Young Maker's Guild

Young Maker

How many times have you heard the phrase “They don’t make it like they used to.”

Unfortunately we live in a disposable world. Furniture, computers, phones, just about everything is meant to be thrown away. Take a look around your house. Most of what fills our space is probably cheap disposable junk. But take a closer look and I bet there are some timeless, priceless, pieces of furniture that have been handed down from generations. And I bet these pieces of furniture or other goods would not end up in the “pitch it” pile during spring cleaning.

Why?

I have one guess, and it is because whatever it is wasn’t made like we are used to. There was a time when people were craftsmen. A blacksmith forged metal in a blistering hot blacksmiths shop. A carpenter used old growth, true dimensional lumber to frame walls. The cobbler fashioned shoes. And the list can go on and on, but one thing all of these craftsmen share is they were master’s at their craft.

Before machinery started taking over jobs and furniture was mass produced the craftsmen spent hundreds of hours learning and honing their craft. There was a passion and a sense of pride to create something of high quality that would last.

I’m sure craftsmen of centuries past couldn’t imagine that we would rummage through antique and vintage shops seeking out their work. As a growing craftsmen myself, I know the sense of pride that comes from creating something with your own hands and learning versatile skills. I am learning something that isn’t being taught any more. What I build isn’t mass produced and can’t be found in a big box store. Even if I build the same thing it is slightly different because it is built with hands and not robots. I hope one day the lamps I build or the furniture I build will be sought after as people rummage through antique and vintage stores.

With the Young Makers Guild, I hope to inspire young craftsmen and women to learn a skill and learn how to work with their hands and minds. Technology can grow but we will still need creatives to imagine and build things, learn a craft or trade. Instead of building mass produced junk we can learn about sustainability and build quality, timeless pieces of art. Making, whether it is blacksmithing, woodworking, or sewing all requires the mind to build problem solving creative thinking skills.

I hope I can create what I have envisioned in my head for the Young Makers Guild. There are a ton of big ideas, and I would love to hear any of your ideas or see what you have built. For more updates as the Young Makers Guild gets built out sign up for our newsletter here.

Cedar Bird House

For the past couple of years I have been playing around with the idea to create a progressive woodworking for kids and young adults. (To learn the full back story of the Young Maker’s Guild click on the About section of that page). I have been struggling with trying to come up with a “first project” to launch in the guild and just couldn’t find any clarity.

When not at work at my full time job, my wife and I have been at home socially distancing ourselves from the world. Instead of laying around and watching Netflix I wanted to use this time to devote to something creative and productive. One morning at shift change, (I’m a fireman) I heard a couple of the guys talking about how their kids are starting to run out of things to do, and they started resorting to Netflix to keep the kids occupied. That same morning I read an email from Ramit Sethi that really inspired me to go forward with my idea of the Young Maker’s Guild.

Due to the state of emergency the world was in I wanted something I could come up with fast to put out into the world. It is spring time and there are the birds are coming out in full force. I remembered when I was in Boy Scouts we built a bird house.

That was it. It was something simple enough to build for kids of all ages, and a project that may stimulate some creativity. I could start cutting the cedar to put into kits and it was a project available to the world a couple of days later.

I made this bird house out of cedar so it would be insect and rot resistant. I did some quick research and created a house that would suit a house wren or chickadee, common birds in our area. I think I am going to leave this a natural cedar color and not seal it so it can weather naturally.

I look forward to hours of sitting in the kitchen drinking coffee in our house watching the trees come to life and the birds moving into their house.

Interested in your own cedar birdhouse kit? Click the button below.