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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course provides an introduction to and overview of building assessment procedures used in current historic preservation practice. Methods used to assess and rehabilitate building materials using traditional building skills and craft will be investigated.
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0.00 - 1.50 Credits
The course includes the philosophy of historic preservation and hands-on traditional practices for repairing and maintaining antique furniture, including original finishes as an integral part of antique furniture history. Participants are encouraged to bring a small or medium piece of furniture to repair and refinish.
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0.00 - 2.00 Credits
The Windsor chair style has endured for three centuries and is considered a high fashion chair today. The merit of the Windsor Chair is its beauty, simple lines, dignified, attractiver and decorative appearance. The participants in the 5 day workshop will build a Windsor chair from log, splitting, to shaping, to lathe turning and to assembling the finish product.
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0.00 - 1.50 Credits
This course is a hands-on workshop for the traditional skills of millwork/ wood work and wood window fabrication, repair and restoration. The course includes the philosophy of historic preservation and traditional practices for the repair and replication of historic moldings, millwork, and wood windows. This course covers many aspects of millwork such as replicating and producing moldings, coping and mitering base and crown moldings, using historic wooden molding planes, fabricating windows sash and muntins. The course covers the use of liquid wood and epoxies to restore and preserve decayed moldings and window parts.
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0.00 - 1.50 Credits
This course is a hands-on introduction to the theory and practice of historic landscape preservation. Instruction includes visits to historic properties in Sanpete County to de-construct historic landscapes by examining and documenting landscape features to scale. Participants will attempt to determine the origin of the matherials and building methods based on their experience and knowledge. Participants will apply what they learn by helping to construct a landscape feature.
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0.00 - 1.50 Credits
This course is a hands-on introduction to knowledge and acquired training regarding gravestone preservation. This course will demonstrate and perform treatments for all of the most common gravestone preservation dilemmas including cleaning, resetting tilted stones, and rejoining fractured tablet stones which are common throughout many parts of America. Proper documentation and recording of the restoration process is also part of the course. (Cross-listed with BCCM 2776)
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0.00 - 1.50 Credits
This course is a workshop for teaching traditional building skills of architectural blacksmithing at a more advanced level than TBSI 2636. The course includes artistic design, collaring, mounting foot, up set square corner, tenons, rivet heads and several scrolls like bevel, fishtail, half penny and ribbon. This course also exposes students to jigs and specialty tools along with lap and drop tong forge welding. Students will meet for a three hour lecture preceding the three day workshop.
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0.00 - 1.50 Credits
This course is a workshop for teaching traditional building skills of wood furniture at a more advanced level than TBSI 2596. The course covers the aesthetic philosophy of historic furniture and the construction of historic wood furniture such as chairs, cabinets, chests, and small tables. A furniture project is completed during each workshop which exposes students to a large variety of wood working techniques. Students will meet for a three hour lecture preceding the three day workshop.
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0.00 - 1.50 Credits
This course offers a workshop for teaching traditional building skills of log cabin restoration at a more advanced level than TBSI 2586. The course teaches traditional practices of log cabin repair in using epoxy, daubing, chinking, dutchman and crown log replacement. It also teaches the process of jacking up and removing a sill log, spandrell log and a mid wall log. Students will meet for a three hour lecture preceding the three day intensive workshop.
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1.00 Credits
This course will provide international students with the knowledge, attitudes, skills, and awareness to adapt to college life at Snow College. The course is designed with multiple sections, which will help orient student to college life and American culture. These learning sections will address the following issues: adjusting to American college culture, campus services, and US immigration law as it pertains to International students studying in the US. This course may be repeated for credit. (This course is cross-listed with ESL 1000.)
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