Great, short 10 minute video...

Sean7a

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Not wood related, but I think most of you will be sure to appreciate it.  Found it over on toolmonger.com, a great site if you haven't visited it before.

Maybe this can stir up some interesting stories?

http://vimeo.com/vbf/professional
 
A very interesting guy.  Obviously happy with his life's work.  We should all be so lucky.
Well worth the time.
 
Wow. What a great little documentary! Thanks for posting the link, Sean. I really enjoyed watching this short film on this particular metal fabricator. I feel like alot of us (woodworkers) can definitely relate to his story in one way or another. It really touched me to see how passionate he was and continues to be about the work that he does. I really enjoyed what he said about "always learning," otherwise, "it dies." Or something to that effect.
 
Sean  Thank You for this awesome Video, This is a man who has the older values in life, a generation of doing all you could do to make a living and support your family.
His values are so much need in this economy right now. He reminded me of my Father who taught me what I know and do.
I sit and look at not having a son and wonder what will happen to my skills with no one to pass them on to.
I guess I am saying that those of us in the older generation learned different values from our parents and although we all have tried these valuse are not easy to pass on to the younger generation of today

Again I Say Thank You Sean

Sal
 
I only wish there was enough time in life to work for all the guys like this!
I could watch another hour or two of him just talking. You can learn so much from our older generations that are on their way out of the trade, by way of age not choice, because we all know they would work forever if they could ! 
And I agree it is great to work for guys who just want to hurry and guys who will take time, you can mold yourself to have the combination of both, and know when to slow things down and when to blast though.
 
I only hope that the abilities and knowledge of those who learned when hands controlled the output and quality can somehow be passed on to others and the cycle continued.

Peter
 
So true " When you are done learning you are through". I try to learn something new everyday no matter how small. I consider myself lucky to have learned from my Grandfather. He just turned 92 and is finishing up an addition he put on my moms house. He worked all over Baltimore and DC on many historic sites and other buildings. I still luv to listen to his stories, even though I have heard them many times before.

I have been lucky to have worked on a few jobs that will remain in history for a very long time. You have to take pride in what ever you do and You can see the guy in the video does. Hope he can pass it on to his grand kids .
 
My brother has a shop like that so i can totally relate. My Dad worked as a Machinist all his life and has been retired for about 12 years now but goes to my brothers shop every day to help. He never stops learning, i think that is what keeps him going.
 
Sean Ackerman said:
Maybe this can stir up some interesting stories?

Don't know if it's interesting or not, but here's one of my stories.

Our family lived in Montreal until I turned 12 years of age. My father had a workshop in the basement and he was always building things. I spent considerable time in that workshop. I remember how patient he was with me. In my earlier years, I distinctly remember scribbling all over a wall unit he built. I can also remember opening paint cans with chisels and breaking the tips off them. Never a word in anger. There must have been dozens of other things I did that I should have been punished for, but I can't remember him shouting at me even once, back then.

Fast forward thirty years later. We had moved to Toronto and my family lived in my Grandmother's farm house. Built 1825 and set in the back of a double lot, the property looked like it was in the middle of the woods and this was in Forest Hill, surrounded on almost all sides by million dollar homes. No workshop this time, but a mostly building foundation basement that had a ceiling height of less than six feet. All the old tools and stuff that my father had in Montreal were down there, except that they were piled up everywhere with no real space to build much of anything.

Another ten years later. I was moved out, living in an apartment. My father had died, my mother had moved out and the old farm house was up for sale. I was using a wheelchair by that time and access into the basement was impossible for me. So, all the old tools were still sitting there in that small basement. Then, the time came when the house was sold and I was given all of 36 hours notice to remove what I wanted from the house.

It took me almost half a day to get a friend to drive me over to the old house. We drove part way up the driveway and came upon a huge dumpster, half filled with all my father's tools. It truly broke my heart to see them that way, but there was nothing I could do about it. I didn't have the space or the means to salvage many of those tools. The really sad thing was that these days, those old tools would sell for a literal fortune.

What happened with those tools is one of my biggest regrets in life and why this video tweaked some of my heart strings. Whether it's knowledge or tools being put by the wayside, we are losing a significant portion of our heritage, my heritage in the case of my father's tools. It really hurts me everytime I think of them.

Dave
 
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