Woodworking Instructor and Box Making
Held at the Childcare Support Center
A box-making class led by a woodworking instructor.
This is the woodworking instructor who has been with Nishiokoppe Village since April last year.
We often meet and talk, but I rarely get to observe a woodworking lesson, so I decided to watch the box-making class.
The materials and tools needed are wooden boards, wood glue, nails, and a sledgehammer (genno).
They were making a box the perfect size for a pen holder.
The four boards for the sides had grooves to fit the bottom board.
There were even nail starter holes where the nails would be driven.
(With these holes you can tell exactly where to drive the nail and the nail stays steady, so it’s easier to hammer.)
Even for a simply constructed box, such thoughtful details make the work much easier to carry out.
This time, to get used to handling the sledgehammer, they deliberately included the step of driving nails into the box.
After gluing the boards together to form the box, they drove nails to secure the boards to each other.
Driving nails straight and keeping the boards from shifting is fairly difficult. Watching the woodworking instructor handle it lightly with a rhythmic “ton, ton, ton,” I thought, as expected, they’re skilled.
We moved to Somukan (a workshop the villagers can use for free!) to finish with sanding and other final touches, and then it was complete.
That was a look at the box-making class.
*****
From Saturday, February 1 to Friday, February 28, the 28th Woody Winter School will take place!
Details will be posted in another update📢
#Nishiokoppe Village #Hokkaido #woodworking #mokuiiku (wood learning)
#woodworking class #woodworking instructor #childcare support
#sledgehammer (genno) #I had always called it a tacker or hammer
#Woody Winter School
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