Each month, a long-form conversation with a working maker, a conservator, a curator, or a historian — the kind of talk that ordinarily lives between two people at one bench. The Society records it so the rest of us get to be in the room. Thirty-six in the archive.
Green woodworking from a one-man shop in Jonesborough, Tennessee. His chairs are in Monticello and the Tennessee State Museum.
The Director of Bayou Bend on the collection, its makers, and what curators can tell working makers that the pieces themselves cannot.
How a 1999 meeting at Colonial Williamsburg became the Society — told by the co-founder and first president.
Thirty-six videos, with time-stamped chapter markers and transcripts across the whole archive. Jump straight to the demonstration you came for.