walshjp17
Member
Over the past weekend I attended the North Carolina Woodturners' Symposium. A response to a question posed to one of the demonstrators caught my ear and resonated loud and clear.
The question: "Do you work in a 'shop' or a 'studio'? -- the implication being a 'shop' is where woodworkers toil and a 'studio' is where artists perform. The demonstrator responded with: "Neither. I work in a turnery." Looking up 'turnery' up in the dictionary reveals:
turn·er·y
[tur-nuh-ree] noun, plural turn·er·ies.
1. the process or art of forming or shaping objects on a lathe.
2. objects or articles fashioned on a lathe collectively.
3. a workshop where such work is done.
I'll be renaming my workplace!
The question: "Do you work in a 'shop' or a 'studio'? -- the implication being a 'shop' is where woodworkers toil and a 'studio' is where artists perform. The demonstrator responded with: "Neither. I work in a turnery." Looking up 'turnery' up in the dictionary reveals:
turn·er·y
[tur-nuh-ree] noun, plural turn·er·ies.
1. the process or art of forming or shaping objects on a lathe.
2. objects or articles fashioned on a lathe collectively.
3. a workshop where such work is done.
I'll be renaming my workplace!