Fine woodworking has a video of Hank Gilpin. I don't have his tools or
his skill or workspace, but if I were to ever grow up, I'd like to be
just like him. He may be my first, and only woodworking hero.
http://www.finewoodworking.com/item/24206/hank-gilpin-exploring-the-american-forest
--
Jack
Know guns, know peace, know safety. No guns, no peace, no safety.
http://jbstein.com
On Feb 27, 9:51=A0am, Jack Stein <[email protected]> wrote:
> Fine woodworking has a video of Hank Gilpin. =A0I don't have his tools or
> his skill or workspace, but if I were to ever grow up, I'd like to be
> just like him. =A0He may be my first, and only woodworking hero.
>
> http://www.finewoodworking.com/item/24206/hank-gilpin-exploring-the-a...
>
> --
> Jack
> Know guns, know peace, know safety. No guns, no peace, no safety.http://j=
bstein.com
Thanks Jack for posting the Gilpin video. It was inspiring. He seems
to be a poet in the medium of wood.
Joe G
Mark & Juanita wrote:
> Jack Stein wrote:
>
>> Fine woodworking has a video of Hank Gilpin. I don't have his tools or
>> his skill or workspace, but if I were to ever grow up, I'd like to be
>> just like him. He may be my first, and only woodworking hero.
>>
>> http://www.finewoodworking.com/item/24206/hank-gilpin-exploring-the-
> american-forest
>
> Thanks for sharing that. Several things stand out: 1) He has a very
> diverse design palette. Some of his pieces are too modern for my taste
> while others are a style that I wouldn't mind having in my own home. Being
> able to pull something like that takes skill. and 2) He is an artist, he
> sees what most would think is a flaw and can work the rest of the piece
> around that flaw to make it a central part of the theme, yet not
> overbearing, the rest of the piece fits in and supports the unique part.
> Again, that shows significant skill.
>
> Definitely something to aspire to.
Well said Mark. I never heard of him, which doesn't mean much, but I
really liked his ideas on wood, and the results are definitely
inspiring. He says he used to see good wood and bad wood, now all wood
is good, and he looks at it as "what can I do with this?". His work is
not all funked up either, it is mostly basic stuff with just the right
eye to get the most out of the woods idiosyncrasies.
I forgot to get the TinyURL in case of word wrap:
http://tinyurl.com/ycxg36f
--
Jack
You were wrong, and I'm man enough to admit it.
http://jbstein.com
Jack Stein wrote:
> Fine woodworking has a video of Hank Gilpin. I don't have his tools or
> his skill or workspace, but if I were to ever grow up, I'd like to be
> just like him. He may be my first, and only woodworking hero.
>
> http://www.finewoodworking.com/item/24206/hank-gilpin-exploring-the-
american-forest
>
Thanks for sharing that. Several things stand out: 1) He has a very
diverse design palette. Some of his pieces are too modern for my taste
while others are a style that I wouldn't mind having in my own home. Being
able to pull something like that takes skill. and 2) He is an artist, he
sees what most would think is a flaw and can work the rest of the piece
around that flaw to make it a central part of the theme, yet not
overbearing, the rest of the piece fits in and supports the unique part.
Again, that shows significant skill.
Definitely something to aspire to.
--
There is never a situation where having more rounds is a disadvantage
Rob Leatham