Skip to content

The Spirit of the 1890s is Alive in Washington’s Folk School Movement

DIY folk schools embrace rural living skills.

By Caroline Craighead August 18, 2017

Copy-of-P1010487

This article originally appeared in the August 2017 issue of Seattle magazine.

With life more fast-paced than ever, filled with smartphones, social media and next-day delivery, the idea of unplugging from technology and returning to a simpler way of life has some appeal. This longing may be why folk schools are popping up across the country, including in the Puget Sound region.

Started in mid-19th-century Denmark as an alternative to traditional academic schools, folk schools offer classes in rural arts and living skills. “We need more people who know how to make [these crafts] that are one generation away from being lost arts,” says Stacey Waterman-Hoey, founder of the Olympia-based Arbutus Folk School, which offers classes in blacksmithing, stone carving and fiber arts.

Similar classes are offered at the Turtleback Folk School on Orcas Island, which opened in March, and CedarRoot School in Jefferson County, founded in 2010. The schools emphasize skills-based, hands-on learning, such as treating illness with herbal medicine and the practice of saving seeds, concepts that might have been familiar to a student’s great-grandparent. Children’s courses focus on the outdoors and interacting with nature.

At these schools, what was once considered old is made new again. “The metal, wood, bone and stone that we have interacted with for millennia as a species is still relevant today,” says Scott Brinton, director and cofounder of CedarRoot School. 

Arbutus Folk School
$18–$500. Prices vary based on course.
Olympia, 610 Fourth Ave. E; 360.867.8815

Cedarroot School
$35–$490. Prices and locations vary based on course.
Nordland; 360.379.5413

Turtleback Folk School
$0–$120. Prices and locations vary based on course, scholarships available.
Orcas Island

 

Follow Us

Rearview Mirror: A Better Bath, a Bright Riesling, and Les Mis

Rearview Mirror: A Better Bath, a Bright Riesling, and Les Mis

Things I did, saw, ate, learned, or read in the past week (or so).

Moon Bath Last week, I went to a spring workshop at SLU BRU, the newish beer hall at Dexter Yard in South Lake Union. Open since November 2025 and operated by Gourmondo, it’s definitely ready for nicer weather, with big garage-style windows that open onto the sidewalk. The night was hosted by Orange Moon, the…

Studio Sessions: Lauren Boilini

Studio Sessions: Lauren Boilini

Seattle artist Lauren Boilini talks about animal behavior, field research, and the whale fall installation she counts among her proudest works.

Lauren Boilini has spent years building dense, teeming painted worlds full of animals, movement, and tension. Her work often starts with close observation—time in the field and conversations with scientists—and turns that research into large-scale paintings that feel charged, layered, and alive. Born and raised in Bloomington, Indiana, Boilini studied painting and art history at…

The Story Behind the Bing Cherry

The Story Behind the Bing Cherry

A new picture book follows Ah Bing from orchard history into folklore.

Seattle illustrator Julia Kuo first came across Ah Bing in a history book. She was reading The Making of Asian America: A History when a detail caught her attention: the Bing cherry, the most popular sweet cherry in the United States and a signature fruit of the Pacific Northwest, was tied to a Chinese immigrant….

Staying in the Pocket with True Loves

Staying in the Pocket with True Loves

The Seattle funk powerhouse heads to Jazz Alley for five soulful nights.

If you were to pull aside any casual music fan and ask them to cite quintessential Seattle music, you’d get a lot of grunge, the indie-rock explosion and folk revival of the ‘00s and ‘10s, and maybe some of the hip-hop that came bursting from the underground in the last 15 years. Your average person…