Does anyone know any women who are really into woodworking? I
certainly can't think of any reason why they shouldn't be as interested
as, say, some men are in cooking. I know a woman who is interested but
doesn't get involved. She does like watching Norm however! I'd like
to know that there are some women turning out projects as good as (or
better than) those the men in here do. After all, it isn't an activity
where strength matters very much.
FoggyTown
FoggyTown wrote:
> Does anyone know any women who are really into woodworking? I
> certainly can't think of any reason why they shouldn't be as interested
> as, say, some men are in cooking. I know a woman who is interested but
> doesn't get involved. She does like watching Norm however! I'd like
> to know that there are some women turning out projects as good as (or
> better than) those the men in here do. After all, it isn't an activity
> where strength matters very much.
>
> FoggyTown
Check out John Lucas' site:
http://www.woodshopdemos.com/
He and various females test products and make some great projects.
Dave - Baltimore
There have been a few that have come through here. The names I don't
remember without going back to the archives to look them up. There was
on women from New Orleans that owned her own company. I often reflect
back now and wonder how they faired in the mess down there.
As often as I can I enjoy looking at the work of people who enter their
work into contests. A high percentage of winners are women. I think
most are to busy doing instead of talking.
Roy
On Dec 26, 5:49 am, "FoggyTown" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Does anyone know any women who are really into woodworking? I
> certainly can't think of any reason why they shouldn't be as interested
> as, say, some men are in cooking. I know a woman who is interested but
> doesn't get involved. She does like watching Norm however! I'd like
> to know that there are some women turning out projects as good as (or
> better than) those the men in here do. After all, it isn't an activity
> where strength matters very much.
>
> FoggyTown
FoggyTown wrote:
> Does anyone know any women who are really into woodworking? I
> certainly can't think of any reason why they shouldn't be as interested
> as, say, some men are in cooking.
The bulk of the best chefs are male.
> I know a woman who is interested but
> doesn't get involved. She does like watching Norm however! I'd like
> to know that there are some women turning out projects as good as (or
> better than) those the men in here do. After all, it isn't an activity
> where strength matters very much.
>
When a woman decides to become a (*fill in blank*) she will do so.
With a few exceptions, they can do anything a man can do. (The
exceptions are simple: a 5'0" 100 girl isn't going to carry me down a
fire-truck's ladder.... and neither will a 5'0" 100 pound guy.)
This whole gender typecasting thing is bullshit. If a woman can't do a
certain job, it is because she either hasn't learned, or doesn't have
the desire.... sure as hell not because she is a woman.
My oldest daughter is an operator at a nuclear power-station. She
leaves lots of guys eat her dust.
She studies hard, works hard and has excellent work ethics. Any MAN
with the same qualities would do as well as she does.
Any man/woman who stands in the way of a talent, is an idiot. Gender be
damned.
r
Robatoy wrote:
> FoggyTown wrote:
> > Does anyone know any women who are really into woodworking? I
> > certainly can't think of any reason why they shouldn't be as interested
> > as, say, some men are in cooking.
>
> The bulk of the best chefs are male.
>
> > I know a woman who is interested but
> > doesn't get involved. She does like watching Norm however! I'd like
> > to know that there are some women turning out projects as good as (or
> > better than) those the men in here do. After all, it isn't an activity
> > where strength matters very much.
> >
> When a woman decides to become a (*fill in blank*) she will do so.
> With a few exceptions, they can do anything a man can do. (The
> exceptions are simple: a 5'0" 100 girl isn't going to carry me down a
> fire-truck's ladder.... and neither will a 5'0" 100 pound guy.)
>
> This whole gender typecasting thing is bullshit. If a woman can't do a
> certain job, it is because she either hasn't learned, or doesn't have
> the desire.... sure as hell not because she is a woman.
> My oldest daughter is an operator at a nuclear power-station. She
> leaves lots of guys eat her dust.
> She studies hard, works hard and has excellent work ethics. Any MAN
> with the same qualities would do as well as she does.
>
> Any man/woman who stands in the way of a talent, is an idiot. Gender be
> damned.
>
>
> r
You making up for some past sins or something? Who said anything about
gender typing? Methinks you protest a little too much, son.
FoggyTown
FoggyTown wrote:
> Robatoy wrote:
> > FoggyTown wrote:
> > > Does anyone know any women who are really into woodworking? I
> > > certainly can't think of any reason why they shouldn't be as interested
> > > as, say, some men are in cooking.
> >
> > The bulk of the best chefs are male.
> >
> > > I know a woman who is interested but
> > > doesn't get involved. She does like watching Norm however! I'd like
> > > to know that there are some women turning out projects as good as (or
> > > better than) those the men in here do. After all, it isn't an activity
> > > where strength matters very much.
> > >
> > When a woman decides to become a (*fill in blank*) she will do so.
> > With a few exceptions, they can do anything a man can do. (The
> > exceptions are simple: a 5'0" 100 girl isn't going to carry me down a
> > fire-truck's ladder.... and neither will a 5'0" 100 pound guy.)
> >
> > This whole gender typecasting thing is bullshit. If a woman can't do a
> > certain job, it is because she either hasn't learned, or doesn't have
> > the desire.... sure as hell not because she is a woman.
> > My oldest daughter is an operator at a nuclear power-station. She
> > leaves lots of guys eat her dust.
> > She studies hard, works hard and has excellent work ethics. Any MAN
> > with the same qualities would do as well as she does.
> >
> > Any man/woman who stands in the way of a talent, is an idiot. Gender be
> > damned.
> >
> >
> > r
>
> You making up for some past sins or something? Who said anything about
> gender typing? Methinks you protest a little too much, son.
>
That's a pretty strange response, don't you think? You should widen
your mind a little.
All the women in my family have been very strong. I'm sorry you didn't
have that experience.
r
Robatoy wrote:
> >
> That's a pretty strange response, don't you think? You should widen
> your mind a little.
> All the women in my family have been very strong. I'm sorry you didn't
> have that experience.
>
> r
I can't tell if you're genuinely obtuse or just a troll. All I said
was that I didn't personally KNOW any women who were into working.
Nothing about should be or could be or prevented from, etc. Maybe
being around all those "strong women" in your family has affected you.
FoggyTown
FoggyTown wrote:
> Robatoy wrote:
> > >
> > That's a pretty strange response, don't you think? You should widen
> > your mind a little.
> > All the women in my family have been very strong. I'm sorry you didn't
> > have that experience.
> >
> > r
>
> I can't tell if you're genuinely obtuse or just a troll.
I doubt you can tell anything.
[snipped some more drivel to throw on the cuttingroom floor, I'll try
not to step in any of it.]
> Maybe
> being around all those "strong women" in your family has affected you.
It most certainly has affected me. I have the greatest respect for
women as a result.
I don't get all giddy and paranoid around them.
r
"FoggyTown" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Does anyone know any women who are really into woodworking? I
> certainly can't think of any reason why they shouldn't be as interested
> as, say, some men are in cooking. I know a woman who is interested but
> doesn't get involved. She does like watching Norm however! I'd like
> to know that there are some women turning out projects as good as (or
> better than) those the men in here do. After all, it isn't an activity
> where strength matters very much.
>
All kinds of women work wood. They even have their own magazine. Odd, how
folks who insist they want to be treated the same, because they _are_ the
same want to have their own magazine. Names available in the index of FWW
and such.
> FoggyTown
>
"Charley" wrote...
> My daughter-in-law is a licensed building contractor. She has built houses
> with her dad since she was old enough to do so, doing most anything that
> needed to be done. I've built several projects with her and have been
amazed
> at what she can do. She's not just a carpenter, but a fine cabinet and
> furniture maker.
Further support for the cultural arguement.
I recall now, back in the late 60's in jr. high shop class. Boys had to
take shop, which was metal shop, woodshop, and mechanical drawing. Girls
had to take home ec, and there were no exceptions. Boys had one week of
home ec at the end of the year, hated and resisted it the whole way, and
iirc we baked a cake, learned to sew buttons, balance a checkbook, and on
the last day had a party with the girls & played spin the bottle & other
parlor games under the teachers watchful eye. For that week the girls made
jewelry in metal shop and had a blast.
At the time, I didn't care for woodshop so much - building birdhouses and
other crap out of warped pine boards - but enjoyed drafting class, and metal
shop was awesome: I made a sand casting and poured an aluminum ashtray in
the shape of the US, forged a screwdriver blade and turned a yellow plastic
handle for it, turned a little ball peen hammer with a knurled handle, spun
an aluminum bowl, cut and solderded together a little tin box, made a sheet
of hammered copper, turned a brass candlestick, forged and tempered a cold
chisel. Still have the box, the chisel, and the hammer. So the guys were
exposed to shop big time, and the girls merely got a chance to stop sewing
and baking class for one week to make cool stuff. I'll bet most of the gals
would've rather had a year of shop than a year of home ec, but maybe I'm
just projecting.
--
Timothy Juvenal
www.tjwoodworking.com
My daughter-in-law is a licensed building contractor. She has built houses
with her dad since she was old enough to do so, doing most anything that
needed to be done. I've built several projects with her and have been amazed
at what she can do. She's not just a carpenter, but a fine cabinet and
furniture maker.
--
Charley
"Juvenal" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "FoggyTown" wrote ...
> > Does anyone know any women who are really into woodworking? I
> > certainly can't think of any reason why they shouldn't be as interested
> > as, say, some men are in cooking.
> [...]
>
> I've come across a few woodworker gals. "P" comes to mind. Worked with
her
> in a shop in RI back in the 80's. She was the go-to gal anytime anybody
> needed shaper cutters ground. Aside from that, she did everything
everyone
> else did about the same, except maybe for the heavy lifting. She was a
nice
> gal & a good fishin' buddy.
>
> Met "A" in the 90's working in a millwork and woodworking shop, their main
> employee. Was doing what we would call 'fine woodworking' and doing an
> outstanding job of it.
>
> Did some cabs and a fireplace for a basement remodel job last year, and
the
> lady carpenter on the job was one of the best I've worked with. Real hard
> worker, knew what she was doing.
>
> But definitely, there are way fewer women woodworkers than men
woodworkers.
> I'd guess it's partly cultural differences, and partly innate differences
> between the sexes. Culturally, I'd guess there are fewer women who aspire
> to success in the trades, whereas guys might be more inclined to see
> something noble in it. Also, at one time, less so now, women were given a
> hard time trying to enter the trades, so it would make sense that there
> would be fewer of my generation (50ish) , but more younger women in the
> trades. And lastly, it's my understanding that male brains are innately
> more likely to have good three-dimensional and mechanical reasoning
> abilities, and female brains are more likely to have well-developed
> communication abilities. And of course, there are exceptions, guys who
> can't use a screwdriver, and women who can build anything.
>
> And there is also the fact the environment of working with a bunch of guys
> in a shop may not appeal to a lot of women; guys are pretty rough on each
> other, use rude language, a lot of sexual references, the c-hair is still
> considered a standard unit of measurement in most shops, the work is hard,
> the pay is low - maybe women are just smart enough not to want to get
> involved.
>
>
> --
> Timothy Juvenal
> www.tjwoodworking.com
>
>
"Renata" <barskir@not_myrealbox.com> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Where did you get the notion that women woodworkers want their own
> magazine? The fact that one exists (or, existed) doesn't mean there's
> a demand.
LOL
"FoggyTown" wrote ...
> Does anyone know any women who are really into woodworking? I
> certainly can't think of any reason why they shouldn't be as interested
> as, say, some men are in cooking.
[...]
I've come across a few woodworker gals. "P" comes to mind. Worked with her
in a shop in RI back in the 80's. She was the go-to gal anytime anybody
needed shaper cutters ground. Aside from that, she did everything everyone
else did about the same, except maybe for the heavy lifting. She was a nice
gal & a good fishin' buddy.
Met "A" in the 90's working in a millwork and woodworking shop, their main
employee. Was doing what we would call 'fine woodworking' and doing an
outstanding job of it.
Did some cabs and a fireplace for a basement remodel job last year, and the
lady carpenter on the job was one of the best I've worked with. Real hard
worker, knew what she was doing.
But definitely, there are way fewer women woodworkers than men woodworkers.
I'd guess it's partly cultural differences, and partly innate differences
between the sexes. Culturally, I'd guess there are fewer women who aspire
to success in the trades, whereas guys might be more inclined to see
something noble in it. Also, at one time, less so now, women were given a
hard time trying to enter the trades, so it would make sense that there
would be fewer of my generation (50ish) , but more younger women in the
trades. And lastly, it's my understanding that male brains are innately
more likely to have good three-dimensional and mechanical reasoning
abilities, and female brains are more likely to have well-developed
communication abilities. And of course, there are exceptions, guys who
can't use a screwdriver, and women who can build anything.
And there is also the fact the environment of working with a bunch of guys
in a shop may not appeal to a lot of women; guys are pretty rough on each
other, use rude language, a lot of sexual references, the c-hair is still
considered a standard unit of measurement in most shops, the work is hard,
the pay is low - maybe women are just smart enough not to want to get
involved.
--
Timothy Juvenal
www.tjwoodworking.com
"FoggyTown" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Does anyone know any women who are really into woodworking? I
> certainly can't think of any reason why they shouldn't be as interested
> as, say, some men are in cooking. I know a woman who is interested but
> doesn't get involved. She does like watching Norm however! I'd like
> to know that there are some women turning out projects as good as (or
> better than) those the men in here do. After all, it isn't an activity
> where strength matters very much.
I took a woodworking class a few years ago. Of the 12 of us, four were
women. Unlike most of the men, they did not have beer bellies either.
I do.
Renata
On 26 Dec 2006 02:49:50 -0800, "FoggyTown" <[email protected]> wrote:
>Does anyone know any women who are really into woodworking? I
>certainly can't think of any reason why they shouldn't be as interested
>as, say, some men are in cooking. I know a woman who is interested but
>doesn't get involved. She does like watching Norm however! I'd like
>to know that there are some women turning out projects as good as (or
>better than) those the men in here do. After all, it isn't an activity
>where strength matters very much.
>
>FoggyTown
There's an excellent female woodworker who works closely with another female
who, IIRC, does the inlay work ... but I can't remember either names. I
believe there might have been an article about them in American Bungalow, or
a similar mag, a year or two back.
Be nice to find a website ...
Any idea who that is?
--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 12/25/06
FoggyTown wrote:
> Does anyone know any women who are really into woodworking? I
> certainly can't think of any reason why they shouldn't be as interested
> as, say, some men are in cooking. I know a woman who is interested but
> doesn't get involved. She does like watching Norm however! I'd like
> to know that there are some women turning out projects as good as (or
> better than) those the men in here do. After all, it isn't an activity
> where strength matters very much.
>
> FoggyTown
>
Kathy Wingert who builds custom guitars and used you post to this news
group, is just one that comes to mind.
http://www.wingertguitars.com/gallery1.shtml
--
Jack Novak
Buffalo, NY - USA
[email protected]
On Tue, 26 Dec 2006 18:49:03 GMT, "Juvenal"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>"Renata" wrote...
>
>> I do.
>
>...so much for my theory about women's communication skills. >8^)
Misplace your sense of humor, mayhaps?
Renata
On Tue, 26 Dec 2006 11:08:46 GMT, "George" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>"FoggyTown" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> Does anyone know any women who are really into woodworking? I
>> certainly can't think of any reason why they shouldn't be as interested
>> as, say, some men are in cooking. I know a woman who is interested but
>> doesn't get involved. She does like watching Norm however! I'd like
>> to know that there are some women turning out projects as good as (or
>> better than) those the men in here do. After all, it isn't an activity
>> where strength matters very much.
>>
>All kinds of women work wood. They even have their own magazine. Odd, how
>folks who insist they want to be treated the same, because they _are_ the
>same want to have their own magazine. Names available in the index of FWW
>and such.
>> FoggyTown
Where did you get the notion that women woodworkers want their own
magazine? The fact that one exists (or, existed) doesn't mean there's
a demand. In fact, i'd prefer not to segregate by gender - 'cause you
guys have a head start in the field, if nohthing else :-)
While there are times for differences between the sexes, ww'g is
rarely one of them.
Renata
>>