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Current Events and Press Materials

 

In the world of spirits, the reputations of some are well documented. For example; Angels. They have been  the subjects of countless works of art over centuries.  Although  little is known of wood spirits, nor their  contribution to mankind--until now. 

We welcome inquiries on this developing story.  If you're media, or just want to see some of our press information, feel free to download the materials below, or contact us . . .

Steve@blanchardwoodsculpture.com

Tel. 831 484 0963

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Blanchard Bio

Wood Spirit FAQ Guide

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 
Blanchard’s Wood Sculpture Elevates Tree Houses to an Art Form

 

SALINAS, Calif., Feb. xx, 2005 – Among the redwoods of the central California coast, tree houses have evolved far beyond the boards-and-nails contraptions of long-ago summers. And for master carver Steve Blanchard, who operates Blanchard’s Wood Sculpture (http://www.blanchardwoodsculpture.com), tree houses are an art form inspired by the wood spirits themselves.

 

Some of Blanchard’s hand-carved tree houses (http://www.blanchardwoodsculpture.com/tree_house.html) even bear images of the wood spirits, those long-bearded, gnarled old faces that sometimes appear in the bark of trees and for which woodcarvers search as if for gold. It’s only fitting, then, that the tree houses are just about as rare as gold: Blanchard makes only ten or twelve one-of-a-kind houses each year to sell. Most are around $25,000. The proceeds support development of Itsyville, the playhouse-sized village Blanchard created that has become a local attraction.

 

Though there is not a plumb, straight or level board to be found in any of Blanchard’s tree houses, their craftsmanship and whimsical appeal have   earned Blanchard spots in two  books: Ice, Snow, Sand and Wood Sculptures by Steve Volk (ISBN 1418495778, AuthorHouse) and The Art of Chainsaw Carving (Fox Chapel Publishing). Blanchard’s tree houses are slated to appear for the second time in the French architectural magazine Le Journal du Bois. And Blanchard himself has just finished the first book, ITSYVILLE (THE KEY) in a fantasy series that includes the  Itsies and the Podots, the two clans of wood spirits who occupy Itsyville.

 

Those interested can get a feel for Blanchard’s work by viewing his gallery of completed tree house projects at http://www.blanchardwoodsculpture.com/tree_gallery.html. All are sized for wood spirits, who, coincidentally, are about as big as children. Designs range from a fanciful outhouse to a two-story house with curved staircase. Some feature rounded front doors in twisted stumps, while others look like they would be equally at home on the streets of a frontier town as in Itsyville.

 

Blanchard, whose first chainsaw carving fifteen years ago resembled a mushroom (he was trying to carve a redwood tree), is self-taught. In those early days, he says, each of his carvings was an attempt to improve on the one before it. But from the moment he began carving, Blanchard was hooked. After years of trying his hand at most other jobs, he had found his calling — his gift, he says.

 


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