johnnyb
Established Member
For my part I welcomed a few different stalls this year. Seemed like a few individuals Shenton woodcraft, the joiner with the holtley planes, the guy with the plastic sharpening idea( sharpsomething)
Le tonkinois was absent. Brake disc drill man was preaching to no one. Classic hand tools I wasn't to interested in this time. Axminster were barely there. I love Biven machinery the guys a delight to deal with. I had an enlightening conversation about rocking horses. That company employs 8 people(some partime) but put themselves as the normal people's rocking horse company! London companies are the top end!.....rocking horse poo! Peter sefton seemed extremely busy. A guy was setting up a school at the other end but was not to chatty about it tbh . In fact many stallies seemed a bit burnt out! Busy Friday maybe. The tiny Turner gained large crowds. Seemingly timber sales are quite popular having more and more stalls( all sanded far to thin and many not straight) cnc stalls are now ubiquitous that being trends only presence but interestingly the demographic at the stall was younger and hipsters. The future of woodwork...maybe. I personally didn't feel it was as busy as I had no trouble getting to any stall. The one stall that misread the leaflet was the guy selling wireless headphones he seemed to be struggling being completely unrelated!
Le tonkinois was absent. Brake disc drill man was preaching to no one. Classic hand tools I wasn't to interested in this time. Axminster were barely there. I love Biven machinery the guys a delight to deal with. I had an enlightening conversation about rocking horses. That company employs 8 people(some partime) but put themselves as the normal people's rocking horse company! London companies are the top end!.....rocking horse poo! Peter sefton seemed extremely busy. A guy was setting up a school at the other end but was not to chatty about it tbh . In fact many stallies seemed a bit burnt out! Busy Friday maybe. The tiny Turner gained large crowds. Seemingly timber sales are quite popular having more and more stalls( all sanded far to thin and many not straight) cnc stalls are now ubiquitous that being trends only presence but interestingly the demographic at the stall was younger and hipsters. The future of woodwork...maybe. I personally didn't feel it was as busy as I had no trouble getting to any stall. The one stall that misread the leaflet was the guy selling wireless headphones he seemed to be struggling being completely unrelated!