I'm reading a book about art right now which is making me reconsider my whole approach to woodwork. The basic premise is that artists operate in a realm of space and concept whereas most of us use logical, sequential approaches for most of our daily tasks. Artists often cannot explain the steps they are taking to produce their work because their thought processes cannot be articulated.
So I'm curious to understand more about the attitude of woodworkers as they go about what is after all a very creative task. My type of woodworking revolves around the scrollsaw and is inherently more freeform than most other types of woodwork. As a result, I tend to just cut and shape the wood (or MDF :roll: ) in ways that I encompass mentally, not ways that I can describe. I suspect that many other woodworkers adopt similar mindsets, especially those who work with hand tools. Perhaps cutting dovetail joints by hand requires a woodworker to relax into the task and appreciate the cuts that must be made as part of the creative process rather than a sequential process which must be followed. Yet there will also be woodworkers who enjoy creating woodwork by following sequential instructions (so-called Normites, perhaps?) which lead to them finally creating something which they can admire once the individual components are assembled.
I'm not knocking any particular approach to woodwork here; why criticise an approach which delivers the goods ? I'm just wondering how varied our thought processes are when it comes to woodwork and how that variation affects the end product. We've all got the same arms, legs, hands etc yet some woodworkers can handsaw by eye much more effectively than others who have received the same instruction. If the explanation isn't physical, then surely it must lie somewhere in the mind? And if we can identify a solution, our woodworking skills might be enhanced, opening new techniques which we've never been able to master before.
Gill
So I'm curious to understand more about the attitude of woodworkers as they go about what is after all a very creative task. My type of woodworking revolves around the scrollsaw and is inherently more freeform than most other types of woodwork. As a result, I tend to just cut and shape the wood (or MDF :roll: ) in ways that I encompass mentally, not ways that I can describe. I suspect that many other woodworkers adopt similar mindsets, especially those who work with hand tools. Perhaps cutting dovetail joints by hand requires a woodworker to relax into the task and appreciate the cuts that must be made as part of the creative process rather than a sequential process which must be followed. Yet there will also be woodworkers who enjoy creating woodwork by following sequential instructions (so-called Normites, perhaps?) which lead to them finally creating something which they can admire once the individual components are assembled.
I'm not knocking any particular approach to woodwork here; why criticise an approach which delivers the goods ? I'm just wondering how varied our thought processes are when it comes to woodwork and how that variation affects the end product. We've all got the same arms, legs, hands etc yet some woodworkers can handsaw by eye much more effectively than others who have received the same instruction. If the explanation isn't physical, then surely it must lie somewhere in the mind? And if we can identify a solution, our woodworking skills might be enhanced, opening new techniques which we've never been able to master before.
Gill