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Traditional Japanese Wooden Boat Building Kit - DIY Handcrafted Wooden Ship Model for Adults & Teens - Perfect for Home Decor, Gifts & Relaxation
Traditional Japanese Wooden Boat Building Kit - DIY Handcrafted Wooden Ship Model for Adults & Teens - Perfect for Home Decor, Gifts & Relaxation

Traditional Japanese Wooden Boat Building Kit - DIY Handcrafted Wooden Ship Model for Adults & Teens - Perfect for Home Decor, Gifts & Relaxation

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Description

• Introduces significant aspects of traditional Japanese boatbuildingdesign, workshop and tools, wood and materials • Introduces joinery and fastenings, propulsion, ceremonies, and the apprenticeship system• The only available English-language documentation of these traditional boats and the few craftspeople left able to build themWith Japan’s unprecedented modernization in the last century, the demand for traditional boats (wasen) faded, leaving the last generation of boatbuilders with no one to teach. This is the story of the author’s apprenticeships with five Japanese masters to build their unique and endangered traditional watercraft. Brooks was the sole apprentice for each craftsman, and worked under a time-honored system in which apprentices first swept floors and sharpened tools, learning chiefly by observation with only limited direct instruction. The resulting book is part ethnography, part instruction, and part the personal story of a wooden boatbuilder fueled by a passion to preserve a craft tradition on the brink of extinction. It fills a large and long-standing gap in the literature on Japanese crafts, and will be of interest to boatbuilders, woodworkers, and all those impressed with the marvels of Japanese design and workmanship.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
A Sherpa friend told me, “there are two countries an American should travel to: India and Japan.”Yes, an expensive book... but, exceptionally well constructed, beaurltiful photography, top quality paper and a rarely seen durable dust jacket.Like quality tools, worth the investment.Although I’ve built a few wooden boats, I don’t have a deep interest in Japanese boats, in particular.The apprenticeship element of the book was what drove me to press buy. I have facilitated adventures in a high school for 25+ years, as a side job.This year has been a challenging one, with students consistently refusing to gain deeper insight through their own studies. We cancelled a month long trip to Lake Powell because I would not be able to lecture them through a difficult situation.Douglas Brooks description of having apprenticed and mentored others, in a shrinking industry (wooden boatbuilding) has given me a fresh perspective of another way to pass on what we have learned, so the next generation can go farther than we could.This book is a striking success, from every perspective. Well written, illustrated and produced. The Japanese approach to boatbuilding and passing on knowledge has me looking at how I do things from new directions, which is what the goal of travel should be.