depscribe's photos with the keyword: broom maker
Just-finished broom propped next to the door
03 Nov 2016 |
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Surrounded by some of the many varieties of broom that he makes, Curt Cable is a satisfied man, standing in the doorway of his broom-making porch.
There are many styles
03 Nov 2016 |
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A unique and popular style is the "turkey wing" broom, which resembles a whisk broom but is bound tightly down one side. Just the thing for keeping the hearth tidy, as long as it doesn't encounter any live coals.
It's sharp and strong
03 Nov 2016 |
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Shaker brooms are all even at the bottom. That doesn't just happen, as witness this half-guillotine, half paper cutter device designed to accomplish the task.
So were these
03 Nov 2016 |
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Here, Curt Cable sews a Shaker-style broom. It's in a Johnson Improved Broom Sewing Vise, made many decades ago by the G. P. Johnson company in Amsterdam, New York. An original advertisement for the vise said it was "recommended by all leading blind broom makers and commissions, and is used in several of the schools for the blind throughout this country and in several foreign countries."
These machines were once manufactured
03 Nov 2016 |
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Shaker-style brooms are the kind normally sold at hardware and grocery stores. They're typically bound with wire and are also sewn together part way down the straws. This ancient piece of machinery allows the winding of the wire at very high tension to attach the straws to the handle.
All done -- now it has to dry
03 Nov 2016 |
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The carefully crafted joint of handle to broom corn on an Appalachian-style broom.
Checking to make sure it's straight
03 Nov 2016 |
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Cable glances at the alignment of the corn heads as he builds an Appalachian broom. The string is fed from a stick with square sides; by varying his foot pressure he can control the tension with which it's wound.
Adding broom corn to the handle
03 Nov 2016 |
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The broom corn -- actually not corn but a variety of sorghum -- is initially tied to the handle in alternating layers. The thick stalk end is soaked in water for a while before the process begins, to give the string a better bite.
He makes it look easy, but it isn't
03 Nov 2016 |
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The first style of broom he learned to make is the Appalachian variety, with heads of broom corn fastened to the handle in a woven pattern with strong string.
The craftsman at his shop
03 Nov 2016 |
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The picture of Appalachian hospitality, Curt Cable welcomes the visitor to his broom-making porch. Some of his wares have curlicue handles, formed when honeysuckle vines grow around and with small saplings, changing the shape of the sapling.
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