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Draft:Jeffrey Gale

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  • Jeffrey Gale
    Gale in 2024
    Born (1952-04-14) April 14, 1952 (age 72)
    Huntington, New York
    Occupation(s)Basket maker, artist

  • Jeffrey Gale (born April 14, 1952 Huntington, New York) is an American craftsman, known for his white-ash basketry. His work is found in private collections[1] and in the collection of the Smithsonian American Art Museum's Renwick Gallery.[2]

    Basketry

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    Gale maintains a workshop in Strafford, Vermont, where he harvests the wood for his craft from his own land. He typically harvests one or two ash trees, a year.[3]

    He makes his baskets from white ash, which he splits into "billets" (lengths of wood with a rectangular cross section), using a froe, a wedge, and a mallet. He then shapes the billets into "splints" (flat pieces of wood), trimmed to a desired thickness for weaving as a basket.[4] He makes the splints on a shaving horse, which allows him to hold the billet in place as he shapes it to the desired size with a drawknife. The splints may be as thin as the thickness of the growth ring of the source tree. He steams the splints to make them pliable. Gale uses no power tools in the process.[5]

    Influences

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    Gale apprenticed with an Adirondack pack basket maker, using oak, and started his business in 1982 as a basket maker.[4] Two books by Eric Sloane, Sketches of America Past and A Reverence for Wood, inspired him to take up the craft. His contemporary white-ash basketry derives primarily from early New England techniques, but incorporates his own methods and designs.[6]

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    See also

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    References

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    1. ^ "Famed basket maker comes to Manchester". Manchester Journal. 2016-09-21. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
    2. ^ "Jeffrey Gale | Smithsonian American Art Museum". americanart.si.edu. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
    3. ^ "The Dream Weaver". Country Living: 114–116. July 2005.
    4. ^ a b "Traditional Arts Spotlight: Keeping it in the Family - Jeffrey and Emerson Gale White Ash Basketmaking Apprenticeship". Vermont Folklife. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
    5. ^ "Profile: Jeffrey Gale". Old House Interiors: 14. July 2007.
    6. ^ Adrian, Patrick (2022-01-20). "It was this mysterious thing". The Valley News. pp. S13.
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    Category:American woodworkers