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This was the first year we attended and it was worth every penny (and not just because Turkey Hill was handing out free ice cream).
During the two-day event, various 19th-century reenactors showed what life was like in a small country village.
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It didn't take long for me to spot a woodworker—Jack Stone, the cooper.
Jack learned to make buckets and piggins using traditional methods from the John C. Campbell Folk School. Since then, he's been making coopered items
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His butter carriers, which are lidded buckets (photos 2 and 3), have an interesting locking mechanism where one end of the handle is slid into a mortise, and the other end is locked in place with a pin.
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Jack makes hoops from white oak or metal with brass rivets, and
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Check out the other photos to see Jack's unique ways to rout the groove for bottoms and shave the staves to final width. And check out his website to see a short video about his wooden hoops.
3 comments:
wow ! this is a precious way of making a bucket. I´ve enjoyed the pictures a lot
thanks Kari for this beautyful report
Great pictures and some fantastic jigs, I really like the saw teeth adjustable router instead of using a knife. I think I will have to make one for doing my shrink pots with
Thanks, Julio!
Sean, I thought that was pretty cool, too, and figured that people might find a use for it. It probably wouldn't be too hard to make a croze-type tool that uses this concept.
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