The West Sussex Woodturners, were delighted when Julia Edge and her husband Will accepted the invitation to present their club’s awards and judge the annual presentation evening’s competition. At the event club members enter an array of turned pieces to win the coveted prize. Judging wood turning skills does not usually fall under the day to day remit for Amberley Museum and Heritage Centre’s curator, but Julia was soon put as ease when it was explained that she was not judging perfect turning skills, but choosing items that she would like to see in her home. The West Sussex Woodturners run a quarterly club competition that challenges members to use different turning skills to create specific items. The points awarded for these pieces are tallied to produce the yearly club winners. They are recognised and presented with engraved cups or shields at the awards dinner in Sullington Parish Hall. Having enjoyed a sumptuous meal, Julia and Will took their time to view and inspect the varied items entered into the competition. With no specific brief other than to display an item you would like to see in your home, the entries ranged from the unusual, to functional, to fun and elegant with a castle, vases, bowls, a skittles game and many more stunning pieces to choose from. The decision to choose a favourite was not easy. Julia said: “The quality and beauty of the work is outstanding. It is so very difficult to judge as I would choose everything to have in my home.” Not surprisingly Julia and Will chose different items, but the three final choices were made by Julia, with third prize going to the Stetson crafted by Dave Newson, the second to a wafer thin tea cup and saucer by John Woolgar and first to a stunning birch bowl by Colin Willetts.


Fowler sources all his wood from Knoxville and surrounding communities. He is able to collect wood that is destined to be waste or firewood and turn it into something beautiful.
Beccles-based woodturner Andy Coates took it in his stride when Channel 4 asked him to make a scold’s chair in order to duck Professor Alice Roberts in the River Wensum.
Also known as a scolding stool or stool of repentance, the wooden chair was used in England as a form of public humiliation and often involved the accused being paraded through the town before they were tied into the chair and then lowered into water.
Andy said that he had just under a fortnight to construct the torture device which programme makers had hoped would be used at the original site for ducking – at Fye Bridge in Norwich – but which had to be used down-river at a more suitable site.
It started out as a hobby just over 10 years ago, and now Darren Breeze has used his woodturning talents to open his own shop in Lowestoft.
“With a lathe you can go into the workshop and spend half an hour making a pen and an hour making a bowl and have something to show for it when you come out. It was very therapeutic for me,” he said.
Ely mayor Richard Hobbs arrived in all his civic finery – only to discard them moments later to take up the ‘hands on’ challenge of a group of woodturners.
Those tempted to buy must wait for the summer exhibition at an art in wood event at the cathedral centre in Ely where their work is showcased each year.
The annual Hands-On Woodturning symposium will be held this weekend at the Career Academy, 1200 College Drive on the Bismarck State College campus.
Lewinshtein said the club’s aim was to make 150 stands as part of the Canada 150 celebrations last year, although the project continued into 2018 due to personal commitments. Even so, they surpassed their goal with 177 stands made.
Gift of giving