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  • Why We Make Things and Why It Matters: The Education of a Craftsman
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Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5
255 global ratings
5 star
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4 star
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3 star
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2 star
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Why We Make Things and Why It Matters: The Education of a Craftsman

Why We Make Things and Why It Matters: The Education of a Craftsman

byPeter Korn
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From Canada

Ty Schultz
5.0 out of 5 stars A celebration of craft
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on May 3, 2021
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This personal journey is a fabulous and enlightening exploration of craft and creative thought. Much more than a book about making furniture.
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Mackenzie
2.0 out of 5 stars Some insight but not a lot of depth.
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on October 26, 2018
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More biography of the author with some insight but not as much depth as expected after reading book description. Would not recommend.
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Bricomani57
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on February 22, 2018
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Excellent livre
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DC
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on November 14, 2016
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Great book
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Robert Morris
5.0 out of 5 stars How and why the creative effort "is a process of challenging embedded narratives in order to...."
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on August 18, 2014
Peter Korn poses an intriguing question: "Why do we choose the spiritually, emotionally, and physically demanding work of brining new objects into the world with creativity and skill?" This book is his extended response to that question. After completing his academic assignments for the University of Pennsylvania, he embarked on what became a journey of discovery during which two epiphanies occurred. (More about them later.) "My intuition from the first day I picked up a hammer was that making things with a commitment to quality would lead to a good life." In this book, he retraces the steps of his journey "with reference to larger frameworks - historical, sociological, psychological, and biological - to discover how and why that intuition turned out to be valid."

His readers tag along with him from Nantucket Island to Frederick (Maryland) to New York City and then Philadelphia before relocating (again) to the Anderson Ranch Arts Center in Snowmass Village (Colorado) for which he served for the six years as Program Director before finally founding (in 1992) the Center for Furniture Craftsmanship in Rockport (Maine). Along the way, he published Woodworking Basics: Mastering the Essentials of Craftsmanship (Taunton Press, 2003) and The Woodworker's Guide to Hand Tools (Taunton Press, 1998). Why We Make Things and Why it Matters is his third book. And along the way, he was stricken by cancer and struggled with personal losses best described by him,

With regard to the aforementioned epiphanies, the first occurred in November (1984) when he had been hard at work on a cradle: "After three days of intense focus, cold, and solitude, the cradle is complete -- a miraculous birth in its own right. I have somehow transform benign intent into a beautiful functional object. This is my moment on the road to Demascus. I am overtaken by the most unexpected passion." (Page 28).

The second epiphany occurred in 1991 during his sixth year at Anderson Ranch. By way of background, he explains that he had previously composed an artist's statement, one that included a sentence that brought his emerging ideas into focus. It read: My own values became clear when I eventually realized that the words I used to describe my aesthetic goals as a furniture maker -- integrity, simplicity, and grace -- also described the person I sought to grow into through the practice of craftsmanship." (Page 102) That sentence was his second epiphany.

While re-reading the book in preparation to compose this brief commentary, I was again reminded of similar experiences that James Joyce describes in several of his letters and short stories as well as in Portrait of the Artist as a Young m Man. Of course, I have no idea whether or not Korn had Joyce and his work in mind when sharing this especially significant moment during his own development. Be that as it may, his transition from carpenter to craftsman is near complete, with details best revealed within the narrative, in context.

What's my take? Of greatest interest and value to me is what Peter Korn has to say about how he "found his way in the world" by committing himself to (as Richard Sennett expressed it) "doing something well, for its own sake." Consider this brief excerpt from Creativity in which Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi observes: "To achieve the kind of world we consider human, some people had to dare to break the thrall of tradition, Next, they had to find ways of recording those new ideas or procedures that improved on what went on before. Finally, they had to find ways of transmitting the new knowledge to generations to come. Those who were involved in this process we call creative. What we call culture, or those parts of ourselves that we internalized from the social environment, is their creation."

For Korn, these "essential" observations by Sennett and Csikszentmihalyi ring true: "There is great satisfaction to be found in work that engages one as an end in itself." His experiences can be described in many different ways. He found his calling, he found himself, he found his True North...all quite correct.

For me, the key to understanding the experiences that Korn discusses, many of which resemble our own, is to think of how he created a good life as well as a successful career. He and countless others have learned through their own experiences that what they love to do, what they most enjoy, is probably what they do best, despite challenges and setbacks along the way. "And so it is. As a maker you put one foot in front of the other and you own the journey. Finding creative passion that governs your life may be a curse as well as a blessing, but I would not trade it for anything else I know."

One final point: It will come as no surprise to those who are already familiar with Peter Korn’s art and craftsmanship that he complements his lean and effective prose with preliminary sketches and then photographs of some of his creations, illustrations that are of superior quality. They bring his story to life in ways and to an extent words alone cannot. Bravo!
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From other countries

Nick Henley
5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful book
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on January 18, 2023
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This little book is for anyone who has made things or wants to make things. The author is a furniture maker, but that is not important, as it's about the compulsion to make the world and what it takes to produce things of quality. The most interesting, and perhaps unexpected part , is that it highlights the importance of making things to the maker. In that, it is more about a way or living - something very relevant to today. The sort of book you want to give to all of your friends - so that they can share the joy and wisdom.
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andrew mcgillivray
5.0 out of 5 stars Hippie Woodworker finds enlightenment
Reviewed in Germany 🇩🇪 on May 7, 2022
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This is like a time machine, rediscovering the sixties through the words of a young craftsman searching for his own soulfulness.
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Core
3.0 out of 5 stars Long winded at times
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on July 11, 2015
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This book, may require a second read, or it might not?

My tendency when going through books, is to underline and highlight the heck out of em. I consider them valuable tools to use. I want to reflect as I go, rather than go back through a whole book.
This book, that didn't happen too much.

The reason I bought this book, and I imagine a lot of people would be in the same boat, as far as buying decisions go.. was I was hoping that it would point me in the right direction, as far as "life choices" go..like, on the journey that we call life, I was hoping that this would be a helpful guidepost on that trail. Don't get me wrong, I picked up some nuggets of wisdom, but I didn't really get pointed in any direction.

The biggest thing I probably took away from the book is this:

-If given the opportunity, or if you can create it.. flounder about in life. Try new things, hobby's, interest, and see what sticks. You may not gain exactly what you want from these 'actions' but you will gain something, and taking action is the most important thing you can do.

-Also, life will poop on you.. hardcore sometimes. Its not personal. Its just life relieving itself. I honest to god feel sorry for the author, but maybe it was Karma or something?

Anyways, the book was okay. It was worth the money, and the time to read through it. But the Main title and the sub-title really should be reversed. I think that would give more an accurate picture on what the book is about.
4 people found this helpful
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James Gee
5.0 out of 5 stars Deeply Illuminating About What it Means to be Human
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 6, 2013
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Why We Make Things is a book of introspection, history, scholarship, and enlightenment. Peter Korn deftly weaves stories of self, others, craft, and minds into a compelling and riveting narrative. In light of today’s widespread “Maker Movement”—most of it centered on digital tools—it is illuminating to return to physical making for insights into craft as a form of self-fashioning wherein each of us, through human effort and creativity, can put our own personal spin on tradition and, in turn, transform tradition, ourselves, and, perhaps, society as well. The claims in the book about mind and meaning are all empirically well supported in current research, though Korn does not belabor this fact. However, the book goes beyond facts that are true to discuss facts that matter. In the end, the book exemplifies something that scholarship is only now coming to realize: mind, emotion, values, and the self all merge and reinforce each other in the act of mindful making. The book is artfully written and is a fully engaging read. In my own view, we live today in the midst of many crises because we have forgotten—often in the pursuit of greed and ideology—that the world “talks back” when you act on it and that failing to listen to it with respect is dangerous for body and soul. Why We Make Things lovingly shows how we can listen to things to become better people.
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C. J. Struthers
5.0 out of 5 stars A nice read
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 19, 2014
Verified Purchase
If you are a creative person you'll love this book and if you aren't a creative person who has wondered why some craftspeople are so passionate about their work in spite of some of the hardships they face you will find this little book will open your eyes and your mind.

Mr. Korn has written a wonderful story of his own career but everything he illustrates is true of any dedicated artist/craftsperson. He takes you through his own career and along the way explains why making is such an inherent need of humans. Buy it read it and share what you learn. Those of us who have taken this path will find confirmation that we've done the right thing for our selves and for those of us who have lost touch with their creative sides will find an explanation of why they ought to tap back into making!
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