海角大神

海角大神 / Text

The human touch: Choosing handcraft over machines

Handcrafted furniture and pottery from ShackletonThomas is world-renowned. The human touch gives peace to the artists and beauty to their creations.聽

By Gareth Henderson , Correspondent
Bridgewater, Vt.

鈥淥ptimism is true moral courage.鈥 That鈥檚 a quote from the great Antarctic explorer Ernest Shackleton, who learned that, sometimes, the mere act of pressing on goes a long way when facing challenges. His descendant, Charles Shackleton, agrees.

鈥淢y biggest lesson from him is being able to get out of bed and put one foot in front of the other and just do it 鈥 and stuff will happen,鈥 Mr. Shackleton says.聽

Optimism plus persistence has been a winning formula in uncharted waters for Mr. Shackleton and his wife, Miranda Thomas, who are at the helm of ShackletonThomas, the international business that has produced handcrafted furniture and pottery for more than 30 years out of Bridgewater, Vermont, by the scenic Ottauquechee River.聽The other key to success is their focus on the human touch, from design to finish.

The big challenge this year came in mid-March, when the governor鈥檚 executive order shut them down for about a month. 鈥淭hat was a hard hit, but we鈥檇 just shipped a lot of stuff, and we had a lot of orders,鈥 Mr. Shackleton says.

When state rules permitted it, both workshops slowly ramped up production, with lots of work to complete. Thanks to the federal Paycheck Protection Program, they were able to keep paying their staff of about 15, and the normal flow of production had mostly returned by early November.

You wouldn鈥檛 know that for two years, the couple had been thinking of selling their part of the condoized historic Bridgewater Mill Mall property, largely because of all the exterior work it needed, including a new roof. But eventually both of their buildings got a fresh coat of paint, and Mr. Shackleton and Ms. Thomas used a loan and some of their own money to fund the roof work.

The turning point came when the exterior work began, Mr. Shackleton recalls.聽鈥淲e started looking at the whole thing like, 鈥楾his is a treasure,鈥 whereas a year ago we were ready to give it away.鈥

That human touch

While painting intricate lines depicting wildlife on the outside of a mug, Ms. Thomas notes that pottery, one of the most ancient arts, takes on a deeply human feeling instilled by the one crafting it.

鈥淭here鈥檚 an energy, and if you can get that energy across, that feeling, then everybody鈥檚 happy,鈥 she says.聽

For Mr. Shackleton and Ms. Thomas, who run the furniture and pottery operations, respectively, their work is the result of skilled makers, not a mechanized factory line. That lends a special human element you don鈥檛 get otherwise, Mr. Shackleton says.聽

鈥淲e believe when human beings make things, they have a character to them,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t passes on a little piece of soul, if you will.鈥

While the process happens in Vermont, the finished work has gone well beyond local borders. For example, Ms. Thomas once created a peace bowl, with a special design of peace doves, that then-President Bill Clinton presented as a gift to Pope John Paul II during the pope鈥檚 visit to St. Louis in 1999. Her pottery was also part of the celebration of Kofi Annan鈥檚 2006 retirement from the United Nations as secretary-general.

It鈥檚 no small thing to carry on that legacy of precision and utmost quality, and now the owners鈥 son, Hugh Shackleton, is doing so as shop manager on the furniture side, after joining the operation more than four years ago and learning the craft.

鈥淭he coolest thing is seeing what people can create,鈥 Hugh Shackleton says. 鈥淲e are artists.鈥

His son鈥檚 arrival and subsequent shop-manager role were huge steps forward for the business, Mr. Shackleton says.

鈥淚t saved the business, because he brought in young inspiration, and he鈥檚 completely passionate about making things, designing things, and he鈥檚 really good at management,鈥 Mr. Shackleton notes.

Hugh Shackleton took over the shop-manager reins from Marty Higgs, who鈥檚 worked there for 24 years and recently began training his son on furniture-making. For Mr. Higgs, the workshop has been a place of 鈥減eace and refuge.鈥

鈥淭here鈥檚 nothing really more relaxing than hand-planing a large tabletop,鈥 he says, noting the side-to-side rhythm of the work and the slight 鈥渞inging鈥 sound. 鈥淭he emphasis isn鈥檛 so much on getting things done quickly, but getting things done so they鈥檙e beautiful when finished 鈥 and highly functional as well,鈥 he adds.

Now, Mr. Higgs鈥 son is also enjoying that process. He finished his first table with his father鈥檚 guidance in late October.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been nice for me, especially in such a tumultuous year, to have ... some peace and focus, something to witness,鈥 August Higgs says.聽

Staying the course

It takes time to build two renowned brands, and for Mr. Shackleton and Ms. Thomas, the journey began more than three decades ago. She met Mr. Shackleton, who hails from Ireland, at college in England, where they ended up in the same pottery class. After coming to Vermont at different points in the 1980s, they each ended up working for the famous craft entrepreneur Simon Pearce, who was an important mentor for them both as a craftsperson and business owner.

鈥淪imon really talked us into it,鈥 Ms. Thomas says, recalling striking out on their own in 1987. 鈥淗e helped us get there, and we couldn鈥檛 have done this, I don鈥檛 think, without Simon.鈥

After taking that step, they also made a commitment to stick with handcrafting.

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 want it to become a commercial, mechanized thing, so we decided to stay with handwork,鈥 Ms. Thomas says.

Not everyone has done the same, but this husband-and-wife team has persisted in the approach that propelled their success.

鈥淲e have made ourselves champions of the small-production workshop 鈥 and I say 鈥榗hampions鈥 because that鈥檚 been a goal, to really do that, so you鈥檙e putting out on the market some incredible quality,鈥 Ms. Thomas says.

That quality flows from the hands that create it. For Marty Higgs, there鈥檚 a lasting connection between him and the pieces he crafts and signs.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a part of you going into somebody else鈥檚 home, and you want it to be the best part of you.鈥