About Me
My interest in woodworking started in 1967 as I was walking past the fire wood pile in the driveway. I was drawn by the possibility of the raw material and I found myself in the garage, picking up a 3/8" chisel and a hammer and sat down in the driveway to put my own mark on a piece of oak and make it my own. I was in 11th grade.
College, Navy, marriage, and children pulled my life in many directions but I was always drawn by an interest in woodworking. I went to see the work of George Nakashima, and I loved the woodwork of Wharton Esherick. I was inspired when reading "The Fine Art of Cabinetmaking" by James Krenov.
This is a water damaged photo of me and my four youngest children in 1983. I am reading "Fine Woodworking Magazine", issue #40 May/June 1983. I didn't have many woodworking mentors that I knew personally but I had many experts that shared their knowledge and passion with tips, tricks, photos and "how to" advice, that inspired and instructed me with each issue. I started getting Fine Woodworking Magazine in 1975 when it first came out and my passion for fine woodworking became greater as my knowledge and confidence increased.
I have been self employed most of my working life in some sort of residential construction. At the time of this photo, I had just left a job, running a three man shop, making jewelry showcases and had formed a partnership with a woodworking friend. Our first job was trimming houses and installing handrail on prebuilt stairs. I was beginning to get the bug for stairbuilding. It wasn't long before I had the opportunity to fulfill that itch. The job superintendent asked my partner and I if we could build a set of stairs. I jumped at the chance, although I paused for a moment when he described the job as a 90 degree circular stair. He wanted us to build the stair in place, because the last two prebuilt stairs that were delivered to the house didn't fit.
We did a lot of homework before we took on the job. After some serious head scratching we successfully completed the job. The end result pictured below.
At this point I had a serious case of stair fever, so we subbed out the trim work and just concentrated on handrail and stairs. The handrail installs kept coming, but the stair work was hard to keep steady, mostly because we did not have a shop to prepare our materials.
Partnerships don't always last forever and neither did ours. I soon found myself working for a design build contractor. I did his stair work, trim and kitchen in an old church he was converting into his home.
Church Conversion
I worked exclusively for this builder for about five years doing all his carpentry work from the foundation forms to the roof rafters, building the stairs, balustrade and making the kitchen cabinets.