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I would like to briefly introduce myself. My name is Peter
Poanessa and I am just a regular guy with a love of the
design/build process. I am also owner and founder of Keene
Signworx. I studied art for a year at the University of New
Hampshire, until I got "a gut feeling" that I was only going to
end up teaching, something I didn’t want, so I quit and gave in
to a young mans itch to wander. During a stint as a salmon
fisherman in Alaska, I watched an old sign painter write
freehand along a boat’s bow. It was like watching someone play
the guitar. I was mesmerized, as it didn’t look possible to train
your hands to do that. That was when I got the sign-making itch. |
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| I came into
the sign trade from a background in wooden boat repair, home building, furniture, cabinet work,
and welding (a real jack of all trades). After a ten year stint as a commercial
fisherman I enrolled at the Butera School of Art, a commercial art
school in Boston, were I studied, graphic design, and sign-related
courses like lettering, layout and design. Shortly after graduating I
started my own sign company. Keene Signworx has grown into one of the
country’s top specialists in carved and sandblasted dimensional signs,
and after more than 20 years in the sign making business, I still love
what I do. |
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Our humble beginning
was in a small 600 square foot shop in the woods of Walpole,
NH in 1985. There I did everything by hand. Wood and paint
were our materials of choice, and a chisel and brush were
the tools. The design process was a drawing table, pencil
and straight edge. Once our design was done and approved we
would blow it up to a full size pattern with a projector.
In 1994 after selling my house and shop to finance a brewpub
venture, I moved the shop to its current location at 690
Court Street in Keene. In 1997, I hired Mary McCord as a
part time worker, and ten years later, she is a partner in
Keene Signworx. She handles all of our painting and finish
work and has her hands in most of what goes on here. |
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Over time we adopted new
technology.
It was with much hesitation at first since we had so much invested in
our hand skills and process. However, by the early nineties we were so
busy we knew we needed to invest in streamlining our production. First
it was a computer design system, then film cutting plotters, and finally
in 1997 we were one of the first carved sign shops in the country to
adopt a new machine called a CNC router with 3D modeling and machining
software. This was a major
upgrade that opened up a world of design and fabricating possibilities.
By 2002, we had taken all the space
left in our building and have had to streamline our shop to make the
best use of our 2400 square foot space.
Today we use a wide
variety of materials from 23K gold leaf and synthetic sign panels, to
clear grain mahogany, copper and bronze to produce signs. I believe we
are producing our best work yet and the computer systems are as at home
in our shop as the table saw. We continue to be passionate about the
trade and look forward to coming to work each morning. |