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I was looking at a magazine with Hand Made written on the cover yet every item in the magazine required some tool to make it.
Clearly when a painter uses a brush or pallet knife to paint a picture we still regard it as hand painted even though he used a tool the same applies to knitting with needles but when to produce the item one needs a motorised rolling mill to emboss the cards is that really hand made?
I hand made a crystal set radio as a lad. Used the yellow bit out of coal as a diode and loo role centre with wire unwrapped from an old transformer the only bought item was the head phones. My son had a kit to do the same and just had to solder the items together, and my granddaughter also had a kit where she just plugged the items into a so called bread board which had pre-made links in it.
My day it was just a lump of wood with nails and we soldered wires from head to head of the nails we also called that a bread board and it really looked like one.
So where does one draw the line for calling things hand made? Even as a kid I had an airfix model which I "hand made" glueing the machine made plastic parts together and painting it. Hand assembled may be but not really hand made.
So if you buy a hand made mug how much has to be done by hand? Are you allowed the potters wheel?
Clearly when a painter uses a brush or pallet knife to paint a picture we still regard it as hand painted even though he used a tool the same applies to knitting with needles but when to produce the item one needs a motorised rolling mill to emboss the cards is that really hand made?
I hand made a crystal set radio as a lad. Used the yellow bit out of coal as a diode and loo role centre with wire unwrapped from an old transformer the only bought item was the head phones. My son had a kit to do the same and just had to solder the items together, and my granddaughter also had a kit where she just plugged the items into a so called bread board which had pre-made links in it.
My day it was just a lump of wood with nails and we soldered wires from head to head of the nails we also called that a bread board and it really looked like one.
So where does one draw the line for calling things hand made? Even as a kid I had an airfix model which I "hand made" glueing the machine made plastic parts together and painting it. Hand assembled may be but not really hand made.
So if you buy a hand made mug how much has to be done by hand? Are you allowed the potters wheel?