The Magic of Wood
For thousands of years, wood has been a mainstay for humankind’s creations—for our tools and homes, the beds we sleep in, and the chairs we sit on; for our gardens, fences, and musical instruments; and for weapons as well as works of art. Sometimes we’ve honored this magical material, which can assume massive size and strength from nothing but a seed fed by dirt, water, and sun. And sometimes we’ve abused it. This collection, we hope, does justice to all of wood’s twists and turns.
Mexico’s Master Guitar Makers
When a Disney film, “Coco,” spotlighted a small Mexican town where almost every shop makes guitars, it suddenly made ornate, white guitars famous. Underneath the new pop icon, however, lies a variety of much finer instruments—and a rich craft going back generations.
Written by LAURA FRASER
Photography and video by ANDREW SULLIVAN
A Woodworker’s Tale
In today’s increasingly automated world, why bother toiling with hand tools and sawdust? And what makes someone a master craftsman, or craftswoman? In a new book, Gary Rogowski—a master furniture maker and the founder of Northwest Woodworking Studio, in Portland, Oregon—ruminates on the four decades he has spent “at the bench,” the “magic” in old tools, and the principles of mastery and creative focus, not matter what your calling happens to be.
By GARY ROGOWSKI
Italy’s Last Maker of Traditional Wooden Hat Blocks
An homage, in film, to a third-generation Italian artisan who is the last maker of the traditional, handcarved wooden shapes used as hat blocks.
Story and Film by LUISA GROSSO
The Kayak’s Cultural Journey
For millennia, Indigenous peoples across the world have built and used wooden skin boats to fish and hunt, for sport and travel, even for warfare. Skin kayaks are the unique product of Arctic peoples, but non-Indigenous admirers of the craft are making them, too. Does that matter?
Written by SIMON MORRIS
Breathing Lives into Wood
Mike Dangeli, a First Nations artist and craftsman from the Nisga’a tribe in Western Canada, has devoted his life to preserving Indigenous history in masks, dance, song, and, mostly now, by carving ornate totem poles. The poles, a tradition that Dangeli says date back to creation, are meant to honor important moments in Indigenous history—both the treasured and the painful.
Written by JEFF GREENWALD
Photographed by JEFF GREENWALD and CHERYL SUMSION
Venice, Gondolas, and Black Magic
After suffering a year of twin terrors—historic floods and the Covid pandemic—the makers of Venice’s legendary gondolas are struggling to survive. To understand the unique design, history, and mystery behind this much-loved boat, our correspondent spent a year with Roberto Dei Rossi, one of the city’s last master gondola makers.
By ERLA ZWINGLE
The Lost Art of Traditional Bow Hunting
Over the years, the technology for rifles, scopes, and other hunting gear has gotten so powerful there’s little challenge left in the sport. Hunting with a bow and arrow, therefore, has been steadily rising. But now that even hunting bows have gone high-tech, a small band of purists — like Gabriel Miossi — have turned to a traditional Native American weapon: the stick bow.
By MEGHAN WARD
In Praise of The Makers
In his new book “Material: Making and the Art of Transformation”, master furniture maker and designer Nick Kary explores the roots of craft, through stories of makers and their essential materials.
By WILLIAM BRYANT LOGAN
A review of “Material: Making and the Art of Transformation,” by Nick Kary
(Chelsea Green Publishing, 2020)
Brian Boggs, Master of the Chair
Brian Boggs, maker of fine, handcrafted wood furniture in Asheville, N.C., just can’t seem to leave a good idea alone. A lifetime of tinkering and experimentation has led to his line of innovative woodworking tools—and to creating some of the world’s most beautiful, comfortable hardwood chairs.
Written by JANINE LATUS
Photography by MICHAEL OPPENHEIM
Italy’s Endangered Violin Forest
Since the 16th century, Cremona’s luthiers—including Stradivari himself—have been using an unusually resonant wood from Paneveggio, known as Italy’s “violin forest,” to handcraft the world’s finest string instruments. Then a 2018 storm decimated the forest. A band of experts in Cremona is now rallying to save this iconic tradition. A documentary short.
Film by LUISA GROSSO
The Beauty of a Timeless Rowboat
Centuries ago, a fleet of rowboats called Whitehalls plied the waters of the San Francisco Bay, helping the chandlers at their helms ferry goods to and from the giant sailing ships working the city’s port. Today, descendants of those early crafts are being built, rowed, and occasionally put to work on the same waters.
A documentary short by WENDY “PEPPER” SCHUSS
Story by TODD OPPENHEIMER
More from this Theme
Field Notes
A Man on an Unusual Mission: Bringing the Alphorn Back to France
written by ANNA RICHARDS
photographed by MICHELLE TUCCI
Field Notes
Brian Callan Reclaims Ireland’s Fallen Trees—and its Tradition of Harp-making
by KIMBERLY COBURN
