with our students. Yvonne and I are so very grateful to have this fine young craftsman and dear friend with us here at the school.

    Following our winter term, Yvonne and I will be heading to the Tree of Knowledge School in Israel, where I will be teaching a six day class on drawer making and fitting including drawers along a curve. The school is located in northern Israel and was established by alumni Oren Feigenbaum and Nathan VantHof.

    Over the break, I managed to spent some time with a few special people in my life, and said goodbye to an old friend. After parking our 1987 Westfalia two and a half years ago we found it a new home. While I was sad to watch as it rolled down the road, I realize that the lifestyle changes that we have made in the time since parking it have been positive in every way. A year long experiment, has lead to a life changing experience for Yvonne and I. We are very fortunate to live and work where we do, and while I am not naive enough to think that everyone can be without a vehicle, simply, it works for us. 

    Heart Hand & Eye continues to progress, slow but steady. The book has been a lot of work and a steep learning curve for me. The publisher and the editor have been very supportive and I am grateful for their patience.

    “seems I’m talking my whole life, its time I listened now” – Mike Rosenberg 

    Over the break, I was able to spend time in my shop everyday. I worked on my cabinet, on chairs with Gary, and on some days, I just puttered. It was during this time, that I realized just how meaningful this time is for me and that I am not quite ready to share it yet. In the coming term, I  will focus my time on teaching, writing and working in my shop. Perhaps when I complete my little cabinet, I will having something more to say. Until then, be well and enjoy your work, I know I am.

     

     

     

     

  • Welcome, Winter

    This week we reopened the school to a full class and some familiar friendly faces. Welcome and welcome back! 

     Upward Spiral buddies
    Upward Spiral buddies

    This first week of the program introduced the idea of grain graphics in wood, a central aspect of our work. We discussed selecting our material with intention, rotating the orientation of the growth rings in a piece when milling, always aiming for the grain to be in harmony with the curves and profiles that we shape in each piece. 

    We have added chainsaw milling to this first week to expand upon these concepts, showing how a log can be sawn with the same consideration to grain orientation, yielding boards with the best possibilities for grain that is harmonious with our work. 

     Robert and Will make the first cut
    Robert and Will make the first cut
     Sharpening between cuts
    Sharpening between cuts

    The students gave the Alaskan mill a go, sawing up an Arbutus log that Robert has had for a couple of years.

     Spencer and Mike make a cut
    Spencer and Mike make a cut

    Thank you all for being here this winter, I am excited as ever to be back. 

     Jake cuts Claro walnut
    Jake cuts Claro walnut
  • Farewell Fall Session

    Last week we wrapped up our fall session with a final Elephant at Robert and Yvonne’s home. We shared a delicious potluck dinner and several special closing rituals, including a farewell address from JK in Robert’s shop and a bonfire, on a wonderfully clear night. 

    I completed the frame and panel joinery on my doors earlier in the week, enjoying a grand opportunity to mortise for the mid-rails of my doors on JK’s table saw mortiser in Robert’s shop. What fun!

     Mortising my mortises
    Mortising my mortises

    I got three slices out of my piece of spalted Beech, giving me several combinations for the door panels. Stoked to finally lay down the frames and preview my options.

     A preview
    A preview

    I also finished up a little frame out of Arbutus that I had been working on, to house a print for one of my oldest and dearest friends Wei-Ling. I am coming to love the open mortise and tenon joint, strong and simple, and the more I see it the more I am struck by its straightforward good looks. 

     Open mortise and tenon
    Open mortise and tenon
     Rabbet run, frame assembled, ready for strips and pins
    Rabbet run, frame assembled, ready for strips and pins

    It is my first time using glass in a frame, and I find something so very elegant about this method of pinning it in a rebate with narrow strips of wood, nicely bevelled and edges softened.

     Hanging wire
    Hanging wire

    I spent a good part of a day exploring how the frame would be hung, finally settling on a simple wire, wrapped around brass screws set into the frame. Robert suggested I carve a little groove in the strip for the wire to sit in, a neat touch.

    I am very much looking forward to getting to this stage with my doors next session, which will have glass above and beech below, pinned in rebates the same way. 

    To the fall session, it has been a pleasure working with and sharing a shop with this awesome dedicated group of craftsmen, most of whom are returning next session for Upward Spirals and a Vidar’s chair. Enjoy your break and see you guys soon!