Tuesday, April 17, 2018

How it's made: wooden utensils

This video shows flatware, not cooking spoon or salad spoons and forks.



After all that I was surprised, dismayed, how inexpensive these things are on Amazon.

Must be made by slaves in China. Or else robots. 

On the other hand, there is a fairly wide range, and that difference in cost suggests a difference in materials and production. 

4 comments:

AllenS said...

Probably even worse than that... slave robots.

The Dude said...

I started watching the video and started looking for clues. First clue - the wood is maple, then the announcer guy says "Maple is dense so it doesn't develop cracks" -- right there I knew dude was not a wood technologist. But maple is popular in North America, while in Europe beech might be the wood of choice for such a product.

Next clue was the King brand table saw - looks like they are in the Commonwealth somewhere. The worker is wearing all of his clothes - many layers and a toque or toboggan, what I would call a knit hat. Guy looks to be of European descent, hell, he looks like he might still be in Eastern Europe.

The multihead CNC machine suggests a degree of modernity, more than one would find in a Mennonite wood working shop (they have children run belt sanders to make utensils - who needs slaves?).

Guy is running sanders with no hearing protection or a respirator. If he works out his days in that shop he will end up on a respirator.

Final clue - they box up the finished product and the box says it is a Product of Canada, eh, in two languages. Mystery solved. PDB is working for Queen and Country, to hell with his lungs, right?

That's what I saw in that video. That plus I am never going to compete with that set up. Man's got to know his limitations.

Rabel said...

$102.50 plus S&H for the 12 piece set the Andy Dick looking guy put together at the end.

The redhead looked OK but the years are starting to take a toll.

deborah said...

I carved a cooking spoon once. I think I saw a carver on PBS or something make one. One of those a-ha moments. Draw a spoon on that fills up a small flat piece of wood and carve it out. Bought a chisel especially for the bowl, hee. I never perfected it, but did use it many years.