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Price: $24.95 

Availability: In Stock
Page Count: 192
Size: 8.5" X 11" inches
Type: Soft Cover
ISBN: 978-1-56523-307-2
Product Code: 3077

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Celebrating Birch 
The Lore, Art and Craft of an Ancient Tree
By North House Folk School

How much do you really know about the wood you craft with?

If you're a woodworker, crafter, or artist who works with wood, this stunning new book from the North House Folk School, will fascinate, inform, and inspire you. In celebrating its 10th anniversary, the well-known woodworking and craft school in northern MN decided to salute the birch - also known as the "Mother Tree" because it's been vital to the survival of northern civilizations for centuries.

So, in addition to 20 beautiful and practical projects you can create - such as a turned wooden bowl, a carved box, and woven basket, to name a few - you will discover the rich history, the fascinating cultural myths, and the significant ecological status of this beautiful and legendary tree. In fact, after reading Celebrating Birch, you'll discover that the birch is more than just a tree or a raw material; it's a link to the past that enriches the life, heart, and mind of anyone who works with it.

Reviewer: Andrea Hargreaves, Router & Power Woodworking Magazine, Furniture & Cabinetmaki
Date: 4/1/2008
Subtitled "The Lore, Art, and Craft of an Ancient Tree" and compiled by a not-for-profit organization called the North House Folk School, this book sets out to demonstrate how former cultures relied on birch forrests for more or less everything, and then shows us how we can, through craft, still honour this tree.

North House is a woodworking and boat building school on the shores of Lake Superior, Minnesota, and is run by the man behind the book, Greg Wright, on the lines of the Norwegian folk schools.

Birch bark was formed into a tar used for lining and repairing pots, was woven to make shoes and was used for writing on. Finely ground bark was added to flour to stretch out the supply, and taxes could be paid with it. Oh, and its sap was an ingredient of root beer.

All of this research makes a fascinating backdrop to utilising the timbe for making items ranging from skis to more mundane bowls, and most of the book is devoted to various members of the folk school demonstrating traditional crafts using birch.

If you want to know how to weave a mat, carve a spoon, or make the components for a game involving throwing logs, plus several more, this book is for you, and if you delight in beautifully illustrated volumes, and have a love of heritage, you'll want to read it by a glowing fireside.
Reviewer: Jay Anderson, Cook County Herald
Date: 9/28/2007
So much here is written and photographed, displayed and exampled, the reader feels completely versed in everything there is to know about birch — not botanically as much as pragmatically.
Reviewer: Barb Siddiqui, WoodCentral Klingspor's Woodworking Shop
Date: 5/22/2008
Excellent photography and clear photos of procedures make up this wonderful tribute to traditional craft.
Reviewer: Candace Renalls, Duluth News Tribune
Date: 10/27/2007
The book shows, in step-by-step fashion, how to make 20 traditional crafts, including those with roots in Scandinavia. It's the first book printed in English to do so, Pollock noted.
Reviewer: Cindy Miles, The Texas Carver Newsletter of The Texas Woodcarvers Guide
Date: 3/31/2008
After teaching traditional hand crafts for a decade, Minnesota's North House Folk School commemorates their tenth anniversary with a celebration book, "Celebrating Birch" in honor of the natural resource that has sustained northern culture throughout history - the birch tree. The birch tree was an essential resource, as was all landscape, for centuries. Birch bark, wood and sap were invaluable assets central to everyday life. Traditional crafts preserve that bond and are a link to our common past.

North House Folk School instructors guide readers through fifteen handsome craft projects, including carved ornaments, turned wooden bowls, folded bark baskets, and more. Years ago birch was used to weave shoes, clothing and even primitive roof shingles and was thought to have protective and medicinal qualities. Many of these crafts are a union of our past and present through the preservation of skills handed down through the ages.

The North House Folk School, located on Lake Superior in Grand Marais, MN, is made up of master craftsman who facilitate courses in woodworking, woodcarving, basketry, timber framing, boatbuilding and more. Their goal is to preserve traditional crafts of the past by teaching their practical use in today's modern world.

This book is 192 pages beautifully designed with full-color photography throughout. The reader would learn a great deal about how to use different parts of the tree, such as using sap to make glue, soap, or beverages. Also, the reader will read about how to harvest birch and about the tree's biology and ecology.
Reviewer: Konnie LeMay, Lake Superior Magazine
Date: 1/28/2008
The projects, beautifully and clearly illustrated with photos, are ones that students of the folk school would tackle and range from the simple and small to the more complex.
Reviewer: Jennifer Hicks, Woodshop News
Date: 1/1/2008
Celebrating Birch: The Lore, Art, and Craft of an Ancient Tree, by instructors at the North House Folk School in Grand Marais, Minn., was written to "honor a tree that has been significant to the well-being of civilizations in the Northern Hemisphere since the last ice age." It guides readers through 15 craft projects including carved ornaments, turned wooden bowls and folded bark baskets. It also explains that birch was used to weave shoes, clothing and even make primitive roof shingles. Other topics of discussion include the tree's biology and ecology, how to harvest birch, and how to use different parts of the tree, such as using sap to make glue, soap and beverages.
Reviewer: Barb Siddiqui, Book Central Book Review
Date: 5/22/2008
This book was created to celebrate ten years of instruction at the North House Folk School in the village of Grand Marais, Minnesota, on the north shore of Lake Superior. The non-profit was formed by "spontaneous combustion" according to its editorial board, and what began as a single kayak building class is now 249 classes, 91 instructors, and over 1200 students from 33 states and five countries over the course of one year. Word really got around.
Celebrating Birch covers everything from "Birch Splittin Bitter, Icicle Lickin Sweet Root Beer", recipe included, to woven bark baskets, birch tar, spoons, carved bowls, turned bowls, throwing logs and carved toys. There are instructions on harvesting the tree: the leaves for medicinal tea, the sap for a sweetener, the roots and bark, even fungi to be used as food and medicine. A lesson on the botany of the tree is a thorough lesson in hardwood anatomy as well as facts specifically on birch.
Lore and Legends is an entertaining chapter telling the worldwide traditions and symbols of the birch tree, bringing together history and myth to describe the significance of this widely dispersed species in many cultures.
Excellent photography and clear photos of procedures make up this wonderful tribute to traditional craft. School founder Mark Hansen says, "This is about doing, making things happen, and finishing something. There's a healing that happens when you work with your hands. It's not about efficiency; it's not about proficiency. It's about learning to be a human being with all your senses." Up in the far north woods, it sounds like sombody is getting it right.
Reviewer: Troy Griepentrog, Mother Earth News
Date: 10/26/2007
The step-by-step photos will guide you through each project. In addition to the beautiful photography throughout the book, the 'Lore and Legends” and 'Biology and Ecology” sections make this book a perfect option to leave on your coffee table, too.
Reviewer: Candace Renells, Duluth New Tribune
Date: 10/27/2007
As long as the living layer under the outer bark isn't destroyed, the tree isn't damaged, Mayo explained, and the bark will grow back. He noted that harvesting birch bark in state and national forests is illegal. North House Folk School gets its birch bark by asking the U.S. Forest Service about who is cutting birch for lumber or pulp and wouldn't need the bark, Mayo said.
Reviewer: Joan Farnum, Cook County News-Herald
Date: 9/21/2007
There are step-by-step instructions on how to create 20 different practical objects from birch, including a woven bark basket, carved box, and turned wooden bowl.
Reviewer: WoodCentral.com
Date: 5/8/2008
This book was created to celebrate ten years of instruction at the North House Folk School in the village of Grand Marais, Minnesota, on the north shore of Lake Superior. The non-profit was formed by "spontaneous combustion" according to its editorial board, and what began as a single kayak building class is now 249 classes, 91 instructors, and over 1200 students from 33 states and five countries over the course of one year. Word really got around.
Celebrating Birch covers everything from "Birch Splittin Bitter, Icicle Lickin Sweet Root Beer", recipe included, to woven bark baskets, birch tar, spoons, carved bowls, turned bowls, throwing logs and carved toys. There are instructions on harvesting the tree: the leaves for medicinal tea, the sap for a sweetener, the roots and bark, even fungi to be used as food and medicine. A lesson on the botany of the tree is a thorough lesson in hardwood anatomy as well as facts specifically on birch.
Lore and Legends is an entertaining chapter telling the worldwide traditions and symbols of the birch tree, bringing together history and myth to describe the significance of this widely dispersed species in many cultures.
Excellent photography and clear photos of procedures make up this wonderful tribute to traditional craft. School founder Mark Hansen says, "This is about doing, making things happen, and finishing something. There's a healing that happens when you work with your hands. It's not about efficiency; it's not about proficiency. It's about learning to be a human being with all your senses." Up in the far north woods, it sounds like sombody is getting it right.

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