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Post-Standard, The (Syracuse, NY)

February 21, 2002
Section: Neighbors West
Edition: Final
Page: 19

FROM GYM CLASS TO WOOD SHOP
FORMER GYM TEACHER MARY CHAPPELL SETS UP A STORE IN HER HOUSE

   Nick Serrano Contributing writer

When Mary Chappell sees something she likes, her first thought usually is: What would that look like in wood?

Known in the Skaneateles area craft community for her woodworking skills, Chappell decided in July to pull her items out of the craft stores and start her own business called "In Wood." Chappell can make pretty much anything out of wood, including such diverse things as furniture, signs, a variety of trinkets and small ornaments.

"I've got the time now to do whatever I want to do," Chappell said. "So I put this shop together and try to keep it filled with things that people would like."

Chappell has never taken a woodworking class. She learned everything she knows about the craft from books and other crafters.

Most of Chappell's business is made to order. Customers often order items such as plaques and signs.

"If you ask me for something, and I think I can do it, I'll do it," she said.

But some customers browse the small inventory of natural-looking crafts in her shop.

Most of the crafts are small statues, carvings and trinkets shaped like animals. Many have holiday themes, such as a set of wooden hearts tied to ribbons for Valentine's Day and a picture of Santa Claus carved out of wood.

Chappell taught physical education at Marcellus Central School for 23 years and also coached girls soccer and girls volleyball there. Some of the first items she made were sports plaques for the graduating athletes.

Chappell also loves birds and has made many bird items, including a set of napkin rings shaped like different species from the area.

She sells the items out of her wood shop, which she added onto the back of her home in Spafford about seven years ago. Most of the woods Chappell uses are indigenous to the area - butternut, walnut and maple. She also likes to scavenge through abandoned barns for scrap boards and will buy other expensive woods such as cherry for special projects.

Chappell started woodworking in the 1950s as a hobby. She moved on to selling items in craft fairs and local craft stores before deciding to open her own store. The Cat's Whiskers, a Skaneateles area craft store, sold Chappell's items for about 10 years.

"Almost everything we have is handmade, so her things fit right in because they were handmade, and wood is very big here," said Millie Sharpe, who owns the store with her husband, Bob. "Her things were great here."

Chappell's items were especially popular in the summertime, when tourists flock to Skaneateles, Sharpe said.

Sharpe said she directs customers to In Wood if they are looking for Chappell's items.

Ideas for several items occurred to Chappell after she saw something she liked. Once she saw a cross at church that she thought was pretty, so she made a small wooden replica.

Chappell is especially partial to hummingbirds, so she made a bunch of small trinkets, shaped like the darting birds, with wooden bodies and metal wings.

Chappell uses both heavy machines and hand tools. Although she is used to the machines, she had one accident.

She was using a motorized planer to shave a piece of wood when the planer hit a knot, causing her right hand to slip into the blade. The planer sliced off the tip of her middle finger and skinned the tops of two other fingers.

The accident did not deter her from woodworking, though. "I can't deal cards too well with my right hand," she said. "But it hasn't really affected my work."

Illustration: PHOTO
Stephen D. Cannerelli/Staff photographer
MARY CHAPPELL,a retired gym teacher and coach, holds a sign she made
at her woodmaking shop, In Wood, which she runs out of her house in
Spafford. She started the business in July.

Copyright, 2002, The Herald Company
Purchased for use on the Borodino Bullett.