2008.04.01: April 1, 2008: Headlines: COS - Philippines: Business: Service: Art: Folk Art: Cleveland Plain Dealer: RPCVs Paul Weir and Jim Neidert operate Weir Handmade Inc. to buy thousands of wooden statues made in the Philippines and sell them to distributors in the United States
Peace Corps Online:
Directory:
Philippines:
Peace Corps Philippines:
Peace Corps Philippines: Newest Stories:
2008.04.01: April 1, 2008: Headlines: COS - Philippines: Business: Service: Art: Folk Art: Cleveland Plain Dealer: RPCVs Paul Weir and Jim Neidert operate Weir Handmade Inc. to buy thousands of wooden statues made in the Philippines and sell them to distributors in the United States
RPCVs Paul Weir and Jim Neidert operate Weir Handmade Inc. to buy thousands of wooden statues made in the Philippines and sell them to distributors in the United States
Weir left the Peace Corps in 1969 and returned to Pennsylvania. He taught school and grew organic vegetables but often thought fondly of the men he met in the Philippines and their carvings. He would talk with Neidert about how they could sell the carvings, support themselves and provide earnings for the artists as well. In 1986, he returned to the Philippines to set up a structure. He believed he understood what people in the United States wanted to buy and communicated that to the Filipinos. "They know how to carve," he said. "But I knew what to carve." One of the business' biggest sellers is the cigar store Indian, an old advertisement figure that used to represent tobacco shops but now is used as a decorative item. Weir sells them by the hundreds. About 200 Filipinos create carvings to sell to Weir and Neidert. The pieces are mostly contemporary folk art, including fish and animals of every size and description. Some pieces are sober and serious, others are comical. Because deforestation is a major concern in the Philippines, Weir said they plant as many trees as they cut down and carefully follow all the rules for harvesting trees such as teak.
RPCVs Paul Weir and Jim Neidert operate Weir Handmade Inc. to buy thousands of wooden statues made in the Philippines and sell them to distributors in the United States
Peace Corps service leads to new business
Tuesday, April 01, 2008
Michael Sangiacomo
Plain Dealer Reporter
Paul Weir answered President Kennedy's call for Americans to join the Peace Corps and help the less fortunate. It changed not only his life, but his livelihood, too.
Weir met fellow Peace Corps volunteer Jim Neidert in the Philippines in 1967. Almost 20 years later, they put together a business to help themselves and the families of the people they had met so many years before.
Each year they buy thousands of wooden statues made in the Philippines and sell them to distributors in the United States. They import everything from 7-foot giraffes to 5-inch felines and store them in their warehouse in Rittman, a few miles south of Medina County.
Weir, 62, and Neidert, 65, both of Westfield Center, operate Weir Handmade Inc. and frequently travel back to the South Pacific country they love.
Weir knew the Philippines would always be part of his life when he arrived there in the '60s to instruct men in how to teach mathematics.
He soon realized there was more important work to do. Like fish farming. Weir also helped build a system of bamboo pipes to carry fresh water from the mountains so farmers could water their crops during the dry season.
"Those were what they needed," Weir said.
He met the carvers, who made exotic and whimsical animals and people, in 1968 at a wedding in the mountains outside Manila.
Weir left the Peace Corps in 1969 and returned to Pennsylvania. He taught school and grew organic vegetables but often thought fondly of the men he met in the Philippines and their carvings.
He would talk with Neidert about how they could sell the carvings, support themselves and provide earnings for the artists as well. In 1986, he returned to the Philippines to set up a structure.
He believed he understood what people in the United States wanted to buy and communicated that to the Filipinos.
"They know how to carve," he said. "But I knew what to carve."
One of the business' biggest sellers is the cigar store Indian, an old advertisement figure that used to represent tobacco shops but now is used as a decorative item. Weir sells them by the hundreds.
About 200 Filipinos create carvings to sell to Weir and Neidert. The pieces are mostly contemporary folk art, including fish and animals of every size and description. Some pieces are sober and serious, others are comical.
Because deforestation is a major concern in the Philippines, Weir said they plant as many trees as they cut down and carefully follow all the rules for harvesting trees such as teak.
The workers cut and rough-carve the trees in the field, using machetes made from old truck springs.
After being carved, the pieces are moved to a warehouse for drying, finishing and painting. Then they are shipped to the United States.
The carvings start at about $6 for a small item up to $1,800 for the intricately detailed wooden Indians. The closest place to Cleveland to see and buy the carvings is the Museum of Western Reserve Farms and Equipment in Richfield.
Weir can no longer climb the mountains the way he did in his youth, but he thinks of the Philippines every day.
"I suspect I'll retire there someday," Weir said. "Though I would only live there half the time, because I could never totally leave here."
For more information, Weir Handmade can be contacted at 330-925-2533 or at weirhandmade.com. The Museum of Western Reserve Farms and Equipment in Richfield can be contacted at 330-659-3507 or at ohiofarmmuseum.com.
To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:
msangiacomo@plaind.com
Links to Related Topics (Tags):
Headlines: April, 2008; Peace Corps Philippines; Directory of Philippines RPCVs; Messages and Announcements for Philippines RPCVs; Business; Service; Art; Folk Art
When this story was posted in April 2008, this was on the front page of PCOL:
Peace Corps Online The Independent News Forum serving Returned Peace Corps Volunteers
| Dodd vows to filibuster Surveillance Act Senator Chris Dodd vowed to filibuster the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that would grant retroactive immunity to telecommunications companies that helped this administration violate the civil liberties of Americans. "It is time to say: No more. No more trampling on our Constitution. No more excusing those who violate the rule of law. These are fundamental, basic, eternal principles. They have been around, some of them, for as long as the Magna Carta. They are enduring. What they are not is temporary. And what we do not do in a time where our country is at risk is abandon them." |
Read the stories and leave your comments.
Some postings on Peace Corps Online are provided to the individual members of this group without permission of the copyright owner for the non-profit purposes of criticism, comment, education, scholarship, and research under the "Fair Use" provisions of U.S. Government copyright laws and they may not be distributed further without permission of the copyright owner. Peace Corps Online does not vouch for the accuracy of the content of the postings, which is the sole responsibility of the copyright holder.
Story Source: Cleveland Plain Dealer
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Philippines; Business; Service; Art; Folk Art
PCOL40787
04