The fact that various skills are no longer taught and or passed on in the UK ( and elsewhere ) comes up from time to time here.
I noticed this article today
https://www.theguardian.com/culture...-building-brexit-covid-british-crafts-at-riskDecided to follow the links to learn more.
https://heritagecrafts.org.uk/redlist/https://heritagecrafts.org.uk/redlist/categories-of-risk/Tragic what the UK is losing and what has already been lost.
More than one of the categories of "lost" or losing" some of us here* can do, but the crafts are not getting newcomers.
*I include myself in "here" as in this forum, even though I was last in the UK decades ago, I don't remember the situation of crafts and craft workers being so dire back then, it wasn't good, but to me it appears to be catastrophic. Obviously there are some craft workers who are working unbeknownst to Heritage Crafts, I know of many working in the various branches of miniatures, but this situation is terrible.
I mentioned the Compagnons du Devoir here in France in a thread.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compagnons_du_Devoir@Droogs has mentioned learning techniques in Europe ( I think it was ) from a member of Wandergesellen
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WanderjahreJourneymen has information about some countries ( UK not amongst them )
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JourneymanThere is a Guardian article ( old ) from 2006 which mentions the "International Journeyman Programme" set up in 1997.
https://www.theguardian.com/money/2006/jul/15/careers.work5Since then it appears that in the UK, the Guilds (which I believe still exist, at least some of them ? ) are doing very little ( apart from collecting fees ) and the education systems "tech schools" have decided that "tech" means IT and design, but not crafts. Are the crafts so undervalued in the UK, that no-one can make a living doing them, or is it that none of the skills are being passed on, or both?
I see Brits who live here, working and giving demos here at the craft fairs, one of the best basket makers ( baskets as art, as well as practical ) "vanniers" in Brittany , is a British woman who lives here.
I noticed this article today
https://www.theguardian.com/culture...-building-brexit-covid-british-crafts-at-riskDecided to follow the links to learn more.
https://heritagecrafts.org.uk/redlist/https://heritagecrafts.org.uk/redlist/categories-of-risk/Tragic what the UK is losing and what has already been lost.
More than one of the categories of "lost" or losing" some of us here* can do, but the crafts are not getting newcomers.
*I include myself in "here" as in this forum, even though I was last in the UK decades ago, I don't remember the situation of crafts and craft workers being so dire back then, it wasn't good, but to me it appears to be catastrophic. Obviously there are some craft workers who are working unbeknownst to Heritage Crafts, I know of many working in the various branches of miniatures, but this situation is terrible.
I mentioned the Compagnons du Devoir here in France in a thread.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compagnons_du_Devoir@Droogs has mentioned learning techniques in Europe ( I think it was ) from a member of Wandergesellen
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WanderjahreJourneymen has information about some countries ( UK not amongst them )
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JourneymanThere is a Guardian article ( old ) from 2006 which mentions the "International Journeyman Programme" set up in 1997.
https://www.theguardian.com/money/2006/jul/15/careers.work5Since then it appears that in the UK, the Guilds (which I believe still exist, at least some of them ? ) are doing very little ( apart from collecting fees ) and the education systems "tech schools" have decided that "tech" means IT and design, but not crafts. Are the crafts so undervalued in the UK, that no-one can make a living doing them, or is it that none of the skills are being passed on, or both?
I see Brits who live here, working and giving demos here at the craft fairs, one of the best basket makers ( baskets as art, as well as practical ) "vanniers" in Brittany , is a British woman who lives here.