Skip Navigation
Give Now NCPR relies on
Your Donations

News stories tagged with "craft"

Show             
Story Begins
Heard Up North: steam-bending, baby-size
Sam drives the tacks, Ev holds the rib and the clenching iron.
Sam drives the tacks, Ev holds the rib and the clenching iron.
Done.
Done.
(11/09/09) Steam-bent ribs are a standard feature in many traditional boats. Oak (or other wood) ribs are softened by steaming, then quickly forced to conform to inside of the shell of the boat and clench-nailed in place. It's a two-man job. And the process is the same, big boat or small. Sam Newman got help bending the ribs into a very traditional, but very small craft: a cradle.

Download audio | (0) Comments |
Story Ends Story Begins
Heard Up North: dropping the drop spindle
Nancy Hammill with her drop spindle-full of new yarn. Her tutor, Donna Adams of Long Lake, looks on.
Nancy Hammill with her drop spindle-full of new yarn. Her tutor, Donna Adams of Long Lake, looks on.
(09/01/09) Nancy Hammill of Ft. Jackson was at Traditional Arts in Upstate New York recently for a lesson in an ancient craft: turning wool fleece into yarn by hand with a drop spindle. She and her tutor, Donna Adams of Long Lake, are today's Heard Up North.

Download audio | (0) Comments |
Story Ends Story Begins
A Year of Hard Choices: SunFeather Soap - tough times, hope for the future
Sandy Maine hopes to break into mass market retail with "Bug Off."
Sandy Maine hopes to break into mass market retail with "Bug Off."
(03/26/09) In our Year of Hard Choices series today, we go to a mainstay of the North Country's homegrown business community. You find the SunFeather Soap Company in a tidy, low building on the old state road outside Parishville, in St. Lawrence County. Martha Foley went for a tour, and got a lesson in small business 101.

Download audio | (0) Comments |
Story Ends Story Begins
Heard Up North: pounding black ash for basket-making
(07/31/07) Black ash is one of the sources of raw material for Native American basket makers. They de-bark and then pound ash logs to produce long, pliable strips. Gregory Warner learned the basics from a master: Henry Arquette of Akwesasne.

Download audio | (0) Comments |
Story Ends Story Begins
Heard Up North: Building An Adirondack Guideboat
Adirondack guideboat (Source:  Chris Woodward)
Adirondack guideboat (Source: Chris Woodward)
(07/03/06) Paddlers competed yesterday in the 44th annual Willard Hanmer guide boat race in Saranac Lake. Hanmer was one of the great Adirondack boat builders. In today's Heard Up North, we hear from Chris Woodward who now operates Hanmer's boat building shop.

Download audio | (0) Comments |
Story Ends Story Begins
For Women Who Knit Too Much
(09/27/05) The yarn harlot comes to Canton tonight. Stephanie Pearl-McPhee is author of a book called "At Knit's End" Meditation for Women Who Knit Too Much", author also of a funny web blog for people like her who are obsessed with knitting. Pearl-McPhee is a mother in her mid-thirties, a Canadian. She's found echoes of her OWN fixation in the hearts of knitters across both Canada and the US. She'll be at the St. Lawrence University Bookstore in Canton this evening from 6 to 8. Martha Foley spoke with her in May. She was at home in Toronto.

Download audio | (0) Comments |
Story Ends Story Begins
"An Adventure": Mixed Reviews for NYC Street Fair from North Country Artisans
(06/07/05) 17 artisans from the North Country caravanned to New York City this weekend. They set up booths at one of the largest one day street fairs in the country. The fair stretched for 20 blocks down 2nd avenue in Manhattan. Woodworker Dave Crosby called in by cell phone just after the fair ended.

Dave and the other artisans are part of the Northern Adirondack Trading Cooperative; a project organized by the St Lawrence County Chamber of Commerce. The cooperative is an international finalist for a World Chamber award for micro-enterprise initiatives.

Download audio | (0) Comments |
Story Ends Story Begins
North Country Artisans Head to NYC
Vest by Barbara Cobb
Vest by Barbara Cobb
Dave Crosby's Wood and Bronze Serving Tray
Dave Crosby's Wood and Bronze Serving Tray
(05/31/05) A small business initiative in St Lawrence County was named as an international finalist for the World Chamber of Commerce's "Best Unconventional Project" award. It's the only American finalist in any category. The Northern Adirondack Trading Cooperative was launched in 2003. It offers technology and marketing tools and workshops to small business owners and artisans. Next weekend, most of the group is caravaning to New York City for a one day street fair said to attract over a million people. Greg Warner stopped by their last meeting and brings us this report.

Download audio | (0) Comments |
Story Ends Story Begins
Meet the Masters: Bill Smith, Basketmaker & Storyteller, Colton
(05/01/00) Bill Smith is known throughout the Adirondacks and beyond as a master of many traditional arts of the region, including the making of split ash baskets. He also performs and records stories and songs about local life, including his 1994 collection Tales from the Featherbed.

Download audio | (0) Comments |
Story Ends

1-9 of 9

Photo of the Day

Photo of the Day: Click to enlarge
Blacksmith David Woodward sets in place the final piece of the weather vane he made for the Adirondack Carousel in Saranac Lake, which opens Saturday at 1 pm with a ribbon-cutting ceremony. Photo: Mark Kurtz.
Caption
Today's Photo: Full size | Submit

National & Global News

NPR Hourly Newscast
This text will be replaced
Single-use packages of laundry detergent are causing problems for kids who eat them. There have been at least 250 cases of illness from the packs reported to poison control centers across the country already this year.
 
When a parent returns from deployment, fitting back into the family can be struggle. National Guardsman Kevin Ross says, after coming home from Iraq, he talked to his three kids like they were soldiers. But with the help of a new study, he's learned...
 
Health care has become one of the starkest contrasts between President Obama and Republican rival Mitt Romney in the 2012 campaign. And that's surprising, given that once upon a time they both came up with similar plans to fix the system.
 
One irreverent tweet about a powerful Chinese politician was enough to get Fang Hong sent to a Chinese labor camp for a year. Encouraged by the recent fall of that politician, Bo Xilai, Fang is appealing his case and attacking the system of...
 
Defenders of an Obama administration rule requiring most health insurance plans to offer access to contraception without copays say there's no validity to arguments it violates religious freedom.
 
 
Canada Top Stories
World Service


Adirondack News Fund Founding Supporters: Paul Smith's College, The College of the Adirondacks · Wildlife Conservation Society · Adirondack Medical Center Foundation · Adirondack Museum · Niagara Mohawk Foundation · Schumann Foundation · John A. Sellon Charitable Trust · several anonymous individual donors