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Thread: Hello from Mid Wales...

  1. #1
    Join Date
    May 2018
    Posts
    7

    Default Hello from Mid Wales...

    Hello folks, thank you for accepting me...

    I’m Wriggly, I learnt to bash metal when I was at college in Bath training to be teacher. For some reason, our tutors decided that we needed to learn to silversmith because it would be easy and affordable to teach middle-school children how to make cabochon set rings and elegant brooches. Nope, me neither, but twenty years later and having left teaching as the reality is now 1 hour a week and a budget of zero pounds, I’ve started smithing again. I’ve got lots of questions, because some things have moved on considerably but I’ll try to put them in the right areas....

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Location
    Central London
    Posts
    8,851

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    Hello W from Mid Wales and welcome to the forum. Ask or comment, we thrive on that. Dennis.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    May 2018
    Posts
    7

    Default

    Thanks Dennis. I’m off to Cooksons on Friday... going to be expensive!

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Location
    Scotland
    Posts
    3,404

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    Hi Wriggly
    I suppose back then silver was quite cheap but it still doesn't seem credible. At least you've still got the bug but you will end up broke

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Mar 2018
    Location
    Hertfordshire
    Posts
    215

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    Welcome Wriggly

  6. #6
    Join Date
    May 2018
    Posts
    7

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    Quote Originally Posted by CJ57 View Post
    Hi Wriggly
    I suppose back then silver was quite cheap but it still doesn't seem credible. At least you've still got the bug but you will end up broke
    It was strange, even then. I went for my first teaching practice in the less glamorous end of Bristol, and the head of department thought it hilarious. I ended up teaching Food Technology to students with only spoons for tools because school had decided they couldn’t be trusted with anything else more dangerous. As it was, the police were called to deal with a student who’d set light to another’s hair by holding it in a gas flame on a cooker. I think that, as unlikely as it was, I benefited from having a lecturer who, at the end of his career and who was utterly untouchable as he held tenure, decided to teach us something that made him very happy; me too, if truth be told.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Location
    Scotland
    Posts
    3,404

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    Quote Originally Posted by wrigglefingers View Post
    It was strange, even then. I went for my first teaching practice in the less glamorous end of Bristol, and the head of department thought it hilarious. I ended up teaching Food Technology to students with only spoons for tools because school had decided they couldn’t be trusted with anything else more dangerous. As it was, the police were called to deal with a student who’d set light to another’s hair by holding it in a gas flame on a cooker. I think that, as unlikely as it was, I benefited from having a lecturer who, at the end of his career and who was utterly untouchable as he held tenure, decided to teach us something that made him very happy; me too, if truth be told.
    That sounds an interesting start to your teaching career, that's a bit of an understatement! At least you are left with a grounding that has left an impression. Basic techniques haven't reall moved on, it's really useful to be able to use a saw and perform simple tasks before you move on to something more difficult.

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