Steve Blanchard - Rebel Carver and Itsyville Creator

Tell him anything but that he can't carve something. Anything. One
person did that and just look what happened. Now there are lots of little people running
around an imaginary village. Well, it was imaginary . . .
When Steve Blanchard was learning his craft, his first carvings were
miniature redwood trees. Other carvers were doing similar creations, so Steve decided he
wanted to make his stand out by adding tree limbs. Naturally, a fellow carver and mentor
told him that wouldn't be possible to do. It just wouldn't work. But while his comrade was
busy carving a squirrel, Steve Blanchard worked the limbs into his miniature tree
carvings. Then he moved on to see what else he could uncover in the gift box. Twenty years later, those
tree limbs evolved to one-of-a-kind tree houses that you have to see to believe. Then the
tree houses grew to a whole village called Itsyville.
But Steve wasn't always so fortunate with his.er.uh.trail-blazing
attributes. That rebel spirit seemed to stand between him and any sense of true direction
for the better part of his teen and early adult years. From struggling through reform
school to being in the Marine Corp., the construction business, the field of oil burner
servicing, the area of aluminum siding application and the shrimp boat industry. He also
worked for a sound company out of Miami that toured with the likes of Dickie Betts from
the Allman Brothers, Lynard Skynard and the Isly Brothers. Then he started his own sound
company and began promoting local music talent in Naples, Florida, finally working his way
up to a major concert in which he went broke over night!
With four hundered dollars in his pocket, he moved from there to the
small mountain town of Three Rivers in the Sierras. where he worked odd jobs until another
venture posed itself. There he started his own nursury, (Sierra Garden Center) which
is still there to this day. It was a long journey to find his calling, and not
just from one coast to the other. "For most of my life, I'd never felt like I fit in
anywhere until I started carving, which I believe was a gift. Like God had mercy on me and
said, 'Here. Do this.' From then on, I had an identity. What a relief that
was."
He never married, though he says he came close a couple of times.
Niether did he father any children. Maybe that's why Itsyville happened--and
why it is now the focus for his up-and-coming children's book series. And even more recently,
the screenplay adaptation of the first novel! aLL reflecting the world of his boundless
imagination, but yet imparting invaluable charactor lessons and tidbits of uncomplicated
wisdom. "I still maintain a rebellious spirit, and maybe there's
magic in that. "
The rebel carver and Itsyville creator bases his shop, the entire
village of Itsyville and his imagination out of Salinas, California. For a peek at his
latest creations, visit www.blanchardwoodsculpture.com or come by to visit W.C. Fields,
George Burns and other Itsyville residents in person.
When asked if there's a carving that he still wants to do . . .
"I'd like to add James Dean to the list," he says with a sparkle in his eyes.
Web Design & Graphics © 2004 Crop Circle Studios.com | Photographs and Content © 2004 Steve Blanchard
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