When did you decide to learn this skill?
As a boy I was fascinated by traditional woodwork and the endless possibilities of wood. My first apprenticeship was in Weissküfer woodwork, with its chip-carving decoration, then I took a second apprenticeship as a woodcarver.
Why is this type of woodwork typical of Switzerland?
In a mountain region like Appenzell, where I was born, there is a lot of dairy farming and a lot of wood. Farmers needed equipment for the production of milk, so they made it out of wood, and that was the beginning of the Weissküfer profession.
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What techniques do you specialise in?
Curving and bending wood, chip-carving, writing in wood, making three-dimensional wooden objects based on scaled-up natural forms. I sometimes combine Weissküfer work and woodcarving either in a traditional way or in a new, modern form.
What type of wood do you use?
Ideally, we look for maple trees growing at around 700-900m altitude near a river: those particular conditions produce wood that will bend without breaking, making it ideal for Weissküfer work. The forests around Lake Brienz are a good source of wood like that.