Starring in the new DVD series from
Woodworker's Journal, The Way to Woodwork, are Ian Kirby
and LiLi Jackson.
Ian, a long-time U.S. resident who
emigrated from Great Britain decades ago, is the guiding force behind
the instruction and the philosophy of woodworking that's presented in
the DVDs. "It's the methodology that I've been harping on about
for as many years as I've been working for Woodworker's Journal,"
he explained.
For over a decade, Ian has been a
regular contributor to the Woodworker's Journal print magazine,
writing articles on topics ranging from wood science to project
design, as well as specific projects. In all of the articles -- and
on the DVDs -- he puts to use the training he himself received in the
British Arts and Crafts tradition. His studies included lessons with
Edward Barnsley, son of one of the members of the original British
Arts and Crafts movement.
"I didn't ever give it a second
thought that somebody else could take this role" on the DVDs,
Ian said. "It dealt with a logical methodology of furniture
making as produced by the hand furniture makers of the Arts and
Crafts movement."
"It's a whole process that takes
you from beginning to end," LiLi Jackson added, "not just
one technique or one tool."
LiLi, the daughter of Woodworker's
Journal founder and Rockler Woodworking and Hardware CEO Ann Rockler
Jackson, is also a woodworker in her own right who has studied at a
variety of woodworking schools
across the country. Unlike taking a
class on a specific technique or project, of the DVD series, she
said, "It's really comprehensive," organized in a specific
manner. "I think just watching it myself, and rewatching, I'll
learn more."
She also noted that she had managed to
learn some different techniques from Ian during the course of filming
itself. For hand tools, it might have been a different way to hold
it. As for power tools, "I would often use the router table to
cut rabbets and dadoes and whatever. I would try to avoid the table
saw as much as possible. He [Ian] would say, 'This is the most
efficient way; this is the way you're going to do it.'"
While woodworking, Ian said, can
encompass anything that changes the form of wood, such as, for
example, putting up an outdoor fence, in the DVDs, "Fundamentally,
what we're talking about is furnituremaking. I would hope that this
would give a clear message that there is a methodology to furniture
making."
There are also methodologies to
filmmaking, and the experience this time, Ian said, was different
from the instructional videos he's filmed in the past: "It's the
difference between the BBC and Hollywood." For the British
Broadcasting Corporation, he said, the attitude is, "You
practice it, you should know what you're doing. Hollywood will do
take and take. On the previous occasion, we
mapped out what I was going to talk about, there were cameras on me
and they said go, and I just talked and demonstrated. In this
instance, there was retake and retake. It was much more organized and
broken into smaller bits."
Also, he said, "The sound guy had
a very important part to play. It's quite extraordinary how sensitive
the sound guy gets with the equipment: sounds that were off the set,
that you could barely hear, he'd say,
'We'll have to wait until that
passes.'" With summer rainstorms, LiLi said, "We would lose
a half day to shoot because of the sound on the roof."
Additionally, Ian said, "An
abiding memory was the determination to try and keep the sequence so
that everything in the background is the same in one shot as it was
in the previous one." That experience with the importance of
continuity in film sequences has made him more aware of it as a
spectator -- he noted that his recent viewing of a George Clooney
movie had him noticing "how out of sync Clooney frequently
appears" when viewing his five o'-clock shadow. On The Way
to Woodwork set, shot largely in a shop belonging to
Woodworker's Journal editor in chief Rob Johnstone, "Matt
[Becker, WJ internet production coordinator] was particularly good at keeping the
set so that it looked alike," Ian said.
LiLi had her own comment about
stability on the set: "Rob's saw is on wheels, and we would move
it in and out of the shop for different scenes, and someone would
forget to lock it down. I'd be going to rip a board, and the table
saw would move away from me: not cool. I'd tell everyone, 'Your
stationary tools should remain stationary at all times.'"
In addition to on camera talent like
Ian and LiLi, others present on the set included Woodworker's Journal
editor in chief Rob Johnstone and director Robert Jackson: "My
father's the director," LiLi said, "and my mother's the
executive producer." Her brother, A.J. Jackson, provided
the music. "Even in a professional situation, people are still
your parents," LiLi said. "My mom would make some comment
about how my hair or outfit looks; she'd definitely see it as a mom
sometimes."
For his part, Ian said, "My sole
goal was to satisfy Rob, because I saw Rob as the guy with the vision
and knowing what he wanted. Everybody else was simply putting it
together."
Others might disagree. "In a way,
it's kind of Ian's story," LiLi said of The Way to
Woodwork. "Working with Ian is so amazing. He knows
everything." In the course of their working together, "he's
become a mentor and a friend," she said, who has had an
influence on her decision to pursue graduate studies in industrial
design.
"Ian really talks a lot about how
many woodworkers don't understand design," she said. "They
may be talented woodworkers, but with not understanding concepts of
design and aesthetics, their joinery might be heavy." He
addresses the topic of design on the DVDs, and "he'll add little
things to make it more appealing, like maybe add an inset to change
the way your eye goes," she said.
The DVD series name "The Way to
Woodwork" plays off the Julia Child book The Way to Cook --
many of those involved in the production enjoying cooking. "Just
as that's a classic, we hope this becomes a classic, and hope it
inspires people," LiLi said. "The whole point is: there
isn't a fresh perspective. It's the best methods that have been
handed down for generations."