| Q:
How did you get into woodworking?
A:
I am told that as a toddler I tried to break
everything I got hold of. Early on I was given
a truck that simply couldn’t be broken
and since then, I have had an irresistible urge
to make things. By the age of 8, I knew somehow
that I wanted to be an engineer and this led
naturally into woodwork as a hands-on expression
of this feeling. By my late teens, I had the
confidence to build a 16ft sailing boat.
Q:
Who are your woodworking heroes/gods/gurus?
A:
James Krenov stands out for me as somebody whose
writings have inspired me to think about design
and to use hand tools to achieve fine details
and a quality finish. Recently, I came back
from 2 years of living in Tokyo where I had
a wonderful woodworking experience through an
association with Shuko-kai, a group that promotes
traditional Japanese woodwork. In many respects,
the atmosphere of camaraderie in the group could
have been transplanted from a western group
of woodworkers and they have a wonderful focus
on building skills and knowledge with hand tools.
I attribute these attitudes and the focus on
traditional tools and methods to the mentor
behind the group, Tokio Inoue. So he also, is
a hero of mine. He also showed the patience
of a saint in the way he helped me with some
of the early articles that I wrote while still
in Tokyo.
Q:
What do you mainly make?
A:
I think I am a bit of a woodworking butterfly
in that I have sampled a wide range of woodwork
over the years—boatbuilding, carving,
furniture, cabinets, small boxes etc. In Japan,
I did most of my woodwork on a bench I could
mount over the kitchen sink (we had a small
apartment by western standards) and this automatically
focussed me on smaller objects. Going forward,
I think I will keep this focus. I can see additional
things I want to achieve in finding a western
interpretation of the Japanese box tradition.
In addition, I have been experimenting with
small structural forms in moulded veneer and
can see a number of projects there as well.
Q:
Your thoughts on traditional vs ‘new’
and digital?
A:
I think that a solid grounding in the use of
hand-tools is essential to finding a good balance
between hand and machine tools. These days,
I think that there are lots of new hand tools
that are every bit as good as the original models
they replicate. I have a preference for Japanese
tools and fortunately, craftsman-made Japanese
tools are still available.
I use a vernier caliper a lot for fine woodwork.
While a traditional caliper is sufficiently
accurate, I find a digital version somewhat
easier to read. The other digital incursion
into woodwork is 3D CAD. I currently use Google
SketchUp to model my projects and to produce
sketches and final drawings. It has lots of
advantages for visualising and for updating
projects as the design evolves.
Q:
What are you pet woodworking hates?
A:
I dislike artificiality and like to find minimalist
designs where the form is driven by the function.
Q:
What is your desert island hand tool/ machine/
timber/ woodie book?
A:
If I wanted to get off the island, I think that
I would have to go for a chainsaw. However,
my favourite tools are hand planes, though I’m
not sure what I would do with a hand plane on
a desert island.
Q:
The best thing you’ve ever made.
A:
I’m pretty happy with the mitre box-in-a-box
that I submitted to the AWR Open Box competition*.
It captured a lot of ideas from Japanese woodworking
while also displaying a western style.
Q:
Your best excuse for not getting something quite
right?
A:
The best excuse I’ve heard was from the
craftsmen who built one of the temples at Nikko
in Japan. They felt it was so perfect that the
Gods would be jealous, so they intentionally
(?) put one of the pillars upside down. I haven’t
tried that one yet.
Q:
Your most often-made mistake?
A:
One of the good things about woodwork is that
you can learn from your mistakes—so my
most often-made mistake is a moving feast. Precision
woodwork depends on accurate mark-up initially
and I think that’s where most of my mistakes
occur.
Q:
Your biggest woodworking disaster!!?
A:
The tradition at Shuko-kai is that members learn
on the more malleable white steel blades. When
I eventually graduated to a harder blue steel
blade, I managed to crack it while adjusting
the back. I then had to take it back to the
master—Tokio Inoue and together, we ground
ten years life out of the blade in order to
fix it. Very embarrassing.
Q:
The thing I would most like to change about
wood is...
A:
Golf would be boring if it was easy and everybody
could do it well—so would woodwork. Wood
is a complex and variable medium and that’s
what I love about it—okay, wood that doesn’t
move or tear out would be great.
Q:
The thing I would most like to change about
woodworkers is...
A:
There’s a lot of boring woodwork out there.
I’m not sure whether this means that woodworkers
need to spend more time on the design phase
or whether buyers need to value good design
more—maybe both.
Q:
The thing I would most like
to change about my own woodworking is...
A: Woodwork
is a journey and I am enjoying the journey.
It would be great if I was further down the
journey but I am where I am—I just hope
the journey keeps going for a while.
Q:
My final word on woodwork is...
A: I
am happy if I can design good solutions to everyday
problems—and in doing so, make something
that somebody else will value and enjoy while
they use it.
* Iain Green writes about
making the box in AWR#61, p.46.
Write to Iain at: iain.green@bigpond.com |