Archive for the ‘Chippendale News’ Category

Some of the Things that Make our Furniture Design Course Stand Out

Thursday, May 23rd, 2013
He came He saw He conquered. Chippendale School of Furniture.

Our students learn more than 80 woodworking techniques.

Do you dream of building a rewarding career in professional furniture design and restoration? There are still some places on our furniture making and furniture restoration course starting this October 2013.

Our feedback suggests that our courses are that little bit different:

1. We teach you up to 80 woodworking techniques in just 9 months (other schools take 2 to 3 years to cover the same ground);
2. We lay on lectures, visiting experts, learning from your colleauges and field trips, as well as spending up to 1,400 hours doing practical benchwork on your own projects;
3. We provide all the tools you need – planes, safety gear, routers, chisels, hammers (worth at least £2,500);
4. Your fees include all the wood required to make 3 pieces of furniture, sourced and dried here from local Scottish hardwoods;
(more…)

Hide your whisky with a ‘Prohibition Table’: see the video

Wednesday, March 6th, 2013

Anselm Fraser has just the table to hide his drinking habits from his wife; his American ‘prohibition table’ allows the occasional dram to be sipped in peace away from prying eyes. Slange Var! (‘cheers’ in Scotland).

Watch our Woodworkers Wednesday video of Anselm demonstrating how his bottle of bottle of Famous Grouse whisky can be hidden away.

During American prohibition in the 1920′s, an entrepreneurial cabinet maker created and patented his ‘prohibition table’. This neat, round table has a secret, pop-up compartment in its centre for storing the illicit booze. These beautiful, mahogany tables sold like hot cakes for a year until the US police cottoned on and banned their sale.

(more…)

U3A Brave Arctic Conditions to Visit Furniture School

Thursday, January 24th, 2013
U3A visitors at Chippendale School of Furniture

Our U3A visitors with Anselm sporting a wooden kilt.

We were delighted that our visitors from the U3A (University of the Third Age) went ahead with their visit to the Chippendale School of Furniture last Saturday despite the Arctic conditions.

U3A are self-help, self-managed lifelong learning co-operatives for older people, providing opportunities for members to share learning experiences in a wide range of interest groups and to pursue learning not for qualifications, but for fun. So a visit to see what happens here seemed to prove quite popular.

(more…)

International Furniture School wins Chamber of Commerce Family Business Award

Friday, October 26th, 2012
L to R: From left to right: Arthur Johnston (Business Partnership), Anselm Fraser, Antonia Fraser, David Lochhead (Springfords Accountants)

L to R: Arthur Johnston (Business Partnership), Anselm Fraser, Antonia Fraser, David Lochhead (Springfords Accountants)

The Chippendale International School of Furniture has just won a local Chamber of Commerce Award for a successful Family Business by “demonstrating sustained success across a broad range of measures”. The award is sponsored by local accountants and tax advisors, Springfords, and the ceremony was hosted by Queen Margaret University.

Anselm Fraser and his wife Antonia set up the international furniture school near Gifford more than 25 years ago. More recently, they have been joined by their son, Jamie, who graduated from the furniture school this June and is now one of five tutors.

“The school’s success means that for the second year running we have a full student roll for our furniture making and restoration course”, says Anselm Fraser. “Forty per cent of this year’s new furniture school students come from overseas, including Japan, Malaysia, South Korea, Barbados, Mexico, Canada, New Zealand and South Africa.

“We’re unique in that our bespoke kitchen and furniture restoration business, Anselm Fraser Furniture, operates in parallel with the furniture school. The ‘Chippendale approach to learning‘ combines lectures and lots of hands-on bench time; the students also learn from each other on a collaborative basis.

“The course is particularly suited to students who want to be furniture making entrepreneurs. This year, for example, five of our most recent graduates have set up furniture making and woodworking businesses in the Chippendale Incubator workshops adjoining the school. They also benefit from our support and from being part of our 34-strong woodworking community.”

At the awards ceremony, the international speaker, author and business strategy guru, Roger Harrop, gave an inspiring presentation entitled ‘Staying in the Helicopter®’.  Roger reminded the 200-strong audience of the four basics of business: be exceptional at what you do; create a great place to work; prospect for business; and focus on the bottom line.

Business guru Roger Harrop who made the keynot speech

Business guru Roger Harrop who made the keynote speech

“In today’s competitive climate where weak businesses don’t survive, successful companies must have belief, passion and courage.  Business owners have to ensure they ‘Stay in the Helicopter®’ to give them a high level, strategic perspective on their business, and not be too focused on the all-consuming, day-to-day details.

“I congratulate all the businesses that won the Chamber’s Awards: GMP Print Solutions, Network ROI, Pure Malt Products, BSS Gas, Qik Serve and the Chippendale International School of Furniture.

“Family businesses employ about half the workforce in Scotland, contribute some 45% of GDP and play a really important role in our communities.

“The Chippendale International School of Furniture deserved to win the Family Business Award for their record of long term success. I admire the premium position they have built in their international education market and the way in which they’ve condensed a 2 to 3 year course into an intensive one year course; the fact that they have a full student roll speaks for itself.

“It’s also great that the furniture school is helping spawn about 10 new furniture design businesses each year and supporting some of their graduates’ businesses in their Chippendale Incubator workshops.”

You can watch a video on the Chippendale International School of Furniture in the Chippendale YouTube channel and further information is available on Roger Harrop‘s website.

A Swiss chalet. Nothing but pine.

Wednesday, September 26th, 2012

Doug, Graham and Anselm with chainsaw. Photographer: Matthew.

Doug, Graham and Anselm with chainsaw. Photographer: Matthew.

Former Chippendale School of Furniture student Matthew Meyerhoff and father Doug, Graham Davies (the furniture school’s senior tutor), and Anselm Fraser spent two weeks during the summer in the Swiss Alps renovating a derelict, 250 year old, pine chalet. The experience proved what the Swiss can do with ‘nothing but pine’ available as a building material.

There were no services to the chalet, and it was only accessible via a basic track up a steep mountain slope. Everything about the chalet’s structure was dictated by the wood available nearby: the overall size was limited by the height of local pine trees; the roof would originally have had wooden tiles; and the doors, shutters and window frames are made entirely of wood, right down to the wooden hinges and wooden nails.

Matthew Meyerhoff says: “Apparently, it was quite common for farmers to have three chalets at varying heights up the mountainside for occupying during different seasons.

Matthew describes how “Water had damaged a big section of a corner of the chalet. You could put your hand through the wall, so we had to chainsaw back past all the rot. In the process, we found moss, used to seal any gaps.

“There was a half mile zigzag walk up a steep slope to get to the chalet, and each morning for two weeks we carried up big pine beams and green wood planks. It took us 3 days to repair the hole with new lap jointed beams.”

“I’ve always loved learning about history so walking up to the time trapped chalet was just heaven! My father loved the experience too. Crystal clear blue skies and only a couple of days of rain…

Newly laid pine floor in former cow shed.

Newly laid pine floor in former cow shed.

“One evening we watched the locals celebrate their national day with an impressive firework display, while a massive thunder and lightning storm was going on behind us.”

You can watch the Swiss trip slide show here.

Next job was the cow byre on the ground floor which had been used to shelter the farmer’s cows. Apparently, a  cow can generate 1.5 KW of heat so the animals in the basement helped warm up the chalet! The team had to dig out a foot and a half of old manure and rocks to lower the ground floor before laying a new pine floor with locally milled, green wood planks with clean, crisp edges.

Anselm Fraser added: “A staircase had to be built up to the former hay loft. We used whatever wood we could find nearby, so that it looked like it had always been there. The wooden steps were created in the traditional manner by splitting (‘wriving’) logs into four quarters, the two flat edges of each quarter forming a tread and riser.

“When finished, the chalet will probably have 3 bedrooms and sleep up to 8 guests in the loft.

Staircase with wooden steps created by wriving (splitting logs).

Staircase with wooden steps created by wriving (splitting logs).

“One day we lit the old wood lined chimney for a BBQ. The interior of the chimney was so large (10’ square at the base reducing to 3’ square at the top) that the flames were nowhere near the wood. Racks coming out of the chimney would have been used for smoking hams and sausages.

“A lot of the pine was in good condition despite being exposed to the elements for many years, and some of the wood had been preserved by coating it in old engine oil!

“Clearly, we have a lot to learn from the Swiss about preserving pine so that it lasts for centuries.”