Visit
the web site of Refined Edge
Furniture Design, and you’ll see some beautifully
handcrafted furniture. Mosey on over to
White Mountain Design, and you are likely to get a strange
feeling of déjà vu as you peer at lovely handmade boxes and hand
planes. There’s good reason for that. Both open a door to the
craft and passion of one man, Canadian woodworker Norman Pirollo.
Why two different web sites?
“I began White Mountain in 1996,” explained Norman, “and latched
onto making jewelry boxes. There was a demand locally, but the
clientele did not want to pay what it cost to make them. When
the Internet came along, I developed a web site and began to get
orders for boxes. I love making them, but was uncomfortable with
stores charging a 100 percent markup, which is typical for
stores.
“At the time, I thought people would be loath to buy from a
one-man operation, so I tried to make White Mountain look like a
larger company and not an individual maker. Sales were good, and
I developed a product line which offered scalable designs,
allowing me to customize the proportions of any of my box
designs.
“About
five years later, I started to get tired of making boxes, and
sales to the U.S., my largest market, started dropping as the
exchange rate of Canadian dollars weakened. I decided I would
prefer making unique custom furniture pieces, and felt that the
best approach was to make a clean cut and start over with a new
company name and a new web site devoted entirely to custom-made
furniture. I still make jewelry boxes and sell them, but keep
the two web sites separate.”
While his woodworking businesses did not come along until the
mid-90s, Pirollo’s propensity for working with his hands started
early. “My father, who had variously worked as a steam fitter
and shoemaker before becoming an entrepreneur, had a basement
workshop where he made both metal and wood objects,” he
recounted. “I worked with him a lot, and that was where I got my
earliest woodworking training.
“During
my college years, I studied electronic technology and computer
science, and worked for a series of firms as a hardware
technician and software engineer. In 1986, I had some time and
wanted to take an evening course at a local college; one
preferably not in my field. People said my hobby should not be
my work. The course was on hand tools, making a dovetailed plant
stand. It was a Saturday class, and I found myself unable to
wait for the week to pass until I could get back to it. That was
what made me realize that woodworking should be my vocation, and
not merely an avocation.
“That happened to be the first class in a diploma program in
cabinetmaking, so I decided to continue and got my diploma in
1993. In 1995, I joined a couple of area craft guilds and
entered a few jewelry boxes in a couple of juried shows, but did
not get in. That was an eye-opener to me, as I thought I was
making a nice product. I crawled back to my shop and started to
improve, redesigning the boxes, joinery, and, mostly, improving
the finishing. The result was that my boxes improved vastly, and
the juried shows started accepting everything I presented.”
“Meanwhile, I set up the White Mountain web site in 1996 as an
online business card. I was still trying to cater to the local
market, but much to my shock, I started getting calls from all
over the U.S. and Europe. I still had a full-time job, and I
worked alone, as I still do, and decided that working solely
through the Internet
was much more feasible. I expanded my product line, but as
demand grew, I had to start turning away orders. I was making
about 50 or 60 boxes a year, and unfortunately, most sales were
seasonal. By 2001, I realized I could either just make jewelry
boxes and become very efficient at it, or follow a different
path. The thought of assembly line pieces did not appeal to me
at all, so I looked further.
“About
that time, a former [James] Krenov student founded a school in
this area. Called the Rosewood Studio, it is based on Krenov’s
design philosophy. I took several courses there and concluded
that this was the type of woodworking I wanted to be doing.
There I started learning to make smooth surfaces with planes
instead of sandpaper. Prior to that, I had been working
primarily with power tools. The school experience convinced me
that working with hand tools was a better way to go. The air was
cleaner, there was less dust, and it was simply a more
satisfying way to work. These days I use power tools for wood
prep, but most everything after that is done with hand tools.
“Last year I set up Refined Edge, a web site devoted to custom
studio furniture, and just as before, the orders followed. We
had a furniture conference at Rosewood Studio last year with a
juried show for former students. I presented a beech cabinet,
which was the very first piece of my Refined Edge company. The
response I got from a wide range of well-known guest speakers
boosted my morale, and convinced me that this was what I should
be doing. At the moment, I still spend one quarter of my time
working for the software industry and the rest doing
woodworking. I still make a few jewelry boxes, mostly for the
Christmas season, but my main focus, as far as woodworking is
concerned, is furniture.”
Not
content to simply learn from others, Norman decided he should
pass it on by teaching. “In 1998 I created a modular woodworking
course on CD-ROM,” Norman told me. “It is essentially an
interactive book on CD covering everything from lumber selection
and safety to joinery and finishing. At the end of every module
there is an interactive question and answer session to reinforce
what you have learned. I advertise it in a few woodworking
magazines, and have sold thousands of copies over the years.”
He also has posted a few articles on his White Mountain web site
and on the WoodCentral article archive, including one on
shooting boards, and one outlining his clever
downdraft table cum shop air filter that doubles as a table
saw extension. But perhaps even more valuable than his articles
is this succinct bit of advice that he offered. After all, it is
a wise teacher who follows his own council.
“If you are tired of your day job,” Pirollo advises, “do what I
did. Pursue your passion instead.” |