The Starter in Her Grandmother's Will
Her grandmother's will left her one thing that dies if you ignore it.
No glue, no screws — his chairs tighten as they dry, and they'll outlive us all.
Read the StoryMaker’s Lore visits the workshops, kitchens, forges and looms of American makers — and stays long enough to hear the real story. No trends, no hustle. Just people, their hands, and the things they can’t help but make.
Her grandmother's will left her one thing that dies if you ignore it.
She shapes the pot. The fire finishes it — and she loves the ones it argues with.
Shipped from Norway as farm equipment, the 1908 loom still sings in Ingrid's hands.
He made ten thousand identical parts. Now he makes one thing at a time.
She spent nine years designing notifications. Now she makes the opposite.
In Craftsbury, spring is six frantic weeks of steam, chili, and faith in a freeze.
A busted ranch hand, an old man's bench, and a debt you can only pay forward.
No glue, no screws — his chairs tighten as they dry, and they'll outlive us all.