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Maloof Memories Please
comments (12) June 15th, 2009 in blogs
Help us with an article for an upcoming issue of Fine Woodworking magazine. We’re putting together a retrospective on Sam Maloof (1916-2009) and need your assistance.
Please send us an email (fw-web@taunton.com) or post a comment to let us know how his life and work influenced you. Email us high-resolution images to show how his furniture affected your own.
Or, if you have a great story about this furniture-making legend, we’d love to hear that as well. It’s a chance to commemorate the man, share your memories, and show Maloof-influenced work in the magazine.
Again, please email us explaining how he your influenced work and send high-resolution images as examples to fw-web@taunton.com. Or, if you just have a comment, please feel free to post it below. Thanks to all those who already shared their thoughts/comments on this blog post.
posted in: blogs, news, sam maloof
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Comments (12)
Posted: 1:50 am on June 27th
I look back on my 35 years of furniture making and I ask myself one question? If it were not for Sam Maloof what type of furniture would I be making today. Sam's designs have been a real influence on my woodworking career.
Weather is is good or bad, many of my designs have a very distinct Maloof inflence. People that see my work always ask, "Do you know Sam Maloof?"
He will be missed by many and there isn't a day that goes by that I don't think or see Sam Maloof in my life. I hope he is now designing and building furnniture for you know who.
If you would like to discuss additional experiences I had with Sam, please do not hesitate to contact me.
Sincerely,
Ed Rizzardi
(909) 899-8005
Posted: 12:28 am on June 23rd
He told a story at lunch one day about a conversation he had with a salesman at the Porsche dealership where he bought his car. The salesman was impressed that someone Sam's age would want to buy a Porsche, saying that most men his age would be sitting at home in a rocking chair. Sam replied that his rocking chairs sold for a higher price than the salesman's Porsche.
The second time I met Sam was at his home and ranch in LA. My wife and I went there for the standard tour, and saw Sam right when we got there. After the tour, he showed us around his shop, his lumber storage sheds, and even brought us in to visit his new home. You couldn't meet a nicer, more generous, or more genuine person.
Posted: 3:24 am on June 21st
Posted: 10:31 am on June 18th
Posted: 8:11 pm on June 17th
Nobody in my immediate family appreciates the subtleties of woodworking; I am all alone in this. So it was immensely fulfilling for me to sit on my folding chair in a fairly large audience and mentally follow the step-by-step instructions that Sam was giving us. At one point I looked around: Fifty grave heads were slowly nodding as the image of the table grew in our fifty minds.
From Sam Maloof I acquired the idea of sculpting a complete form out of pieces of wood joined or glued together with more wood there than necessary. The form flowed from one piece of wood to the next without particular regard for the glue line.
Posted: 1:12 pm on June 17th
Posted: 9:43 am on June 17th
My take isapplied and different than any I've seen. The title is "More tha a Rocker"
http://furnitology.blogspot.com/2009/05/sam-maloof-more-than-rocker.html
Neil
Posted: 9:03 am on June 17th
When I reach for a belt sander instead of a bench plane, I remember his comment. And I feel good about myself!
Thank you for sharing Mr. Maloof with us.
Posted: 8:49 am on June 17th
In 1967, as Western Divisional Manager for Knoll International, I successfully negotiated with Sam to reproduce a number of his more easy to manufacture designs. As I recall, it included a chest, several tables and a dining chair. Things were on track until his wife, Alfreda learned of the conversations. She terminated the conversations and, in the process, maybe caused Sam to become more of a fine artist than he may have been had I been successful in drawing him in to a more commercial orientation. On the other hand, it may have given him more time for creativity which is what Harry Bertoia's designing his famous wire chairs did for him. The financial arrangement he made with Hans Knoll allowed him to become one of the finest artists of his era.
Barry Rosengrant
Posted: 3:49 am on June 17th
Thank you, Mr. Maloof.
Posted: 12:16 am on June 17th
Posted: 7:03 pm on June 16th
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