Brill88
Tom Brill general woodworker and woodsman
Is there anyone from the old days when courses were hard to pass and you were taught more than the very basics? I think I remember my grandfarther saying his course was 7 years including his apprenticeship although that may have been muddled with WW2 popping up at the same time.
I was after a coat for keeping the dust and shavings off my clothes and from abit of talking to folk on here it turns out there was a whole thing with different lectures wearing different colours etc. I just have this vision of an old boy with a pipe and shirt and tie cracking the whip so to speak.
Only course I’ve done was a kitchen fitting one with a rather lack luster teacher who complained the whole time of his ill health.
Guess what I’m trying to say does any one on here remember the old school ways of carpentry before it all became about having the latest festool tool and more about the level of work and working with wood not MDF?
I was doing some work a while ago at a building built in the 60s. It was an ex-tax office and there were fire extinguishers on the wall surrounded by a lovely hardwood probably sepele with an angled compound dovetail mitred joint. Couldn’t believe it each signed by someone with the year they were installed.
I was after a coat for keeping the dust and shavings off my clothes and from abit of talking to folk on here it turns out there was a whole thing with different lectures wearing different colours etc. I just have this vision of an old boy with a pipe and shirt and tie cracking the whip so to speak.
Only course I’ve done was a kitchen fitting one with a rather lack luster teacher who complained the whole time of his ill health.
Guess what I’m trying to say does any one on here remember the old school ways of carpentry before it all became about having the latest festool tool and more about the level of work and working with wood not MDF?
I was doing some work a while ago at a building built in the 60s. It was an ex-tax office and there were fire extinguishers on the wall surrounded by a lovely hardwood probably sepele with an angled compound dovetail mitred joint. Couldn’t believe it each signed by someone with the year they were installed.
Last edited: