Discussion:
Schoolsville, by Billy Collins
(too old to reply)
VickieB
2012-01-15 12:59:57 UTC
Permalink
Schoolsville

Glancing over my shoulder at the past,
I realize the number of students I have taught
is enough to populate a small town.

I can see it nestled in a paper landscape,
chalk dust flurrying down in winter,
nights dark as a blackboard.

The population ages but never graduates.
On hot afternoons they sweat the final in the park
and when it's cold they shiver around stoves
reading disorganized essays out loud.
A bell rings on the hour and everybody zigzags
into the streets with their books.

I forgot all their last names first and their
first names last in alphabetical order.
But the boy who always had his hand up
is an alderman and owns the haberdashery.
The girl who signed her papers in lipstick
leans against the drugstore, smoking,
brushing her hair like a machine.

Their grades are sewn into their clothes
like references to Hawthorne.
The A's stroll along with other A's.
The D's honk whenever they pass another D.

All the creative-writing students recline
on the courthouse lawn and play the lute.
Wherever they go, they form a big circle.

Needless to say, I am the mayor.
I live in the white colonial at Maple and Main.
I rarely leave the house. The car deflates
in the driveway. Vines twirl around the porch swing.

Once in a while a student knocks on the door
with a term paper fifteen years late
or a question about Yeats or double-spacing.
And sometimes one will appear in a windowpane
to watch me lecturing the wallpaper,
quizzing the chandelier, reprimanding the air.

"Schoolsville" by Billy Collins. Reprinted with permission.

v .. a 'B' who lolled on the courthouse lawn
ylem
2012-01-15 20:02:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by VickieB
Schoolsville
Glancing over my shoulder at the past,
I realize the number of students I have taught
is enough to populate a small town.
I can see it nestled in a paper landscape,
chalk dust flurrying down in winter,
nights dark as a blackboard.
The population ages but never graduates.
On hot afternoons they sweat the final in the park
and when it's cold they shiver around stoves
reading disorganized essays out loud.
A bell rings on the hour and everybody zigzags
into the streets with their books.
I forgot all their last names first and their
first names last in alphabetical order.
But the boy who always had his hand up
is an alderman and owns the haberdashery.
The girl who signed her papers in lipstick
leans against the drugstore, smoking,
brushing her hair like a machine.
Their grades are sewn into their clothes
like references to Hawthorne.
The A's stroll along with other A's.
The D's honk whenever they pass another D.
All the creative-writing students recline
on the courthouse lawn and play the lute.
Wherever they go, they form a big circle.
Needless to say, I am the mayor.
I live in the white colonial at Maple and Main.
I rarely leave the house. The car deflates
in the driveway. Vines twirl around the porch swing.
Once in a while a student knocks on the door
with a term paper fifteen years late
or a question about Yeats or double-spacing.
And sometimes one will appear in a windowpane
to watch me lecturing the wallpaper,
quizzing the chandelier, reprimanding the air.
"Schoolsville" by Billy Collins. Reprinted with permission.
v .. a 'B' who lolled on the courthouse lawn
What a great poem!
[big chuckle]
That's got to be Miss B, who I am told never married, but was close
friends with Miss H the Girl's PE teacher who did push-ups like a man.
I took Miss H's role one cool morning when the soph girls were
supposed to swim laps in the outdoor pool.She was arguing with the
Assistant-Principal for Girls about something in her office.

I was a senior jock PE coach's assistant ... they actually gave me
credit like it was a class. It was a plumb off-season racket reserved
for senior athletes. I was on loan from Coach L. and had the the
clipboard of authority in my hands ... and a line of 15 and 16 year
old girls in ill-fitting shapeless school bathing suits in front of
me. Some shivering.
:)>
Later, Miss H told Coach L that I "enjoyed myself a little to much".
That was until this snotty little gum chewing blond broke ranks (she
thought I was taking too long with the role) and looked up at me and
said: "So are we going to swim Big Guy?" She was being very saucy.
17 year old boy - instantly tongue-tied by a 16 year old girl.
Ahhhhh...school daze!
:)>
Ylem
Jean B.
2012-01-15 23:13:06 UTC
Permalink
Post by ylem
Post by VickieB
Schoolsville
Glancing over my shoulder at the past,
I realize the number of students I have taught
is enough to populate a small town.
I can see it nestled in a paper landscape,
chalk dust flurrying down in winter,
nights dark as a blackboard.
The population ages but never graduates.
On hot afternoons they sweat the final in the park
and when it's cold they shiver around stoves
reading disorganized essays out loud.
A bell rings on the hour and everybody zigzags
into the streets with their books.
I forgot all their last names first and their
first names last in alphabetical order.
But the boy who always had his hand up
is an alderman and owns the haberdashery.
The girl who signed her papers in lipstick
leans against the drugstore, smoking,
brushing her hair like a machine.
Their grades are sewn into their clothes
like references to Hawthorne.
The A's stroll along with other A's.
The D's honk whenever they pass another D.
All the creative-writing students recline
on the courthouse lawn and play the lute.
Wherever they go, they form a big circle.
Needless to say, I am the mayor.
I live in the white colonial at Maple and Main.
I rarely leave the house. The car deflates
in the driveway. Vines twirl around the porch swing.
Once in a while a student knocks on the door
with a term paper fifteen years late
or a question about Yeats or double-spacing.
And sometimes one will appear in a windowpane
to watch me lecturing the wallpaper,
quizzing the chandelier, reprimanding the air.
"Schoolsville" by Billy Collins. Reprinted with permission.
v .. a 'B' who lolled on the courthouse lawn
What a great poem!
[big chuckle]
That's got to be Miss B, who I am told never married, but was close
friends with Miss H the Girl's PE teacher who did push-ups like a man.
I took Miss H's role one cool morning when the soph girls were
supposed to swim laps in the outdoor pool.She was arguing with the
Assistant-Principal for Girls about something in her office.
I was a senior jock PE coach's assistant ... they actually gave me
credit like it was a class. It was a plumb off-season racket reserved
for senior athletes. I was on loan from Coach L. and had the the
clipboard of authority in my hands ... and a line of 15 and 16 year
old girls in ill-fitting shapeless school bathing suits in front of
me. Some shivering.
:)>
Later, Miss H told Coach L that I "enjoyed myself a little to much".
That was until this snotty little gum chewing blond broke ranks (she
thought I was taking too long with the role) and looked up at me and
said: "So are we going to swim Big Guy?" She was being very saucy.
17 year old boy - instantly tongue-tied by a 16 year old girl.
Ahhhhh...school daze!
:)>
Ylem
Sounds like an interesting experience, Ylem.
--
Jean B.
VickieB
2012-01-16 13:21:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by VickieB
[..]
"Schoolsville" by Billy Collins. Reprinted with permission.
What a great poem!
[big chuckle]
That's got to be Miss B, who I am told never married, but was close
friends with Miss H the Girl's PE teacher who did push-ups like a man.
I took Miss H's role one cool morning when the soph girls were
supposed to swim laps in the outdoor pool.She was arguing with the
Assistant-Principal for Girls about something in her office.

I was a senior jock PE coach's assistant ... they actually gave me
credit like it was a class. It was a plumb off-season racket reserved
for senior athletes. I was on loan from Coach L. and had the the
clipboard of authority in my hands ... and a line of 15 and 16 year
old girls in ill-fitting shapeless school bathing suits in front of
me. Some shivering.
:)>
Later, Miss H told Coach L that I "enjoyed myself a little to much".
That was until this snotty little gum chewing blond broke ranks (she
thought I was taking too long with the role) and looked up at me and
said: "So are we going to swim Big Guy?" She was being very saucy.
17 year old boy - instantly tongue-tied by a 16 year old girl.
Ahhhhh...school daze!
:)>
Ylem
~
Good read, Big Guy. ;)
v
Jean B.
2012-01-17 02:48:49 UTC
Permalink
Post by ylem
Post by VickieB
[..]
"Schoolsville" by Billy Collins. Reprinted with permission.
What a great poem!
[big chuckle]
That's got to be Miss B, who I am told never married, but was close
friends with Miss H the Girl's PE teacher who did push-ups like a man.
I took Miss H's role one cool morning when the soph girls were
supposed to swim laps in the outdoor pool.She was arguing with the
Assistant-Principal for Girls about something in her office.
I was a senior jock PE coach's assistant ... they actually gave me
credit like it was a class. It was a plumb off-season racket reserved
for senior athletes. I was on loan from Coach L. and had the the
clipboard of authority in my hands ... and a line of 15 and 16 year
old girls in ill-fitting shapeless school bathing suits in front of
me. Some shivering.
:)>
Later, Miss H told Coach L that I "enjoyed myself a little to much".
That was until this snotty little gum chewing blond broke ranks (she
thought I was taking too long with the role) and looked up at me and
said: "So are we going to swim Big Guy?" She was being very saucy.
17 year old boy - instantly tongue-tied by a 16 year old girl.
Ahhhhh...school daze!
:)>
Ylem
~
Good read, Big Guy. ;)
v
Didn't see Ylem's post.... That sounds like it was quite the
short episode in a young boy's life. It's kind-of odd to give a
teen-aged boy that responsibility. Maybe more so back then.

Hmmm, thinking of back then, those girls weren't even wearing
their [disgusting] gym suits.
--
Jean B.
VickieB
2012-01-17 12:27:19 UTC
Permalink
"Jean B." wrote in message news:***@mid.individual.net...

[high school]
Hmmm, thinking of back then, those girls weren't even wearing
their [disgusting] gym suits.
Jean B.
~
I missed all that, we didn't have swimming, or gym, in our small town high
school. Other than classroom studies (Civics, English, History, Typing,
Biology, Algebra) all we had were Home Ec. and Shop. I don't remember any
music or art .. but then I quit in the 10th grade and ran away to join the
hippies in SoCal and became self-educated.

v .. just don't ask me to do algebra
Jean B.
2012-01-18 02:03:16 UTC
Permalink
Post by VickieB
[high school]
Hmmm, thinking of back then, those girls weren't even wearing
their [disgusting] gym suits.
Jean B.
~
I missed all that, we didn't have swimming, or gym, in our small town
high school. Other than classroom studies (Civics, English, History,
Typing, Biology, Algebra) all we had were Home Ec. and Shop. I don't
remember any music or art .. but then I quit in the 10th grade and ran
away to join the hippies in SoCal and became self-educated.
v .. just don't ask me to do algebra
You obviously did a nice job on the self-education part. Now I
forget. Did girls get to take shop too?
--
Jean B.
VickieB
2012-01-18 13:21:24 UTC
Permalink
"Jean B." wrote in message news:***@mid.individual.net...
[..]
Did girls get to take shop too?
~
Not in my small town high school .. that would've been as hilarious as boys
taking Home Ec. Strange when I think of it, because girls were considered
equal when it came to farm work .. and in 4-H Club we could raise calves and
pigs right along side the boys .. not me of course, ick.
v
Jean B.
2012-01-19 03:01:30 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jean B.
[..]
Did girls get to take shop too?
~
Not in my small town high school .. that would've been as hilarious as boys
taking Home Ec. Strange when I think of it, because girls were considered
equal when it came to farm work .. and in 4-H Club we could raise calves and
pigs right along side the boys .. not me of course, ick.
v
LOL. No, we didn't get to take shop either. I think it would
have come in pretty handy.
--
Jean B.
VickieB
2012-01-19 12:46:16 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jean B.
[..]
Did girls get to take shop too?
~
Not in my small town high school .. that would've been as hilarious as boys
taking Home Ec. Strange when I think of it, because girls were considered
equal when it came to farm work .. and in 4-H Club we could raise calves and
pigs right along side the boys .. not me of course, ick.
v
LOL. No, we didn't get to take shop either. I think it would
have come in pretty handy.
Jean B.
~
Indeed, such as small home repair jobs. I have a friend who makes wooden
bowls, lovely salad bowls. I love to watch him work the lathe .. would like
to turn one myself.
v
Jean B.
2012-01-20 02:47:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by VickieB
Indeed, such as small home repair jobs. I have a friend who makes wooden
bowls, lovely salad bowls. I love to watch him work the lathe .. would like
to turn one myself.
v
Same here! I'd like to make bowls from burls. I just love wood.
The problem is finding a place to learn how to do it--and the
time to do so. Would your friend teach you?
--
Jean B.
VickieB
2012-01-20 13:28:56 UTC
Permalink
Post by VickieB
Indeed, such as small home repair jobs. I have a friend who makes wooden
bowls, lovely salad bowls. I love to watch him work the lathe .. would like
to turn one myself.
v
Same here! I'd like to make bowls from burls. I just love wood.
The problem is finding a place to learn how to do it--and the
time to do so. Would your friend teach you?
Jean B.
~
Yes, he encourages me to learn .. but if I fell in love with it I'd be over
there bugging him all the time .. or buying all that equipment, which I'm
not inclined to do. I have enough hobbies .. but, I do love the way his shop
smells.

Tell me more about bowls from burls. What wood would you choose? My salad
bowls are made from pear wood.
v
Joy
2012-01-20 19:27:44 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jean B.
Post by VickieB
Indeed, such as small home repair jobs. I have a friend who makes wooden
bowls, lovely salad bowls. I love to watch him work the lathe .. would like
to turn one myself.
v
Same here! I'd like to make bowls from burls. I just love wood.
The problem is finding a place to learn how to do it--and the
time to do so. Would your friend teach you?
Jean B.
~
Yes, he encourages me to learn .. but if I fell in love with it I'd be over
there bugging him all the time .. or buying all that equipment, which I'm
not inclined to do. I have enough hobbies .. but, I do love the way his shop
smells.
Tell me more about bowls from burls. What wood would you choose? My salad
bowls are made from pear wood.
v
Ah, yes! There's nothing line the smell of fresh-cut (or turned, or planed)
wood! I used to love going out into my Dad's garage workshop when he was
working on wood.

I know what you mean about hobbies, though. I'm pretty much the same way,
although I tend to stick to one at a time. I think I get it from my Dad.
He always went all the way into a hobby, did it for a few years, then moved
on to something else. When he was into Bonsai, he had several hundred
trees. His last hobby was repairing and restoring antique clocks, and he
when he died, he had about 15 of them. And that's not counting the ones he
gave to my siblings and me.

Joy

Joy
VickieB
2012-01-21 12:39:21 UTC
Permalink
"Joy" wrote in message news:4f19c02e$0$18700$***@news.dslextreme.com...

"VickieB" <***@privacy.net> wrote in message news:jfbq6m$uh0$***@dont-email.me...
[..]
I have enough hobbies .. but, I do love the way his shop smells.
v
Ah, yes! There's nothing line the smell of fresh-cut (or turned, or planed)
wood! I used to love going out into my Dad's garage workshop when he was
working on wood.

I know what you mean about hobbies, though. I'm pretty much the same way,
although I tend to stick to one at a time. I think I get it from my Dad.
He always went all the way into a hobby, did it for a few years, then moved
on to something else. When he was into Bonsai, he had several hundred
trees. His last hobby was repairing and restoring antique clocks, and he
when he died, he had about 15 of them. And that's not counting the ones he
gave to my siblings and me.
Joy
~
You Dad sounds like quite a guy .. I remember that he was also an excellent
carpenter.
v
Joy
2012-01-21 21:05:33 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joy
[..]
I have enough hobbies .. but, I do love the way his shop smells.
v
Ah, yes! There's nothing line the smell of fresh-cut (or turned, or planed)
wood! I used to love going out into my Dad's garage workshop when he was
working on wood.
I know what you mean about hobbies, though. I'm pretty much the same way,
although I tend to stick to one at a time. I think I get it from my Dad.
He always went all the way into a hobby, did it for a few years, then moved
on to something else. When he was into Bonsai, he had several hundred
trees. His last hobby was repairing and restoring antique clocks, and he
when he died, he had about 15 of them. And that's not counting the ones he
gave to my siblings and me.
Joy
~
You Dad sounds like quite a guy .. I remember that he was also an excellent
carpenter.
v
Yes, he was. In fact, he was outstanding at everything he tried. His
formal education ended with high school graduation, but he never stopped
learning.

Joy
Jean B.
2012-01-22 05:21:29 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joy
Post by Joy
[..]
I have enough hobbies .. but, I do love the way his shop smells.
v
Ah, yes! There's nothing line the smell of fresh-cut (or turned, or planed)
wood! I used to love going out into my Dad's garage workshop when he was
working on wood.
I know what you mean about hobbies, though. I'm pretty much the same way,
although I tend to stick to one at a time. I think I get it from my Dad.
He always went all the way into a hobby, did it for a few years, then moved
on to something else. When he was into Bonsai, he had several hundred
trees. His last hobby was repairing and restoring antique clocks, and he
when he died, he had about 15 of them. And that's not counting the ones he
gave to my siblings and me.
Joy
~
You Dad sounds like quite a guy .. I remember that he was also an excellent
carpenter.
v
Yes, he was. In fact, he was outstanding at everything he tried. His
formal education ended with high school graduation, but he never stopped
learning.
Joy
He sounds really special, Joy.
--
Jean B.
Joy
2012-01-22 08:13:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jean B.
Post by Joy
Post by Joy
[..]
I have enough hobbies .. but, I do love the way his shop smells.
v
Ah, yes! There's nothing line the smell of fresh-cut (or turned, or planed)
wood! I used to love going out into my Dad's garage workshop when he was
working on wood.
I know what you mean about hobbies, though. I'm pretty much the same way,
although I tend to stick to one at a time. I think I get it from my Dad.
He always went all the way into a hobby, did it for a few years, then moved
on to something else. When he was into Bonsai, he had several hundred
trees. His last hobby was repairing and restoring antique clocks, and he
when he died, he had about 15 of them. And that's not counting the ones he
gave to my siblings and me.
Joy
~
You Dad sounds like quite a guy .. I remember that he was also an excellent
carpenter.
v
Yes, he was. In fact, he was outstanding at everything he tried. His
formal education ended with high school graduation, but he never stopped
learning.
Joy
He sounds really special, Joy.
--
Jean B.
He was.

Joy
Jean B.
2012-01-22 05:20:56 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joy
Post by Jean B.
Post by VickieB
Indeed, such as small home repair jobs. I have a friend who makes wooden
bowls, lovely salad bowls. I love to watch him work the lathe .. would like
to turn one myself.
v
Same here! I'd like to make bowls from burls. I just love wood.
The problem is finding a place to learn how to do it--and the
time to do so. Would your friend teach you?
Jean B.
~
Yes, he encourages me to learn .. but if I fell in love with it I'd be over
there bugging him all the time .. or buying all that equipment, which I'm
not inclined to do. I have enough hobbies .. but, I do love the way his shop
smells.
Tell me more about bowls from burls. What wood would you choose? My salad
bowls are made from pear wood.
v
Ah, yes! There's nothing line the smell of fresh-cut (or turned, or planed)
wood! I used to love going out into my Dad's garage workshop when he was
working on wood.
I know what you mean about hobbies, though. I'm pretty much the same way,
although I tend to stick to one at a time. I think I get it from my Dad.
He always went all the way into a hobby, did it for a few years, then moved
on to something else. When he was into Bonsai, he had several hundred
trees. His last hobby was repairing and restoring antique clocks, and he
when he died, he had about 15 of them. And that's not counting the ones he
gave to my siblings and me.
Joy
Joy
Like my dad. How many do you have, Joy? I "just" have 3 shelf
clocks and a grandfather clock. I also have a beautiful clock
that he made out of ebony and silver.
--
Jean B.
Joy
2012-01-22 08:12:54 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joy
Post by Jean B.
Post by VickieB
Indeed, such as small home repair jobs. I have a friend who makes wooden
bowls, lovely salad bowls. I love to watch him work the lathe .. would like
to turn one myself.
v
Same here! I'd like to make bowls from burls. I just love wood.
The problem is finding a place to learn how to do it--and the
time to do so. Would your friend teach you?
Jean B.
~
Yes, he encourages me to learn .. but if I fell in love with it I'd be over
there bugging him all the time .. or buying all that equipment, which I'm
not inclined to do. I have enough hobbies .. but, I do love the way his shop
smells.
Tell me more about bowls from burls. What wood would you choose? My salad
bowls are made from pear wood.
v
Ah, yes! There's nothing line the smell of fresh-cut (or turned, or
planed) wood! I used to love going out into my Dad's garage workshop
when he was working on wood.
I know what you mean about hobbies, though. I'm pretty much the same
way, although I tend to stick to one at a time. I think I get it from my
Dad. He always went all the way into a hobby, did it for a few years,
then moved on to something else. When he was into Bonsai, he had several
hundred trees. His last hobby was repairing and restoring antique
clocks, and he when he died, he had about 15 of them. And that's not
counting the ones he gave to my siblings and me.
Joy
Joy
Like my dad. How many do you have, Joy? I "just" have 3 shelf clocks and
a grandfather clock. I also have a beautiful clock that he made out of
ebony and silver.
--
Jean B.
I just have one, but I love it.

Joy
Jean B.
2012-01-23 04:37:59 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joy
Post by Joy
Post by Jean B.
Post by VickieB
Indeed, such as small home repair jobs. I have a friend who makes wooden
bowls, lovely salad bowls. I love to watch him work the lathe .. would like
to turn one myself.
v
Same here! I'd like to make bowls from burls. I just love wood.
The problem is finding a place to learn how to do it--and the
time to do so. Would your friend teach you?
Jean B.
~
Yes, he encourages me to learn .. but if I fell in love with it I'd be over
there bugging him all the time .. or buying all that equipment, which I'm
not inclined to do. I have enough hobbies .. but, I do love the way his shop
smells.
Tell me more about bowls from burls. What wood would you choose? My salad
bowls are made from pear wood.
v
Ah, yes! There's nothing line the smell of fresh-cut (or turned, or
planed) wood! I used to love going out into my Dad's garage workshop
when he was working on wood.
I know what you mean about hobbies, though. I'm pretty much the same
way, although I tend to stick to one at a time. I think I get it from my
Dad. He always went all the way into a hobby, did it for a few years,
then moved on to something else. When he was into Bonsai, he had several
hundred trees. His last hobby was repairing and restoring antique
clocks, and he when he died, he had about 15 of them. And that's not
counting the ones he gave to my siblings and me.
Joy
Joy
Like my dad. How many do you have, Joy? I "just" have 3 shelf clocks and
a grandfather clock. I also have a beautiful clock that he made out of
ebony and silver.
--
Jean B.
I just have one, but I love it.
Joy
I bet!
--
Jean B.
Joy
2012-01-23 06:38:32 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jean B.
Post by Joy
Post by Joy
Post by Jean B.
Post by VickieB
Indeed, such as small home repair jobs. I have a friend who makes wooden
bowls, lovely salad bowls. I love to watch him work the lathe ..
would
like
to turn one myself.
v
Same here! I'd like to make bowls from burls. I just love wood.
The problem is finding a place to learn how to do it--and the
time to do so. Would your friend teach you?
Jean B.
~
Yes, he encourages me to learn .. but if I fell in love with it I'd be over
there bugging him all the time .. or buying all that equipment, which I'm
not inclined to do. I have enough hobbies .. but, I do love the way his shop
smells.
Tell me more about bowls from burls. What wood would you choose? My salad
bowls are made from pear wood.
v
Ah, yes! There's nothing line the smell of fresh-cut (or turned, or
planed) wood! I used to love going out into my Dad's garage workshop
when he was working on wood.
I know what you mean about hobbies, though. I'm pretty much the same
way, although I tend to stick to one at a time. I think I get it from
my Dad. He always went all the way into a hobby, did it for a few
years, then moved on to something else. When he was into Bonsai, he
had several hundred trees. His last hobby was repairing and restoring
antique clocks, and he when he died, he had about 15 of them. And
that's not counting the ones he gave to my siblings and me.
Joy
Joy
Like my dad. How many do you have, Joy? I "just" have 3 shelf clocks
and a grandfather clock. I also have a beautiful clock that he made out
of ebony and silver.
--
Jean B.
I just have one, but I love it.
Joy
I bet!
--
Jean B.
It has a place of honor on the top shelf of the bookcase he built.

Joy
Jean B.
2012-01-22 05:19:22 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jean B.
Post by VickieB
Indeed, such as small home repair jobs. I have a friend who makes wooden
bowls, lovely salad bowls. I love to watch him work the lathe .. would like
to turn one myself.
v
Same here! I'd like to make bowls from burls. I just love wood.
The problem is finding a place to learn how to do it--and the
time to do so. Would your friend teach you?
Jean B.
~
Yes, he encourages me to learn .. but if I fell in love with it I'd be over
there bugging him all the time .. or buying all that equipment, which I'm
not inclined to do. I have enough hobbies .. but, I do love the way his shop
smells.
Tell me more about bowls from burls. What wood would you choose? My salad
bowls are made from pear wood.
v
I dunno. Depends on the piece of wood, what is available. I
suppose I shouldn't think of it as ever making money.... I just
love wood.

You'd love a table I have--cherry slab on top of a natural base.
Hard to describe. And I still have a redwood jeweler's burl slab
that I picked up in the 70s. If and when I ever have money, I
will get an appropriate base made for it.
--
Jean B.
VickieB
2012-01-22 12:47:22 UTC
Permalink
"Jean B." wrote in message news:***@mid.individual.net...

[..]
You'd love a table I have--cherry slab on top of a natural base.
Hard to describe. And I still have a redwood jeweler's burl slab
that I picked up in the 70s. If and when I ever have money, I
will get an appropriate base made for it.
~
Oh that table does sound lovely. A friend has a beautiful redwood burl slab
bench.
v
Jean B.
2012-01-23 04:40:45 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jean B.
[..]
You'd love a table I have--cherry slab on top of a natural base.
Hard to describe. And I still have a redwood jeweler's burl slab
that I picked up in the 70s. If and when I ever have money, I
will get an appropriate base made for it.
~
Oh that table does sound lovely. A friend has a beautiful redwood burl slab
bench.
v
Way back when I got that table, I actually could afford things
made by artisans. No more such things for me.

Oh, you would have loved a chair that I eyed many times in another
artisans' shop. By now I forget exactly what it was but it
involved lovely woods. And it was comfortable. Oh well. I need
to regard such things as eye candy now.
--
Jean B.
VickieB
2012-01-23 13:32:03 UTC
Permalink
"Jean B." wrote in message news:***@mid.individual.net...

[..]
Way back when I got that table, I actually could afford things
made by artisans. No more such things for me.

Oh, you would have loved a chair that I eyed many times in another
artisans' shop. By now I forget exactly what it was but it
involved lovely woods. And it was comfortable. Oh well. I need
to regard such things as eye candy now.
~
I also admire such 'works of art' .. but I seem to have arrived at a point
in my life of not wanting any more 'things' .. I'm trying to scale down,
clear out .. give things away.

EXCEPT for my sewing room, where my fabric stash lines the walls in
bookcases. Quilters have a saying - "Whoever dies with the most fabric
wins." ;)
v

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