Quality Not Quantity
We are passionate about the craft of upholstery here at Tresithick - this is why we are driven by
quality not quantity.
It matters far more to us that we deliver unrivalled tuition that adds real value by making the time to
properly equip our students with the skills and knowledge they come to us to learn, than we allow
ourselves to be driven by financial considerations.
Only this way can we achieve the quality of upholstery tuition that we believe our students should
rightly expect. We know that hanging around surrounded by lots of other students in the room
twiddling your thumbs whilst you wait your ‘turn’ to snatch a share of your tutor’s time and
attention is very frustrating - we’ve all been on those courses!
A tutor spread too thinly, trying to keep all those plates spinning, continually rushing about trying to
help too many students at the same time is not what we are about.
This is why we limit numbers to no more than 4 students in any one course week.
Upholstery is a craft, a handcraft, that requires time to understand and execute if the best results
are to be achieved. As with the majority of true handcrafts - and the clue is in the name - so much of
it is tactile, it’s about feeling the work; you can’t throw a pot or sculpt a statue without having your
hands in physical contact with the materials. In just the same way, you can’t properly upholster a
chair or sofa without feeling it. What should the stuffing feel like? How firm should an edge roll be?
How should the fabric be tensioned and what is the right amount of tension? All these (and so many
more) questions can only be answered when you have a tutor right next to you who has the time to
explain and demonstrate the various techniques and processes fully and provide that baseline, that
frame of reference. You will be able to see how much pressure is being applied, you can feel what
your tutor feels when it is demonstrated in person, in front of you. Not only that, but of course,
should you stray from the taught techniques and procedures then a tutor who has time to properly
and continuously monitor student progress will spot this and be able to step in to get you back on
the ‘straight and narrow’ before any problems arise.
Teaching in its most basic sense is, after all, the transfer of knowledge, skill and experience from one
person to another; from tutor to student. This is most effective when the tutor-to-student ratio is
appropriately set and managed. If we could provide one-to-one tuition at a reasonable cost for
everybody, we would. Unfortunately, this is unrealistic and so we try to do the next best thing by
limiting numbers to the minimum needed to support our operation.
If you will permit me to use the cliché ‘the devil is in the detail’, this is so true in upholstery.
Distance learning via the internet will get you so far, but with a handcraft such as upholstery, the
finer points of detail, the ‘touchy feely’ bits and the tricks of the trade can only be conveyed if the
tutor has the time and is on hand to actively teach the techniques and guide the student through
their project as they are working on it.
With groups of only 4 students, we make sure we have that time.










