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    <title>Peter Lloyd</title>
    <description>Diary and News updates from Peter Lloyd fine hard wood boxes.</description>
    <link>http://www.finehardwoodboxes.co.uk/</link>
    <language>en-gb</language>
    <managingEditor>peterlloyd@finehardwoodboxes.com (Peter Lloyd)</managingEditor>
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            <pubDate>Sat, 07 Aug 2010 0:00:00</pubDate>
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            <title>August 2010  Scarecrows in the village</title>
            <description>&nbsp;
Well,&nbsp; summer is now in full swing, the holidays are over and we are refreshed and ready to face what will probably be the Christmas rush fairly soon. Sorry to mention Christmas but it has to be faced and last year the rush did start in September. In fact we've already sold our first Christmas box!
The holidays have been great with a wonderful trip to France where we visited friends in the Ardeche which is full of trees which made Peter very happy. Mainly chestnut in mature forests and our friend Eveline was a wealth of knowledge about the flora and fauna - our walks with her were fascinating.&nbsp; She herself owns a small forest and was harvesting the wood and had made her barn roof from chestnut. It is a beautiful rich golden wood and looked stunning. She had her own stretch of river which we swam in and we did of course enjoy the local wine and some lovely food.
While in France we also spent a week in the Gers region, close to the Pyrenees with fellow boxmaker Andrew Crawford and his wife Hilary. They had the use of a very beautiful villa in exchange for some teaching. This brought about the idea of running a box making course there next year with Peter and Andrew as the tutors. The villa has a well equipped workshop and the accommodation is very comfortable. There is a pool, tennis court, croquet lawn and beautiful grounds to relax in during those non-box making moments! If you are at all interested in this course then please get in touch with either Peter or Andrew and they will give you the details.
So, back to reality and the box making world.&nbsp; Interesting commissions recently have included a box inlaid on the lid with semi precious stones which were sent by the owner, each one being significant to him and his wife in some way.
Peter has just finished a series of jewellery boxes some of them in the most amazing burr woods. The ring boxes continue to do really well and we have just had an order from a pirate stuntman in Las   Vegas who would like a HMS Victory ring box for his wedding. A pirate wedding of course.
In our village at the moment there are some very strange characters lurking including a pirate, coincidentally, a mole catcher, a mermaid and The Simpsons! It is our annual scarecrow festival which is great fun and I'll add a photo of our contribution which caused much hilarity as we assembled it in the rain last Saturday. Not sure we are going to win the prize for the best scarecrow but it is making people laugh which is all that matters!!
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            <pubDate>Fri, 11 Jun 2010 0:00:00</pubDate>
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            <title>June 2010</title>
            <description>&nbsp;
I'm beginning to think that there is more to box making than meets the eye. Recently we have had high powered meetings over endless cups of tea, deliveries in the middle of the night and rushed deliveries for boxes to be taken to the other side of the world.
First there was the saga of a large copper bolt from the Cutty Sark. An engineering firm in London who are undertaking the restoration of the Cutty Sark wanted to present the bolt to someone and needed a box to put it in... This person was flying out to Hong Kong in three days so could it be done "now"? "Of course" says Peter who seems to say yes to everything and then thinks about the consequences afterwards! The bolt was then rushed up the motorway by Carly who arrived here at one o' clock in the morning. I think we could have started some gossip in the village if anyone had seen her arrive at that time and hand over a brown paper package to Pete who then looked furtively up and down the road before closing the door.&nbsp; The next two days were spent frantically making the box from scratch but it did get off in time.
Then it was on to the next deadline which has to be completed in the next two days - perhaps it's because we live in a society that wants everything immediately but in the case of Pete's boxes so much time and thought go into them that it is hard to work it that way. I went into his workshop yesterday to find him staring at his bench deep in thought. There was large piece of paper on the bench covered in illegible scrawls, lines, maths, drawings and covered with an assortment of tools. It made no sense to me whatsoever but then I'm not a boxmaker.
I will stick to the less complicated life of my hens who had a happy time recently when Nelson the cockerel decided to go and live next door with another harem. He's back now though and they're a bit fed up as they can live very happily without his demands. The gossip in the village is that the peacock has been banished and will be leaving us soon for another more tolerant home. I think we'll miss him in an odd kind of way but he is very noisy.
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            <pubDate>Thu, 29 Apr 2010 0:00:00</pubDate>
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            <title>April  2010</title>
            <description>I don't think that Peter is ever going to be competing with Samual Pepys as his diary keeping is far from impressive. I think it all needs taking in hand and maybe I should try and keep up with it now.
I should introduce myself - I'm Chris, Peter's long suffering box widow wife who has recently taken the plunge, given up my day job and started working with Pete. The job description&nbsp; mainly involves keeping some semblance of order in the office, answering emails, making the tea, packing up boxes, making the tea, ordering supplies, making the tea - you get the idea. It's a varied role in that I sometimes make coffee....&nbsp; I work just in the mornings which allow me time to get out into the garden, try and grow some vegetables and chase the peacock that continues to terrorise my hens. In fact he's got a wife now and she comes and joins in and they both eat all the hen's food. Poor Nelson, the cockerel isn't able to stand up to them and hides in the hen house.
Anyway, back to boxes. It's surprising how interesting they can be and it never ceases to amaze me what a variety of uses they can be put to and what gets put into them! The people who buy them are universally nice and interested in the process and end up really loving the boxes. One man admitted last week that he keeps his cufflinks in his wife's jewellery box just so he can open it occasionally and give it a stroke!
We've agreed that I should get on with the office work and leave Peter undisturbed - he gets a bit cranky if I pop my head around the corner to ask a question so I'm really trying. So, if you do call and I say "he's in a meeting" you know why!
Meanwhile I will try and keep up with this diary and let you know what he's up to and hopefully it won't be two years until the next entry! </description>
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            <pubDate>Mon, 01 May 2006 0:00:00</pubDate>
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            <title>May 2006</title>
            <description>It&rsquo;s mid June already and I haven&rsquo;t added May yet! Where does the time go?
Why is it that when I&rsquo;m busy sanding boxes I&rsquo;m thinking to myself I must include that in my ramblings or &ndash; that&rsquo;s a useful little tip I could mention next time &ndash; and then when I&rsquo;m sitting in front of this computer my mind goes completely blank&hellip;&hellip;Senility maybe.
Back in May I had a visit from a couple who wanted me to make a jewellery box for their daughter&rsquo;s twenty first &ndash; which I was very happy to do. I showed them lots of different wood and they selected a piece of rather unusual burr sycamore. They took a photo of the raw wood and the deal was struck. I decided to make it along with a number of other boxes in some of the last pieces of rather spectacular burr oak I&rsquo;ve been using and finally finished the batch just before heading off to Andover for the Project Workshops show. Which was quite a successful show. I sold several boxes and some good crack with some of the other exhibitors.
After the show I diverted to Norwich to get some more Victory oak which I needed a large piece offor a stationery box I&rsquo;ve been commissioned to make. A long days driving but I made it back home some time around midnight still mostly awake.
The following day I had to catch up on the emails . There was one from somebody wanting to know where their birthday present was. They had a daughter who was 21 but no present. I had a horrible sick feeling in my stomach. They wanted the burr sycamore box. And I&rsquo;d sold it! I just don&rsquo;t know what I was thinking of. Why did I even take it? I&rsquo;d sold it! How could I be that stupid? What could I say? They&rsquo;d photographed the wood. I just had to come clean and confess. Fortunately I&rsquo;ve got some more of the sycamore but I still feel horribly bad about it.
To add insult to injury when I came to put the card details of the people I&rsquo;d sold boxes to at the show one of the cards was rejected because I&rsquo;d forgotten to ask for the security number on the back the card and I&rsquo;ve had no response at all to the letters I&rsquo;ve sent to the buyer. I&rsquo;m sure I&rsquo;ll get my money eventually but I am a bit miffed!
I got a call a couple of weeks back from somebody who wanted a ring box. Which is something I have never made. in fact I&rsquo;ve tried half a dozen times or more to make a small box - some that I can sell at a craft fair for &pound;40 or so and there&rsquo;s a shelf above me that&rsquo;s full of small boxes that I&rsquo;m just not happy with. So my inclination was to say no. in fact I think I did say no but then I said yes. She was so nice. I just couldn&rsquo;t refuse. So I dreamt up a design and spent several days experimenting and playing with ideas and I have to say I quite liked the result. The only slight snag was that when I showed it to my wife she hated it. Normally she loves what I make - well she usually says it&rsquo;s quite nice but she really didn&rsquo;t like my ring box. I was totally deflated. I had another lined up ready to make. I&rsquo;d cracked the problems, overcome the difficulties, all I had to do was chose the woods. Well it was made so I emailed a photo to the lady who&rsquo;d persuaded me to make it. And she loved it. It was fantastic! Just perfect! I think there are two morals to that tale: believe in yourself &ndash; which is easier said than done - and it&rsquo;s far better to have loving and hating than indifference. </description>
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            <pubDate>Thu, 01 Jun 2006 0:00:00</pubDate>
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            <title>June 2006</title>
            <description>Oh dear, I knew this would happen. I&rsquo;m falling behind. I started out the year full of good intentions too. I must try to catch up with myself.
June was spent frantically getting things finished for Art in Action. I absolutely had to finish &lsquo;twins&rsquo; which was a box very similar to the &lsquo;skeleton&rsquo; box featured in Making Heirloom Boxes but instead of one tower of drawers this one had two interconnecting towers. I&rsquo;ll put up a photo of it soon. I had actually promised this piece for last years Art in Action but I didn&rsquo;t get it finished in time so I felt I really couldn&rsquo;t give them a load of excuses this time. And then there were boxes to sell. I had about ten desk boxes, six &lsquo;back hinge&rsquo; jewellery boxes and three ring boxes all on the bench at the same time &ndash; oh, and a couple of commissioned boxes too. Why didn&rsquo;t I just work on one, or at least one group at a time? Partly I think because I believed that I had to have desk boxes there and I had to have the jewellery boxes finished, but partly too because I think I work best under pressure. There&rsquo;s far more chance of my staying up late at night if there&rsquo;s a risk of not having enough boxes to take and a chance of another ten! So I work on a big group and try to fool myself into thinking that this time I will be able to squeeze the full quart into the pint space.
"Twins"
I didn&rsquo;t succeed of course. Two days before the show and I hadn&rsquo;t even finished &lsquo;twins&rsquo; never mind the ten desk boxes! &lsquo;Twins&rsquo; proved a very tricky box. It was more like an exercise in cross halving joints than a box! But it did get finished. And for the rest I managed two desk boxes and two jewellery boxes. </description>
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            <pubDate>Sat, 01 Jul 2006 0:00:00</pubDate>
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            <title>July 2006</title>
            <description>And of course I didn&rsquo;t need to panic at all because I didn&rsquo;t sell nearly as many as last year so I had plenty of boxes! I wonder why it wasn&rsquo;t such a good show sales-wise as last year. Maybe it was me. I know I started off in a bad mood. On the way down to Oxford I scraped the hired van across an innocuous looking yew bush. Unbeknown to me there were some very solid branches concealed under the wispy fronds and the side of the van got seriously caved in. &pound;500.00 excess was lost in an instant. I was a bit cross. Who knows, maybe that affected the whole of the rest of the show. It was certainly good to be there though. The standard was as high as ever and, as always happens left me feeling very humble. So if you missed Art in Action this year &ndash; make sure you get there next year!
Good news! Well good news for all those hundreds of woodworkers out there who have asked me where I bought my miniature sash cramps. I&rsquo;ve been replying for years now that they&rsquo;re no longer made. I&rsquo;ve just found them again! They&rsquo;re in the new Axminster Power Tool catalogue &ndash; www.axminster.co.uk - They&rsquo;re called Japanese Hatakane brass bar clamps and for a mere &pound;8.45 for a pair of 300mm I think they&rsquo;re great!
Not only did I manage to spend (or throw away) a large amount of money on the way down to Art in Action but I spent nearly &pound;800 on the way back as well. I&rsquo;m beginning to understand why I don&rsquo;t make any money&hellip;&hellip; I was offered some wood. Some ripple sycamore at quite an attractive price. Mainly I think because it wasn&rsquo;t pure white. It was a bit streaky with yellow bits in it. But I like it like that. So I bought it, and of course while I was there I saw some very attractive tiger oak and some rather nice brown oak. In fact they were both from the same tree &ndash; the tiger oak was from higher up. Caused by beef steak fungus so far as I know. So I bought some of that too. The only slight snag is I&rsquo;ve nowhere to put it&hellip; </description>
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            <pubDate>Wed, 30 Aug 2006 0:00:00</pubDate>
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            <title>August 2006</title>
            <description>I have neglected my ramblings for far too long. Again.....
As I write I&rsquo;m perched on a stool behind a display of my boxes. I&rsquo;m in the courtyard of Somerset House in the heart of London. Inside a purpose built pavilion which is the new home of the Chelsea Crafts Fair &ndash; now called Origin, the public are wandering by. Some pausing, some passing compliments and one or two actually getting out their cheque (or check if you&rsquo;re reading this in America) books. Though today I have to say there have been very few of these cheque book moments. And I&rsquo;m a bit bored. Quite a lot bored really, the gaps between the cheque book moments are too long and I&rsquo;m just not very good at smooching the visitors. I&rsquo;m not very good at small talk, somebody has just told me &ldquo;your boxes are beautiful and clever&rdquo; &ndash; all I could think to say was &ldquo;thank you very much&rdquo; &ndash; doesn&rsquo;t really move the conversation along does it&hellip;.In fact there&rsquo;s somebody right now and I&rsquo;m sure she&rsquo;s trying to decide between one box and another but she doesn&rsquo;t want to catch my eye so I don&rsquo;t feel I should intrude. My attitude is that I&rsquo;m here if she wants to talk or ask questions but if she doesn&rsquo;t then that&rsquo;s fine too. So right now I&rsquo;m trying to look busy writing this and blending into the wall.
And now it&rsquo;s tomorrow &ndash; or today depending on how you look at it. And not only did the lady yesterday make up her mind and buy a box but I sold another a few minutes later. So today I really must be more positive. I&rsquo;m sure somehow that sitting behind my work with positive and optimistic thoughts makes people much more likely to buy boxes. Although quite why what goes on deep in my own brain should affect anything or anybody I&rsquo;m not sure. Perhaps it&rsquo;s all to do with aura. Maybe we&rsquo;re all constantly sending and receiving signals on wave lengths we don&rsquo;t even know exist. I&rsquo;d better stop there I think.
So what else has been happening since I last hammered away on the keyboard &ndash; I wish I could hammer away. I&rsquo;ve never mastered touch typing and really wish I could &ndash; but that&rsquo;s another story.
I have a moral problem. A lady approached me after church and said &ndash; you make boxes don&rsquo;t you. I want a box for a Christmas present for a friend of mine whose dog has died so would you make one for me, and perhaps put the dog's name on it too? The trouble is I&rsquo;m absolutely certain she expects to pay about a quarter of the price of my cheapest box. Making something by hand to standards I aim for takes time, and time in the western world in which I live is expensive stuff. So do I knock her out a poor quality box as fast as I can and charge the sort of money she expects. &ndash; I don&rsquo;t really want to do that because that puts something that&rsquo;s not very good out there with my name on it. Or do I give her a realistic price which I think she would find horribly expensive. Or do I just treat it as a favour and make her something for what she can afford (or for nothing) and risk other people asking for the same? Surely I can&rsquo;t means test my customers and charge what they can afford? At the time I was a coward and told her I&rsquo;d have to think about it.
Slipping back into the present for the moment. It does annoy me when a group of friends meet in the isles of one of these shows and then settle down and stand with their backs to my stand and have a long and involved conversation effectively blocking my entire display. Gripe gripe moan moan. What happened to positive? Time for a cup of tea I think.
Somebody&rsquo;s just stopped by who bought a box from me in 1994! And they&rsquo;re still enjoying it and using it. I like hearing from them (the boxes that is); it&rsquo;s as if they send me the odd Christmas card to let me know they&rsquo;re well and happy&hellip;&hellip;&hellip;</description>
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            <pubDate>Fri, 01 Dec 2006 0:00:00</pubDate>
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            <title>December 2006</title>
            <description>I know, I know, you're wondering what happened to September, October and November! Well nobody's perfect! I actually think I&rsquo;ve done well managing to write something for 9 months. I&rsquo;ll try and do better in 2007 &ndash; honest&hellip;
As 2006 draws to a close I suppose it&rsquo;s time for reflection and looking back on 2006 but I have to admit that I&rsquo;m far more interested in looking forward to 2007 rather than back to 2006.
I&rsquo;ve been working this last week on a brand new box. Earlier in the year I was asked to make a ring box and a little reluctantly agreed. I liked the result but didn&rsquo;t really develop the idea sufficiently so as to be able to make them in small batches. The idea of a little ring box though has totally refused to go away and in this funny little period between Christmas and New Year I&rsquo;ve been working on a new design. It never ceases to amaze me how long it takes to work out a new design, but I&rsquo;m getting there. So hopefully before too long I&rsquo;ll have a new page on this web site (provided I can persuade my son to do it for me) dedicated to ring boxes. In fact I&rsquo;d really like him to make me a Victory box page and a personalise-your-box page. The trouble is he&rsquo;s in his final year of his degree course so the pressure is on. We shall see.
I&rsquo;ve also got several boxes that have been commissioned for rather a long time so I really must get those done.
I must go. We&rsquo;ve visitors coming and we&rsquo;re off tomorrow night to see in the New Year in Allendale in Northumberland where traditionally the men of the village run around the village square with flaming barrels of tar balanced on their heads before tipping them onto a huge bonfire&hellip; It&rsquo;s all true! I might even put a photo up if I manage to take any good ones.</description>
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            <pubDate>Mon, 01 Jan 2007 0:00:00</pubDate>
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            <title>January 2007</title>
            <description>I think that January is a month that can be divided into three halves &ndash; well, you know what I mean.
Right at the beginning of the month &ndash; in fact I think it was in that dead time between Christmas and new year, I started work on a ring box. For years now I&rsquo;ve had it in my head to develop a little box. But because people, not unreasonably, expect something smaller to be cheaper, it had to be something I could make reasonably quickly. It couldn&rsquo;t be a smaller version of a box that I normally make because with the same number of joints it would take the same amount of time. Over the years I&rsquo;ve made probably over a dozen different prototypes but I wasn&rsquo;t happy with any of them. They just didn&rsquo;t have that special quality that I was looking for. I&rsquo;ve got a shelf full of them. Then around the middle of last year I was asked to make a ring box and the whole small box thing surfaced again. I made the customer her ring box and she was delighted with it but it wasn&rsquo;t very repeatable. This time I was determined to come up with a design that both looked &lsquo;special&rsquo; and was makeable1 Which was how I spent the first half of January 2007. I&rsquo;m still not quite there but I&rsquo;m a lot closer and this box definitely won&rsquo;t end up on the failed prototype shelf.
The next half of January was spent in classic New Year mode. In other words I was sorting out and tidying up. That wasn&rsquo;t my plan for the middle of January at all but somebody wanted a box in ash and I didn&rsquo;t have any ash. So I trundled off to get some. The only trouble is that once I&rsquo;m at the timber yard wandering around all that wood I&rsquo;m like a child in a sweet shop. I want it all. So naturally I bought too much ash. I also bought some sycamore which I&rsquo;d need for my ring boxes and I bought too much of that as well. And I couldn&rsquo;t resist bringing back some walnut that looked interesting. So it was all piled into my long suffering and abused Volvo and hauled back to the workshop. But where on earth could I put it all? It couldn&rsquo;t stay on the floor so somehow space on the shelves had to be made. So I spent the next week in a total muddle (I hate a muddled workshop) trying to squeeze the proverbial quart into a pint space. Which I did &ndash; eventually. Mostly by sawing wood up into box sized bits and carefully labelling and stacking them.
The last half of the month was spent finishing a group of boxes that were on the bench, and had been since before Christmas, so as to completely clear the decks.
Now, finally I must start work on three commissioned boxes that I&rsquo;ve been putting off for over a year now. I&rsquo;m not even really sure why I&rsquo;ve been putting them off &ndash; apart from the fact that other boxes come along that are more urgent &ndash; but I think it&rsquo;s more than the squeaky wheel getting oiled; I think there&rsquo;s something on each of these boxes that I&rsquo;m a bit frightened of. One of them for example has to have hidden catches, or secret catches. Another is an unusually large box and the third is from HMS Victory oak which is not the easiest wood to make into a box by a huge margin. In fact it&rsquo;s a pig! But I&rsquo;ve accepted the commission so I&rsquo;ve got to get on with it!
Well its February 3rd today so if I upload this now I guess I&rsquo;ll have done pretty well&hellip;.But it&rsquo;s always like that at the start of the year. However the sun is shining and it&rsquo;s going to be one of those rare winter days that are clear, sunny, light winds and hopefully not too cold. So I&rsquo;m off to the Lake District to do some paragliding. See you in a month!</description>
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            <pubDate>Sun, 01 Jul 2007 0:00:00</pubDate>
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            <title>July 2007</title>
            <description>&ldquo;See you in a month&rdquo; was how I ended in February. It&rsquo;s now July&hellip;.. oh well, nobody&rsquo;s perfect. I know that&rsquo;s always my excuse but it&rsquo;s true!
So what&rsquo;s been happening in the world of boxes in the last few months. Well, just to bring you up to date with the three boxes I mentioned previously. Two of them are now made and delivered and the third is cut up and ready to go. The only slight snag is that there are now four more commissioned boxes that are pestering for my attention.
In February I had a student working here for a week. I think I&rsquo;m fairly protective of my space. I like being in my workshop alone. I talk back to the radio, I talk to myself and that&rsquo;s the way I like it even though I sometimes grumble that it gets a bit lonely. Isn&rsquo;t everybody a paradox? However I got an email from an American student who was studying in Sweden and she wanted to come and make boxes for a week. Well even if it was a total disaster it was only a week so I said yes. And it was a success! Her skills and experience were fairly limited so I decided we&rsquo;d spend the week concentrating on one type of box. We had a pretty intense week starting at eight in the morning and not finishing most days until after ten but we did take an afternoon off to go paragliding and we even managed to fit in a trip to Hadrians wall.</description>
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