Cheshirechappie
Established Member
During the somewhat extended -and sometimes surreal - thread on OBM or bevelled-edge chisels for morticing ( regular-mortice-chisel-or-bevel-edged-for-your-mortices-t109499.html ), several side discussions developed, one of which was about efficient methods. I thought it worth extracting the matters raised and starting a separate thread, in part because I think there are ideas that could be discussed more widely and perhaps developed for mutual benefit.
Jacob raised the point that some older pieces were made by 'efficient' hand methods - fast, and with no frills - and that he was interested in such methods because there could be things to apply to modern hand-work. I posed an alternative view that most people doing hand work today are not mass producing items to make a living, and thus can afford to take a bit more time to do things to a better standard. A number of people then pointed out that there was merit in learning to do things more quickly and efficiently - which is a fair point.
I'd like to expand a little, firstly by adding experience to the mix. It's been mentioned before that learning to do anything really well takes something in the order of 10,000 hours or so. Most craftsmen earning their living in the 18th or 19th centuries working wood would rack up their 10,000 hours well before finishing their apprenticeships, given a working week of about 70 hours and five to seven year apprenticeships. We can therefore infer that the standard of work they used was dictated not by lack of experience, but by the time available to complete the work. A journeyman cabinetmaker working for a supplier of cheap, basic furniture would therefore use whatever time-saving tricks they could find, whereas one of Thomas Chippendale's craftsmen would have more time to do a 'proper' job, because that's what the client was paying for.
For most of us, working part-time in sheds and garages, accumulating 10,000 hours might take years, or even decades. However, we can still try to do the best work we can. That might mean taking time and care, and forgetting about 'efficiency' for our early projects, but trying to become 'more efficient' as our skills develop. That's rather different from Victorian skilled journeymen deciding whether a job needed maximum efficiency (or 'corner cutting', as BB pointed out) in order to leave enough for a profit on the job, or whether he could take more time and still make a profit.
The 'cheap end' furniture of today (flat MDF joined with KD fittings, backs of cardboard stapled on and so on) has supplanted the Victorian basic furniture that used to be hand made down to a price; there's no point in our trying to emulate it. Thus, the 'efficiencies' practiced by the Victorian journeyman to cut as many corners as he could should not concern us in the work we do today, except as historical interest. For maximum enjoyment and pride in what we've produced, we should be trying to do better.
Jacob raised the point that some older pieces were made by 'efficient' hand methods - fast, and with no frills - and that he was interested in such methods because there could be things to apply to modern hand-work. I posed an alternative view that most people doing hand work today are not mass producing items to make a living, and thus can afford to take a bit more time to do things to a better standard. A number of people then pointed out that there was merit in learning to do things more quickly and efficiently - which is a fair point.
I'd like to expand a little, firstly by adding experience to the mix. It's been mentioned before that learning to do anything really well takes something in the order of 10,000 hours or so. Most craftsmen earning their living in the 18th or 19th centuries working wood would rack up their 10,000 hours well before finishing their apprenticeships, given a working week of about 70 hours and five to seven year apprenticeships. We can therefore infer that the standard of work they used was dictated not by lack of experience, but by the time available to complete the work. A journeyman cabinetmaker working for a supplier of cheap, basic furniture would therefore use whatever time-saving tricks they could find, whereas one of Thomas Chippendale's craftsmen would have more time to do a 'proper' job, because that's what the client was paying for.
For most of us, working part-time in sheds and garages, accumulating 10,000 hours might take years, or even decades. However, we can still try to do the best work we can. That might mean taking time and care, and forgetting about 'efficiency' for our early projects, but trying to become 'more efficient' as our skills develop. That's rather different from Victorian skilled journeymen deciding whether a job needed maximum efficiency (or 'corner cutting', as BB pointed out) in order to leave enough for a profit on the job, or whether he could take more time and still make a profit.
The 'cheap end' furniture of today (flat MDF joined with KD fittings, backs of cardboard stapled on and so on) has supplanted the Victorian basic furniture that used to be hand made down to a price; there's no point in our trying to emulate it. Thus, the 'efficiencies' practiced by the Victorian journeyman to cut as many corners as he could should not concern us in the work we do today, except as historical interest. For maximum enjoyment and pride in what we've produced, we should be trying to do better.