Located in central Kentucky, Berea College, founded in 1855, is the oldest integrated and coeducational higher-learning institution in the South and has been tuition-free since 1892. Students work 10 to 15 hours a week at campus jobs to offset housing and meal costs. In the school’s Student Craft program, approximately 100 students a year learn craft skills alongside their pursuit of degrees in areas such as business administration and biology.
Several changes have occurred in Student Craft recently, marking a new chapter for the 133-year-old program and helping it earn Cooper Hewitt’s National Design Award for product design in February.
“Eight years ago, 95 percent of what Berea Student Craft made was what I would describe as historical or heritage objects, many of which had been made for between 50 and 90 years,” says Aaron Beale, associate vice president of Berea’s Student Craft program.
Today, though, that percentage has been flipped, with goods like woven rainbow baby blankets, squiggle-handled brooms, electric wooden banjos, and two-tone ceramic bowls being, as Aaron describes, “designed by the students themselves or with their strong, direct input.”
Max Hendry works on a twisty broom.
