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RH Lee
RH Lee
01:17

RH Lee

Offerman Woodshop

Los Angeles, CA USA

"Woodworking is all about trial and error...you make a lot of terrible mistakes, but that’s the process of learning."

Career Roadmap

RH's work combines: Art, Design, and Building Things

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Day In The Life

Shop Manager

I design and build things out of wood and teach people woodworking skills.

03:31

Day In The Life Of A Professional Woodworker

My Day to Day

Whether I'm working on my own projects or teaching people, a great day is when a project starts to come together in assembly. What started out as a rough pile of sticks at the beginning of the day begins to take form and transform into a functional and beautiful object.

Skills & Education

Advice for getting started

When I was first starting out, there were times when I wasn't taken seriously. Some of it was because I was new and my skills weren't up to snuff. Other times, it was because I was young, small-statured, and a woman. I had to just improve my skills until I was taken seriously.

Here's the path I took:

  • High School

  • Bachelor's Degree

    Art/Art Studies, General

    Brown University

  • Bachelor's Degree

    Philosophy

    Brown University

  • Vocational

    Furniture Design and Manufacturing

    College of the Redwoods

Here's the path I recommend for someone who wants to be a Shop Manager:

High School

Vocational: Woodworking, General

Learn more about different paths to this career

Life & Career Milestones

My path in life took a while to figure out

  • 1.

    Grew up in Berkeley, CA in a family of academics—admits she is one of the only people in her entire extended family that didn’t pursue an academic discipline.

  • 2.

    At age 7, she took a kids’ carpentry class, which sparked her interest in art and building things.

  • 3.

    Attended Brown University in Rhode Island where she received her degree in art and philosophy (semiotics).

  • 4.

    While in college, she would build sets for the theater department, which she says satisfied her interests in visual arts and literature/philosophy.

  • 5.

    After graduating, she moved back to California, where she continued working as a scenic carpenter and got a job building interactive science exhibits for the Exploratorium Museum in San Francisco.

  • 6.

    She took a three week summer course in fine woodworking at College of the Redwoods, which was instrumental in improving her skills and transitioning her craft from scenic work to fine furniture.

  • 7.

    In 2008, she moved to Los Angeles where she took a job running the Offerman Woodshop, a woodworking collective owned by actor and comedian Nick Offerman.

  • 8.

    She is also the program director of the non-profit Would Works and teaches woodworking in the School of Art at California State University, Long Beach.

Defining Moments

How I responded to discouragement

  • THE NOISE

    Messages from Peers:

    You don't have the skills.

  • How I responded:

    When I was first starting out, there were times when I wasn't taken seriously. Some of it was because I was new and my skills weren't up to snuff. Other times, it was because I was young, small-statured, and a woman. I had to just improve my skills until I was taken seriously.

Experiences and challenges that shaped me

Click to expand

  • Being a woman in this line of work can definitely be a hurdle. I've overcome it by finding other female mentors along the way.

  • It's sometimes important to diversify when working in a creative field. I took on teaching gigs in order to have a more regular paycheck.