Individually, Rebecca Yaffe and Laura Mays each considered becoming an architect -- and ended up becoming a
woodworker. Laura, who obtained a degree in architecture after high
school, spent a bit of time in that career before coming to the
conclusion that "the distance from making things was frustrating, and I didn't know how to
tell other people how to make things if I didn't know myself."
She ended up taking a course in furniture design and making in her
native Ireland -- at a school where she later taught.
Rebecca, on the other hand, quickly
moved away from her planned architecture major in college, and ended
up doing American studies with a focus on the material culture
history of New England. "I had a longstanding interest in being
a furniture maker, without a real
clue what that meant or a starting
entry point. I tried to make it academic."
"I had a fantasy of an
apprenticeship with an old man," Rebecca said, "but the
shop situations I found myself in were big kitchen shops that just
were not satisfying."
Both women eventually found themselves
as students in the woodworking program at the College of the Redwoods
in Fort Bragg, California. The college's woodworking program, says
Laura, who assumed the role of lead instructor there in August 2011,
"takes people of all sorts of experience and background."
Rebecca, for instance, chimed in, "There was so much I didn't
know. Like what a band saw was."
Their class, that of the years 2002 and
2003, spanned the last year of program founder James Krenov's
teaching at the school and the first year of his retirement.
Experiences at the school, Laura said, "have influenced us
enormously -- not necessarily stylistically, but more in terms of
thinking about the human element, the material, the way of working,
rather than 'how to fit a door.'"
After completing their studies at the
College of the Redwoods, Rebecca returned to Ireland with Laura,
which led to the founding of their Yaffe Mays woodworking
partnership. "We're a couple, and it's kind of an extension of
being involved with each other's work. We
shared such a vocabulary
being in it together."
Each partner, Laura said, does tend to
work on her own pieces, but "we talk about it an awful lot with
each other. And if there's a deadline looming, the other one will
jump in and help."
The few true collaborations they have
done include a series of cabinets, with the same carcass but
different visual variations on the fronts, and a box for the Hunt
Museum in Limerick, Ireland. The front for one of those cabinets was
a door "made of little scraps of wood fitted together,"
Rebecca said, which has piqued her interest currently in "shingling
and layering, using small pieces of wood to create a more complicated
texture."
Normally, she said, she the techniques
she finds herself using over and over again are the traditional
joinery techniques such as dovetails and mortise-and-tenon joinery.
For Laura, "I'm increasingly drawn
to the vernacular furniture of Ireland, England and the United
States: the simple things, like coopering and steam bending. It seems
very primal, just using fire and water to bend wood. I'm interested
in using those technologies to move into something that's
contemporary -- and also fine furniture, rather than a barrel."
For instance, as part of completing her
master's degree in Ireland, she did parallel series of chairs, one
based on the traditional Irish "Sligo" chair, and the other
on a basic chair from IKEA. "It's the modern vernacular, what's
in people's
houses in the same way as the vernacular furniture of 200
or 300 years ago," she said. Laura broke both chairs down into
the basic pattern to explore questions like "what makes it a
Sligo chair" and remade them in different ways -- such a bent
and laminated Sligo with curved parts.
In part, Laura said, her work is an
exploration of the objects around us as craft, and making a
connection with them in terms of where the object came from and how
it was made. "It's my niggling obsession: how does craft fit
into the modern world?"
Her series, she said, "also made
me very interested in chairs themselves: their three-dimensional
sculptural quality as compared to other furniture, and the way
they're made to carry a message as well as to sit on."
In the move from Ireland back to
California, Rebecca said, "We moved 23 chairs."
They also moved away from some of the
woods they'd been regularly using. Using woods native to the area
where she's located, Rebecca said, "is one of the deeper
pleasures of woodworking for me. It's picturing what you're making,
where it's going, who's going to touch it in all the little corners,
and being connected to the trees in the ground."
That said, "I will miss
Irish/English sycamore a lot," she said. "Those are the
only pieces I've ever made that required not a lick of sandpaper; you
can just plane it to a glossy beauty. And I really like working with
pear, even though I've only worked with imported. It's so creamy and
pink; I find it lovely, and I can't throw away even the tiniest scrap
of it."
Laura also likes the focus on native
trees, and "making a connection with where you are, given that
it's possible. It's exciting. And you meet interesting people, and
that's part of the connection, as you're phoning up people who've had
a tree fall down in their yard to see if you can get it milled up."
Currently, she's working on a chair in madrone, a species native to
California -- which has fewer hardwoods, she noted, than the U.S.
East Coast. Trees in the Eastern United States, she said, are the
same species as those in Ireland, but grow slightly different.
In Ireland, Rebecca said, when it comes
to making those personal connections, "Laura went to elementary
school with everybody, as far as I can tell. In our time in Ireland,
we had a lot of commissions where we knew the family, or we knew the
tree."
"We made two sideboards for old
family friends of my parents, from an old cherry tree," Laura
said. "I remembered swinging on that tree as a child."
Currently, they are renting a shop in
California, but, after selling all their machines in Ireland and
making the intercontinental move with the 23 chairs, two cats and a
dog, "We plan on digging in here and giving it everything,"
said Rebecca.