People just like what I do and buy it. As for schooling, my clients are my teachers. They’re the ones who bring me the design problems. Schools get too easily divorced from the real world. In many places students graduate and become teachers without ever making a living from their work. They grow stale. There’s a preciousness I see in a lot of student work that comes from having too many hours to put into it. Perfection is fine, and nothing has left my shop that I’m not proud of, but you have to produce if you are going to make a living. I’ve heard people say they have to put a piece of wood aside until the spirit hits them. That’s procrastination. Pick it up and work it – you’ll feel the spirit. No, I think it’s an advantage being self-taught.
— Sam Maloof, December 1980, Fine Woodworking
een nog jonge Sam Maloof werkend aan zijn beroemde stoelen in 1956.
— Sam Maloof, December 1980, Fine Woodworking
een nog jonge Sam Maloof werkend aan zijn beroemde stoelen in 1956.