We start off at the Shuili Wood Utilization Center, where work of arts and furnitures made of woods and bamboos are displayed.
The thing that caught my eyes were the sampling chairs for NTU’s main library. It was originally made by a wood that is too heavy for a chair. So they decided to use another wood which is also a top-leveled quality wood. However, since in Taiwan, people are not allowed to cut down any trees (except for NTU’s Xitou experimental forest since they need to thin the woods), so these are made by imported woods.
Then we went to visit the utilization practice factory, where masters were there cutting and processing woods. The photo below shows the most important part of the whole factory: sharpening the blade of the saw. This process requires technique and experienced masters.
Now here’s the fun part! The master was making a rolling pin (and also made a baseball bat), which we all were amazed by his skillful technique!
Then, this is the part where we all got excited: DIY-making stools. Originally, I was so confused by the schedule which said we are spending the whole afternoon finishing our own stool, since the only seemed to take 15 minutes to put the pieces of stools together. Then after learning the whole process......I realized a whole afternoon...may not even be enough. Here is the process below:
Sand every pieces → get one of our own pieces carved with words or logos we wanted → put them together
The two lines carved on my stools is actually the same as the couplets at our home's front door, which was written my my aunt for our family since mom and dad bought the house when they got married. Since my dad is a tea and plant lover, and couplets are changed every Chinese New Year, so this is what the right line means:we you can smell the tea from the neighboring seat, and the scent of the flower, you will know that the spring is here and a new year has come.
→ spray the paint for the first layer → dry → sand → 2nd paint → dry
→ stick on the tiles: we were suppose to do so, but I was so obsessed with the color and pattern of the wood, and I really like how it feels with the words carved on my stool. Therefore, I took my tiles with me, and after I take my stool back home, we could have a family meeting to decide whether it should be on the family stool.
Done! Thank you teacher and master!! We love it!
















