|
|

- Santa Cruz Sentinel - "Chair
Man of the Board"
- Sunset Article - Best
of the West "Redwood Reborn"
Chair
Man of the
Used redwood lives again as furniture
|
|
|
|
By
Kathy Kreiger
Sentinel
staff writer
It's
a chair that invites you to sit down, put your
feet up and let your troubles drift away with
the sunshine.
The chair's lines are classic, the wood well
sanded. The color is that mellow blend or earth
and fire that must have astonished the first
person to cut open these gaints and see the
hues inside.
It's a redwood chair even Julia "Butterfly"
hill might approve of.
And if you think redwood patio furniture can't
be evnironmentally friendly, the man who make
the chair would love to meet you.
"I've been working with redwood since the
60's, when I was a fence contractor," says
Tom Schot, Santa Cruz Native, self described
type A personality, and proud grandfather. "I'm
a redwood person."
These days, he's still in the redwood busineess,
but from a different angle: Most of the wood
he uses is recycled.
Water or vinegar tanks, barns, old houses and
even fences. You name it, he's found it, arrived
ahead of sledge hammers and bulldozers, and
taken it off to build chairs, tables and benches.
|
"We're
not cutting down the old growth (trees),"
Schot says, "There's plent of second-growth.
There's plenty of tear-down.
"And if you make something out of it, you
give it a whole new life."
The first sign it's going to be a fun interview
are the rows of Frisbees lining the wall of
the small woden office behind the showroom,
which is filled with redwood benches, chairs
and tables.
Each Frisbee is printed with the name of a disc-gold
tournament dating back for years. It's another
of Schot's interests.
The good omens pile up like a big south swell
hitting the beach at high tide on a full-moon
night:
The big, bronze-colored Weber barbecue next
to the table saw. The photos of the grandkids
in the low-tech newsletter. The rainbow-colored
butterflies chasing each other on the computer
screen-saver. The semi-retired, semiconductor
industry businessman who bikes in to mentor
the owner because he has fun doing it. The 20-something
kid with a friendly smile, who offers his killer
barbecued skirt steak recipe, as he assembles
a redwood garden table he says will last 30
years - longer than he's been alive.
For
more Click Here!
|
|
Top!
Sunset
Magizine's- Best of the West
Redwood Reborn
Recycling
an emblem of the West
|
You
might not give a second glance to a dliapidated barn,
a fickety train trestle, or a collapsing wine vat, but
to craftsmen like Whit McLeod, Tom Schot, Brad Wilson,
andGarth Miller, they're things of hidden beauty. These
Northern Claifornia woodworkers know that many such
structures
are made of old growth redwoods felled decades ago;
1/8 inch below the weathered surface are the same rich,
warm tones and tight grain the wood exhibited the day
it was milled. McLeod and his fellow crafters recycle
redwood (or, in some cases, Douglas fir, cedar, and
oak) into furniture, much of it intended for outdoor
use. Their quiet but powerful philosophy is, No standing
trees will be harvested for our products.
Redwood, the most Western, revered, and protected of
these woods, is particularly appropriate for outdoor
furniture because of its resistance to rot and termites.
And as the woodworking treasure-hunters know, old-growth
wood has a hand-someness unequaled by more recently
harvested lumber. Turned into tables, chairs, or benches
and protected with penetrating oil finishes, what was
landfill-boutnd wood can return outdoors, an example
of natural elegance and renewed life. |
Courtesy
of Sunset Magizine
Written by
Peter O. Whiteley
|
|
|
|
|
Top!
|