Sejanus.Aelianus
Veteran
My, admittedly sketchy Greek understands 'technique' as skilful, so that seems a bit curious
Crashes can require enormous skill. Ask a stuntman! 😉
My, admittedly sketchy Greek understands 'technique' as skilful, so that seems a bit curious
Crashes can require enormous skill. Ask a stuntman! 😉
Dear Nick,If the quality of design, materials and assembly is high, then the extent to which something is "handmade" or "manufactured" (however these terms are defined) doesn't really matter much, in my book. Some may take pleasure from the fact something was made by a particular person; others may simply appreciate that the item works well, and reliably, however it was made. . . .
Sorry, artifice was the wrong word to use.
I meant something shallow, frivolous, misguided
Dear Nick,
Or indeed MEAN much.
My suspicion is that "hand made" is often no more than a place-holder for "more expensive", simply because manual labour costs more than machine labour. And EVERYONE knows that "more expensive" is always exactly the same as "better". Unless they have a brain, of course.
Sometimes, though, "hand made" is essential because it would cost too much to set up the machinery to make something for which demand is modest: think of wooden cameras. Or indeed (insofar as they are hand made -- I've seen the production line) Leicas. Or Morgan cars.
At the extreme, I've had stuff made to my own design because there was nothing on the market that would do exactly what I wanted. For example, I'm still using a satchel made to my specifications by a Polish cordwainer in Glasgow 40+ years ago, though I've had to re-stitch it twice. It's like a school satchel, but with a strap that goes all the way around; a main compartment that takes A4 files; and a front pocket divided to take two Leicas. I had only one at the time (a 1936 IIIa that cost me £30), but I had ambitions... Oh, and it's black leather and chrome instead of brown leather and brass: this was 1970-71, after all. I think it cost me £20 so it was good value for money. And my Swiss Army knife lives in a belt-holster with a military-style fastener, which I had made for it maybe 15 years ago.
In a completely different realm, I've had a stove built for smoking food, though I haven't tried it yet: I need the connecting pipes to the barrel I'll be using as a smoker. The same guy is building me a wood-burning sauna stove, but that'll mean I have to build the sauna I've been fantasizing about for half a decade. Both stoves are to my design with a LOT of input from the builder. And 30 years ago I had some wooden cameras built to my design in Delhi. Having stuff made to your own design, or making it yourself, is where "hand made" can really come in useful.
Three or four years ago, on the other hand, I had a pair of boots made to measure (his standard design, no design input from me) and frankly I've had MANY better boots that did not claim to be so "artisanal": a 360€ mistake I won't make again. Even so, well-made boots probably do have a lot of hand work in them: proportionately, I'd guess as much as a Leica.
Cheers,
R.
....
Consider also a house. It keeps its occupants warm/cool, dry, and secure. It could be a prefab house, a cookie cutter subdivision house, or a largely hand crafted timber frame house. Is there a difference in inherent (non-commercial) value?
What do you think?
For some people, it doesn't matter how an object is made. They only consider its function... Take a knife for instance. If its cuts well, that's all that is important to some.
For others, how an object is made is also important. Given that it also cuts well, some people would place greater value on a hand made/forged knife.
Why is that? Is it mere artifice? Is it fetishism? There can be more than one reason, and different people will have different reasons. Are there any defendable reasons with merit?
...What do you think?
hand made prints…
anyone have a hand made camera?
For some people, it doesn't matter how an object is made. They only consider its function. Take a knife for instance. If its cuts well, that's all that is important to some.
For others, how an object is made is also important. Given that it also cuts well, some people would place greater value on a hand made/forged knife.
Why is that? Is it mere artifice? Is it fetishism? There can be more than one reason, and different people will have different reasons. Are there any defendable reasons with merit?
Consider also a house. It keeps its occupants warm/cool, dry, and secure. It could be a prefab house, a cookie cutter subdivision house, or a largely hand crafted timber frame house. Is there a difference in inherent (non-commercial) value?
What do you think?
Do you want something that everybody else has?





Vince that is a lovely table. I thought all handmade things were manufactured? The tools and the raw materials aren't what makes an object 'handmade' just that it is fashioned by human hand IMO.