| Jeff Neil
I have mainly taught myself
the pleasures and agonies of working with many of the American hardwoods.
Over the past 35+ years, I have enjoyed crafting many pieces of furniture
however I have found the most challenge in making small heirloom and jewelry
boxes using many of the same techniques as fine furniture makers.
Matching the selection of wood for color and grain pattern to complement
the box design are challenges I find interesting when both designing and
crafting the heirloom and jewelry boxes.
Currently I am designing
heirloom boxes using themes taken from traditional quilting blocks, applying
the quilt design to the lid using tiles or veneers of various woods and
also carrying the same quilt block theme into the shape of the box itself.
Luckily, quilters have thousands of traditional quilt blocks to choose
from which has allowed my creativity to flow. While the outside of
the heirloom box is devoted to the quilt block theme, the inside is fabric-lined
and partitioned into an exquisite jewelry box.
In 2012, my “Log Cabin” and
“Grape Basket” Heirloom Boxes were accepted into the TACA Best of Tennessee
Craft show in Nashville. My “Doves in the Window” Heirloom Box was
accepted in the 2013 Master Woodworkers Show in Knoxville.
In addition to crafting fine
jewelry boxes, I also enjoy bending one of the simplest boxes perfected
by the Shakers. The Shaker oval box is the opposite of my heirloom
boxes since it only uses four pieces of wood, copper tacks and wooden pegs.
I enjoy bending these boxes using cherry, walnut, maple (straight grain/curly/birds
eye) as well as quarter sawn sycamore. After a request from my wife,
I began using various veneers to incorporate traditional quilt blocks on
many of my Shaker boxes as well.
I am a member of the Southern
Highland Craft Guild and currently sell my heirloom and shaker boxes in
all of the SHCG shops in Asheville, Blowing Rock, Gatlinburg and Cumberland
Gap. Additionally, I am a member of Tennessee Craft: Upper East Chapter
and Holston Mountain Artisans in Abingdon.
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