NickN":2qvcwqav said:
Peter Sefton":2qvcwqav said:
Maybe I should change my approach possibly holding a morning like Paul has planned, what is it £50 per head maximum 100 woodworkers for a 2 hour session, not a bad way of earning 5K for a mornings work.
Peter, if you're still reading this thread by now (!) then just to say, please don't change a thing (though I know you weren't serious anyway). While I do admire the Paul Sellers approach to the use of budget and affordable tools, and the seeming absence of sponsorship by brands, as well as his excellent videos and blog, I got a slight feeling on his course earlier this year that the 'online celebrity status' might just possibly be going to his head a little - and as I mentioned in an earlier post, this caused him to lack involvement with the students (of which there were too many, 13 is imho too big a number) and concentrate too much on... well, not sure really, as Phil took a lot of the photos as well as providing most practical assistance to the class. Or he of course might just be getting a bit tired too with all the work he does. Either way the effect isn't the best for aspiring woodworker students.
Speaking personally, if I pay good money to attend a class run by respected craftsman Teacher X then I really want to be taught and helped along by Teacher X, not Assistant Y.
Hence I will be doing a 5 day beginners course with yourself, as I feel far more confident that this is what I will get.
Thanks Nick don't worry I have no plans to change the way we do things in my workshop, we have a format that we feel works well for our students.
You may have met one of my two workshop assistants over the weekend, Paul is a very talented furniture restorer and french polisher with forty plus years of experience in furniture, his main duty is keeping the workshop **** and span and making sure everything is ready for the students. The only teaching he does is for the last hour or so of my beginners course showing the guys how to shellac seal and wax their weeks work. He also advices any of our full time students if they have restoration projects.
Sam my younger assistant wasn't around on the weekend, he is an Alan Peters award winning young designer maker and a very talented young man, he shows my full time students Sketch Up and helps me prep timber as well as assisting in the tool shop, his afternoons are spent improving his own skills whilst working on commissioned work for his own clients, this is good for his personal development and gives the other full time students an insight into their first few years making in the real world.
I do employ other craftsmen to teach specialist subjects with my full timers, Mark Hancock for wood turning, Quentin Smith for marquetry, Chris Yates for routing (he was demonstrating on Saturday) and Bob Jones for polishing. Sean Feeney joins us once a week for design and make and assists with business studies as he is still a bespoke furniture maker.
http://www.markhancock.co.uk
http://www.qjsmarquetry.co.uk
http://www.seanfeeneyfurniture.co.uk
I am more than happy to bring other craftsmen into the workshop if I feel they can offer the students something up and above my own teaching, although I taught all these skills for years on both C&G and Btec national diplomas. What I won't do is pass the students onto a less experienced maker to free up more time for my own endeavours, this isn't what they paid for.
Hope to see you in the future, cheers Peter