| Q:
Okay we know you like it, but how did
you get into woodworking?
A: I
took up woodturning in January 1970 at the age
of 26. I knew nothing about the craft but have
earned my living from it ever since then. I
was looking for a seachange, woodturning was
suggested, and it seemed the right thing for
me to do. I assumed I’d know if was going
to enjoy the craft within a couple of weeks,
and if I might be any good at it in a couple
of months. I negotiated a deal with a small
country production workshop: I paid a small
fee for a year’s instruction and they
kept everything I made. After that I intended
to set up a small factory with maybe six employees
making a range of wooden kitchenware. I went
out on my own five months later, selling bowls,
scoops, chopping boards, and lamp bases to gift
and kitchen shops out of the back of the car.
Everything was sold on invoice and usually paid
for in exchange for the goods. And that is essentially
how I have continued to run my business, but
with fewer retailers taking more work at a time.
Q:
Who are your woodworking heroes/gods/gurus?
A: Successful
designer/makers like Australians Tony Kenway,
Greg Collins, and Jan Saltet, or Britons Chris
Faulkner and Alan Peters. As a bowl-turner and
boxmaker I’m more influenced by Korean,
Japanese and Middle Eastern ceramics than woodworkers.
The turners whose work I admire most are Irishman
Liam Flynn, and local heroes Greg Collins and
Grant Vaughn.
Q:
What do you mainly make?
A: These
days a range of bowls using green (unseasoned)
wood, and a few boxes. In the 1970s I made and
sold at least 100 scoops a week, plus bowls,
plates, trays, chopping boards, boxes with suction
fit lids, and spindles for antique restoration
and the joinery and building trades.
Q:
Your thoughts on traditional vs ‘new’
and digital?
A: As
a designer/maker I try to think in terms of
‘timeless’. I want what I turn to
last for centuries, otherwise why bother.
Q:
What are you pet woodworking hates?
A: Woodturners
preoccupied with finish and pretty wood at the
expense of form. My Citadel Boxes are
a statement against this. Furniture or turnings
accompanied by pretentious explanatory essays:
work should be able to stand on its own.
Q:
What is your favourite hand tool/ machine/
timber/ woodie book?
A: Favourite
handtool: My 50mm wide slick or 50mm carving
gouge. Favourite machine tool: I’m pushed
to choose between my trusty 30 year old bandsaw
and my relatively new Vicmarc VL300 lathe and
the chucks that go with it. On the bandsaw I
can cut just about any shape I want up to 30mm
thick. Then the Vicmarc lathe is head and shoulders
above its rivals for useability, making all
turning jobs a lot easier. Favourite turning
tool: Raffan Kryo endgrain-hollowing gouge.
Favourite Wood: Manchurian pear or claret ash.
Favourite woodie books: The Workbench Book
by Scott Landis. To the proverbial ‘desert
island’ I’d take my version of a
Japanese slick as it can be used for carving,
turning, sharpening stakes, and other cutting.
I’d build a pole lathe and get turning
for the inevitable tourists so they have some
souvenirs when they go away.
Q:
The best thing you’ve ever made?
A: There
have been some very good bowls ranging from
70mm to 450mm diameter.
Q:
Your best excuse for not getting something
quite right?
A: It’s
my hope that everything is as good as I can
make it at the time. Objects should only be
not quite right in relation to the next generation
of objects.
Q:
Your most often-made mistake?
A: Mis-measuring
for chucks—and this invariably adds another
step to the project or becomes a design opportunity.
Q:
Your biggest woodworking disaster!!?
A: Kiln
drying large ash salad bowls in 1973: they looked
fine on the outside but 90% had severe honeycomb
splits internally that were revealed as I trued
the bowls. These days turners might detail the
splits and pass the degraded timber off as art,
but in 1973 they were merely split and close
on 100 roughed bowls went for firewood. I wasn’t
earning much at the time.
Q:
The thing I would most like to change
about wood is…
A: I’d
like to be able to freeze a wood at a given
point in its deterioration to preserve it in
the condition in which I should like to work
it. Thus freshly felled casuarinas would stay
wet and split-free for green turning; spalting
could be halted at its prettiest just before
the log softens to pulp.
Q:
The thing I would most like to change
about woodworkers is…
A: What
can there be to change! I thought everyone knows
that woodworkers are perfect beings without
any of the faults of their chosen material…
Q: The thing I would most like to change
about my own woodworking is…
A: Always
I want to be more proficient and work more fluently.
Q:
My final word on woodwork is…
A: Final
is a bit final: As I drift into my retirement
years woodturning has become my hobby rather
than my profession. I expect to make fewer but
ever better bowls and boxes, striving for the
simplicity exemplified by the finest utilitarian
bowls thrown throughout centuries by unknown
Japanese and Korean potters.
Contact Richard Raffan at:
rraffan@homemail.com.au
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