OLYMPIA — The rhythmic sound of sandpaper smoothing wood is accompanied by the steady punching of slots in leather as a handful of students focus on putting the finishing touches on knife sheathes that are as much a work of art as a tool.
The students on this particular evening — a homemaker, a high school student and a bakery worker — are part of an inaugural Scandinavian knife-making class, one of a handful of classes at Arbutus Folk School, which recently opened its doors in Washington state’s capital city. The school — which focuses on regional crafts — is modeled on others around the country that allow people to learn skills that predate a world consumed with iPhones and easy access to Wi-Fi.
“I think we very much undervalue some of the social values of these skills — sharing those skills with others, learning from a mentor … the whole community around sharing an interest with somebody,” said Stacey Waterman-Hoey, the founder and acting director of the school. Waterman-Hoey walked away from 18 years of energy and climate policy research to start the school, saying she “found a lot of joy and beauty along the way that I never would have known in my office days.”
There are currently more than 30 such schools in more than a dozen states around the country, including Minnesota, Wisconsin, and North Carolina. Classes vary school by school, but include courses on such pursuits as blacksmithing, knitting, beekeeping, soap making, archery and other skills that harken back to earlier times. Some — such as Highlander Research and Education Center, previously known as Highlander Folk School, in New Market, Tenn., which counts Rosa Parks among its alumni — focus on social justice or promote political organization. However, most of the schools that have started up in recent years focus on traditional or regional crafts, skills or music, including banjo or the fiddle.