clanger
Established Member
custard":2p53f6ep said:I wonder why there's so much reluctance by amateur woodworkers to invest in proper training?
When you see examples like this it's clear that face to face training drives you up the learning curve in leaps and bounds. But if you were to offer most hobbyists the choice between a week of training and some piece of Chinese tat machinery, then 99 times out of 100 they'd choose rubbish kit over solid skills.
Maybe people think the internet will take care of all their training needs? For a tiny disciplined and determined minority that's possibly correct, but for the majority the internet is more of a trap, with so many conflicting opinions and diversionary rabbit holes that most people just get spun around in circles rather than make any real woodworking progress.
I fully agree - when work permits, I like to enrol on the evening classes of Furniture Making at Chichester college (been too long as I'm now working in London). Being taught by ex-students that have gone on to become apprentices at Barnsleys etc. is great. The best (which you will never get from YouTube) is when you get something wrong - they will explain what went wrong, why it went wrong, and best of all the 'cheats' available to recover the situation.
<flame-suit>They also demonstrate and get you practising sharpening. Apparently, that causes some people difficulty :shock: </flame-suit>
Chris