07 April 2016

Scenes from the last classes in Hangzhou

On March 11th my employer saw fit to fire me as a woodworking instructor.  He and his partner had decided to focus the business efforts on increasing membership and put less energy into instruction. I finished out the busiest month of my tenure there. Here are a few photos from those classes.
Layout skills

Cutting 4 pieces to the same length
This was class #1, which although explicitly a prerequisite for the succeeding classes, I taught few sessions of.

Chopping the waste after making stop cuts
Proper use of a combination square


Ably observed by my assistant, Lao Wang

A triumvirate of satisfied students
 Some examples of the promotional materials that accompanied my class offerings. It says that I teach American style woodworking.


Marketing

The free English lessons are an added bonus!

Class #5 introduces dovetailing and, in theory, builds upon the skills from lessons #1 and #2. This was the first class with me for these four students.
Fully on task

Ryoba saw for cutting dovetails

Trimming flush with a blockplane

Ably assisted as usual


Second day: rush to the finishing line

Brace and bit
I also hosted a banker for a series of classes. He proudly arrived in class #1 with a set of Lie-Nielsen paring chisels with leather roll. His work schedule: 6 days on, 2 days off, dictated the erratic class dates. He worked with me for thee classes in total, having the April classes cancelled, and being the only student to have taken class #3. Despite his membership in the parasitic class, I did not find myself with the usual urge to throttle enemies of the proletariat.
Ripping the bottom panel to size

Shaving bench put to proper use

Inspecting a tapered chair leg

He posted the results of his efforts on his own wechat account.
Class #1


Candle box, class #2

class #2

Mallets, class #3
Staked stool, class #3


2 comments:

Jonas Jensen said...

Sorry to hear that you were made redundant.

Will you be able to find another teaching job in China?

Hope all will be well.

Brgds
Jonas

Potomacker said...

@ Jonas Jensen There are many teaching jobs to be found in China. Finding a good one is the main challenge.