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| Interviewed
in this profile: |
| Deloris Tarzan Ament
Art Critic/Author |
| Ralph Anderson
Architect |
| Jonathan Cohen
Furniture Designer/Maker |
| Edith Fairhall, Artist
Evert’s Significant Other |
| Damien Farwell
Custom Furniture Maker
Apprentice 1996-98 |
| Cheryl Peterson
First Director
NW Gallery of Fine Woodworking |
Neil Planert
Shop Foreman
1978 – present |
Evert Sodergren |
Norman Warsinske
Interior Designer
Student 1957-58 |
David Weatherford, ASID
Student 1957-58 |
Thomas H. Young IV
Custom Furniture Maker
Apprentice 1992-96 |
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EVERT SODERGREN-Master Woodworker 2002,
28:35 "My father was only interested in
traditional design and I wasn’t satisfied with that. I would like
to make something that hasn’t been made before."– Evert
Sodergren
Born in 1920, a fourth generation furniture maker, Evert Sodergren grew
up in a family of Swedish immigrants in Seattle, Washington. From the
age of 15, working alongside his father, he learned both the art and economics
of building fine furniture. In 1939 he went to work at the Boeing Company
where for eight years he built test model aircraft -- exacting work done
to precise tolerances that was critical to the war effort. 
In the 1950’s, Sodergren Furniture, the custom shop he founded with
his father, began producing his original designs for modern furniture.
From his sojourn in the aircraft industry, he carried a dedication to
precision, advanced skills in metal fabrication (he creates almost all
of the hardware for his furniture), and innovative ideas using techniques
and materials developed for aircraft.
It was unheard of at that time for a custom shop to create work on speculation.
The custom market was for kitchen cabinets and historic reproductions
produced on commission. Evert’s pioneering efforts to get contemporary
woodworking in front of the public grew into the acceptance of woodworking
as an art to be displayed in galleries and exhibitions.
From 1952 – 1978 Evert taught furniture design and construction
to architecture, interior and industrial design students at the University
of Washington. But it is through maintaining the traditional apprenticeship
system in his own shop, that Evert Sodergren passes on the skills, high
standards, and survival techniques necessary for a life, lived well, in
the crafts.
Evert Sodergren maintains his shop, Sodergren Atelier, where he prides
himself on the ability to solve any design problem presented to him by
a client. He has worked with some of the finest architects and designers
in the region. For more information about his work, see his Web site: www.sodergrenfurniture.com
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