Babylon
Well-Known Member
Craftsmanship is an attitude, not a question of available tools.
No, he's quite solvent (despite only charging me £18/hour six years ago), lives in a large house he's paid for, has brought up three children all now post-college. His wife (who he calls 'The Ayatolla') worked as a senior nurse. He just prefers to work on old buildings rather than new-builds.
I myself can mark and cut single-drawer dovetails by hand as fast as, but finer than, any router with a dovetail-jig. The jig slowly becomes more time-efficient when making multiple drawers (it's initial setup time is quite long), but can never achieve the finesse of hand-cut work which gives barely a 1mm gap between the ends of each dovetail.
Similarly, my old cottage is so idiosyncratic that his careful hand-woodworking would have left the nailgun and chopsaw crews scratching their heads - or wrecking the crookedness by trying to straighten everything out!
Good craftsmanship is a state of mind (ask any German, Swedish or Japanese worker) which has little to do with what kit you prefer to use. That attitude to craft was the British baby that got thrown out with the British bathwater!
Of course it took him 4 times as long as anyone else..... and as a consequence he went bust......
No, he's quite solvent (despite only charging me £18/hour six years ago), lives in a large house he's paid for, has brought up three children all now post-college. His wife (who he calls 'The Ayatolla') worked as a senior nurse. He just prefers to work on old buildings rather than new-builds.
I myself can mark and cut single-drawer dovetails by hand as fast as, but finer than, any router with a dovetail-jig. The jig slowly becomes more time-efficient when making multiple drawers (it's initial setup time is quite long), but can never achieve the finesse of hand-cut work which gives barely a 1mm gap between the ends of each dovetail.
Similarly, my old cottage is so idiosyncratic that his careful hand-woodworking would have left the nailgun and chopsaw crews scratching their heads - or wrecking the crookedness by trying to straighten everything out!
Good craftsmanship is a state of mind (ask any German, Swedish or Japanese worker) which has little to do with what kit you prefer to use. That attitude to craft was the British baby that got thrown out with the British bathwater!