[Northkeep] Metal and Glass Workers' Symposium
Niewoehner, Hugh
Hugh.Niewoehner at flightsafety.com
Wed Feb 17 14:18:35 PST 2010
Keep an eye of this. If you are a metal or glass worker (or want to be) this could be fun. Being a long weekend you can do start to finish projects.
Damon
Yeah-yeah-yeah. Different kingdom but knowledge about cool stuff is knowledge about cool stuff regardless of kingdom.
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Good Masters, Journeymen, Apprentices, Craftsmen, Guild members and Artisans:
The time is upon us once again to recruit teachers for the 2010 Metal and Glass Workers' Symposium!
We need you -- yes, you! -- to consider teaching what you know about the medieval arts of metal and glass.
Event at a glance:
Date: 3-6 September, 2010 (Labor Day)
Site: Warrenton, MO (West of St. Louis near Missouri wine country)
Facilities: Primitive site; port-o-johns and hot showers will be available. Electricity available for limited classes.
In 2008, we had 26 classes and 3 demos, run by 15 teachers. I have every confidence that we can do even better.
Right now I have only five confirmed teachers. We will once again have knife-making, repousse, and glass beads; and we've added classes in pin making and wire drawing. I know that's not all that Calontir has to teach!
Laurels, if you have Apprentices who could use a chance to teach what they know, this is the perfect venue. And you just might find an eager class of students waiting for you, too.
Some special notes this year:
This year we're dedicating the event to Theophilus, _On Divers Arts_. This is one of the finest medieval treatises on medieval glass and metalworking. If you want to develop a new class completely from scratch, this book is a great place to start. There's plenty of time yet to experiment and learn before you teach.
We love hands-on classes where students can complete a project they can take home with them. This was the style in 2008 and it was a rousing success. Please consider this style of class if at all possible.
We have also added a dedicated "Techniques Track" for short classes on general techniques. These won't usually lead to a complete project, but they teach wonderful skills you can use in many projects down the line. If you have something you can teach here, we'd love to have you.
A Teacher's Infosheet is available at
http://students.cec.wustl.edu/~mlw2/infosheet.pdf
If you are interested in teaching, please contact HL Francis Bean (mlw2 at wustl.edu<mailto:mlw2 at wustl.edu>).
-Francis Bean
-Event Steward
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