Scheumack Broom Company
Sep. 13th, 2022 04:15 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
the shop is bustling. we hired a new part-time employee. our etsy sales have picked back up.
I was terribly worried that our sticks were drying out to much from the terrible heat this year. especially the viney maple sticks have become brittle and difficult to carve, they tear or crumble when carved with a mallet and gauge. Thurman showed me a technique using our band saw, that alleviates a lot of this concern, especially on a day like today, when there is a brand-new blade on the saw.
This technique also allows me more control of the nose. The nose is the trickiest bit of the "green man" carvings I do. If the nose breaks off, it often ruins the whole carving, or at least makes it much more challenging.
I wondered: "why havent I been using this technique all along?" It saves a LOT of time, and potentially increases my output by almost double!
Of course, as an apprentice, it often pays to learn the most fundamental, and maybe even most difficult techniques.
But I'm glad this has worked out.
Flogging Molly plays at the Cuthbert Ampitheater Friday, with The Interrupters and Tiger Army. The new Flogging Molly album "Anthem" was released last Friday, and it includes a single A Song Of Liberty, which has a fabulous, but very emotional animation:
Flogging Molly have joined forces with renowned Ukrainian animators/filmmakers, The Mad Twins, for the band’s “A Song of Liberty” video. The clip highlights humanity’s ongoing struggle against oppression, from Ireland’s Easter Uprising through several 20th century moments including both World Wars, to the current occupation of Ukraine.
“We were working on this video for three months under air alerts and constant shelling of our country,” explain Ukrainian twin sisters Olya and Vira Ischuk, aka The Mad Twins, who have created award-winning videos for Social Distortion, NOFX, Josh Freese and more. “Dave and Bridget got in touch with us for this very special song, which is meant to tell the Easter Rising story and highlight the universal message of nations who fought for their independence and identity. These are idealists who will fight and die for their ideas. We connected the story with the reality we are experiencing in Ukraine. Generations who went through two world wars paid with their blood for peace. Modern generations have grown up in a world where it is easy to take things for granted. We had calls with Dave talking about the video development where Dave exclaimed indignantly ‘What?! Again?! People have to go through war again?!’ We’ve been going through this for over six months now: life plans stopped, our friends were drafted, some of them have already been killed, friends’ homes have been destroyed or looted, the lucky ones have been evacuated to a safer region or abroad. Generations of Ukrainians have been traumatized for a lifetime.”
“It’s a song of freedom, which I wrote as a recounting of a dark period in Irish history. But suddenly the injustice, and the fight against it, became current events,” Dave King details. “And so our Ukrainian friends, who’ve had their freedom taken away from them, created something with it that seeks to inspire hope in everyone.”
Cheers!
I was terribly worried that our sticks were drying out to much from the terrible heat this year. especially the viney maple sticks have become brittle and difficult to carve, they tear or crumble when carved with a mallet and gauge. Thurman showed me a technique using our band saw, that alleviates a lot of this concern, especially on a day like today, when there is a brand-new blade on the saw.
This technique also allows me more control of the nose. The nose is the trickiest bit of the "green man" carvings I do. If the nose breaks off, it often ruins the whole carving, or at least makes it much more challenging.
I wondered: "why havent I been using this technique all along?" It saves a LOT of time, and potentially increases my output by almost double!
Of course, as an apprentice, it often pays to learn the most fundamental, and maybe even most difficult techniques.
But I'm glad this has worked out.
Flogging Molly plays at the Cuthbert Ampitheater Friday, with The Interrupters and Tiger Army. The new Flogging Molly album "Anthem" was released last Friday, and it includes a single A Song Of Liberty, which has a fabulous, but very emotional animation:
Flogging Molly have joined forces with renowned Ukrainian animators/filmmakers, The Mad Twins, for the band’s “A Song of Liberty” video. The clip highlights humanity’s ongoing struggle against oppression, from Ireland’s Easter Uprising through several 20th century moments including both World Wars, to the current occupation of Ukraine.
“We were working on this video for three months under air alerts and constant shelling of our country,” explain Ukrainian twin sisters Olya and Vira Ischuk, aka The Mad Twins, who have created award-winning videos for Social Distortion, NOFX, Josh Freese and more. “Dave and Bridget got in touch with us for this very special song, which is meant to tell the Easter Rising story and highlight the universal message of nations who fought for their independence and identity. These are idealists who will fight and die for their ideas. We connected the story with the reality we are experiencing in Ukraine. Generations who went through two world wars paid with their blood for peace. Modern generations have grown up in a world where it is easy to take things for granted. We had calls with Dave talking about the video development where Dave exclaimed indignantly ‘What?! Again?! People have to go through war again?!’ We’ve been going through this for over six months now: life plans stopped, our friends were drafted, some of them have already been killed, friends’ homes have been destroyed or looted, the lucky ones have been evacuated to a safer region or abroad. Generations of Ukrainians have been traumatized for a lifetime.”
“It’s a song of freedom, which I wrote as a recounting of a dark period in Irish history. But suddenly the injustice, and the fight against it, became current events,” Dave King details. “And so our Ukrainian friends, who’ve had their freedom taken away from them, created something with it that seeks to inspire hope in everyone.”
Cheers!