Meet Tony Hunt
He is the production manager, runs the
factory and is also completing his apprenticeship.
Tony
Hunt tried a lot of things before settling on the furniture
trade.
“I left school at 15, and did courses in all sorts of
things, like engineering, to find out what I liked,” he
says.
“Then I got into manufacturing Customwood furniture, but
that wasn’t really what I wanted either.”
What Tony wanted was to work with solid wood, and seven
years ago he joined Forest Furniture in Hamilton,
manufacturer of high-quality rimu and macrocarpa furniture.
Tony is the company’s production manager, but at the same
time as running the factory, he’s also been completing an
apprenticeship.
“I really wanted to do it,” he says. “I love working with
wood, and it gives me something to fall back on. It’s good
to have a trade qualification.”
Now aged 29, Tony is about to finish his apprenticeship.
He’s become so good at his trade that judges in the
recent Top Furniture Apprentice Awards were prompted to
award a special merit prize for his rimu wine chest.
“It had to be 600mm by 600mm, so we were limited in what
we could make,” he said. “I made a wine chest. It holds five
bottles of wine, and the glasses are in the lid. Underneath,
in the base, is a hidden drawer that holds a cheese board,
cheese knife and coasters.”
Tony says he has no regrets about taking on an
apprenticeship as an older worker.
“I was a bit older than most apprentices, but it has been
well worth it,” he says. |