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Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte. |
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#10
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Olebiker wrote:
I know I may be really stepping into it, but what is it that impresses folks about Krenov? I mean, how many variations on those trinket cabinets can a guy make? What is it that people like about them anyway. The legs are out of scale with the box and the clunky-looking-thicker-at-the-bottom design of the legs reminds me too much of my old bell bottoms I wore back in the 70s. (What were we thinking?) Somebody 'splain it to me. Dick Durbin Probably spittin' in the wind but here goes First, when I discover anyone who gets to do what they have a passion for and love to do AND do it exceptionally well - all of their adult life - I get a buzz - Gary Knox Bennett (sp?) being an exception. Mr. Krenov does a few, relatively speaking, things as perfect as is humanly possible. The results may, at first glance, appear to be very simple and straight foreward - until you look a little closer AND have a good idea of the skills and sensitivity required to make the piece from that particular wood, using that particular joinery done just so, choose those edge treatments, nobs, pulls and latches so they all go together and work just the way they're supposed to - without drawing attention to anyone thing, picking the finish that goes with the whole . . . Because his pieces are so "simple" there's no place to hide errors. If the parts don't fit perfectly it's obvious - no trim or molding to cover up gaps, no way to hide a slip of the chisel or plane. No way to disguise the fact that a door or drawer is off - even just a little. Even his edge treatments flow together flawlessly. His stuff is "just so" - not absolutely perfect, but close enough to be well beyond "close enough". There's a quality to the sound of a wood on wood latch clicking shut that a metal bullet catch doesn't have. While Blumm/Euro hinges are easier to install and work fine - for kitchen cabinets, knife hinges, though more difficult to install properly are less distracting while still very functional. A glued stopped dado is functional, but a stopped sliding dovetail stronger and more easily removed should that be necessary sometime down the road. I guess it gets back to which is more valuable, the finished piece or the part of the journey it reminds us of or lets us share. I'm a tool freak and have lots of tools. But my most valued tool is an old mallet I picked up at an estate sale of a neighbor. He'd made that mallet himself a long time ago and used it often. It does it's job well and every time I use it I get the feeling the old guy is smiling as he hears it tap a part in place or whacks a part hard to drive it home. The Old Guy made a nice tool and the more ways I use it the more I appreciate this thing he made. It's an intangible thing I guess. I see a fine bonsai tree and I see both the full sized tree, with evidence of its life's experiences, and I appreciate the bonsai artist who was able to work with the little tree to help it do what it does. Krenov's stuff is like that - for me. For others .. . charlie b |
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