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Area couple turns metal into art

When it comes to art Robin and Glenn Falkowski like to dig out a cutting torch and welder and get to work creating metal designs. The couple operate on a acreage northwest of the city, although Robin is a relative newcomer to the area.

When it comes to art Robin and Glenn Falkowski like to dig out a cutting torch and welder and get to work creating metal designs.
The couple operate on a acreage northwest of the city, although Robin is a relative newcomer to the area.
Robin is originally from Newfoundland, and moved to Manitoba in 1997.
鈥淚 was living in Manitoba and working in Northern Alberta in 2008, where I met my future husband Glenn on the job site in 2010,鈥 she explained.
Robin is Red Seal Journeymen mobile crane operator and Glenn is a Red Seal Journeymen welder fabricator.
Glenn was born and raised in Yorkton, and owned the farm the couple are on today.
鈥淚 moved in with him in 2010 and that's pretty much where our story begins,鈥 said Robin.
When you look at the couple's job descriptions it might not be a huge surprise that when they started creating, it was with metal.
鈥淚n our downtime from the construction industry, we started creating items using scrap metal,鈥 said Robin. 鈥淚t was around 2017 that I had asked Glenn to create something for me to hold my glasses, as well as some kind of a stand to hold open my cook books while in the kitchen.
鈥淕lenn came up with the "Fork man" and "Spoon man" made from -- you guessed it -- forks and spoons.
鈥淗e created a couple more and I decided to try selling them at a outdoor farmers market that summer. It was a great hit, and from the response of the public, we saw there was an interest in unique items like this.
鈥淔riends and family had asked us for various items to be created, so it kind of took off from there.
鈥淛ust like the Domino effect, once we got started it kept going.鈥
It helped that both Glenn and Robin discovered they are crafty minded people.
鈥淲here someone would look at something like a turbocharger from a vehicle, we see a snail, or a starter from a motorcycle engine, we see a flower,鈥 said Robin.
Like a good oiled machine, the couple work as a duo in creating the pieces.
鈥淲e work as a team when creating everything,鈥 said Robin. 鈥淚 don't do any of the welding, Glenn, being a welder for 30-plus years has the total responsibility of welding all the items together, and the fabricating comes from both of us.
鈥淚'll lay out an creation and he'll tweak it.
鈥淥nce we get in the shop, and our minds start spinning, we start assembling an idea, and we feed off each other to come up with some pretty cool ideas -- like my favourite pieces - The Heavy Metal Band.
As it turns out pistons are a favourite item to turn into art.
鈥淲e were at a Bike Shop in Regina a few years ago, promoting a custom bar stool we had built and the owner had showed us a picture of a 'Piston Head', and Glenn tried his hand at carving his first skull and it took off from there,鈥 said Robin.
Each Piston Head is hand carved and not one of their pieces are identical.
鈥淓very single piece we create are different in someway,鈥 offered Robin.
As for what to create, the metal often seems to speak to the couple.
鈥淥ur inspiration sometimes come from looking at the actual scrap metal,鈥 said Robin. 鈥淟ike a sculptor sees something in a rock, we see the same in scrap metal.
鈥淲e also get our inspiration from every day objects made from wood or plastic and then an idea will hit us that we could make something like it out of metal.鈥
Some of their efforts are more inspirational than artistic.
鈥淥ur most popular items we've sold to date would be the 'love' word made mostly from railway spikes and words spelled out of bolts like 'home sweet home' and 'she shed'.
Robin said for them it's just about making something special.
鈥淲e really enjoy creating very detailed pieces that bring life to each item,鈥 she said.
鈥淲e do enjoy creating small items for a persons desk top, to the larger items like our custom built furniture.鈥
For example they currently have a chrome throne chair built from a motorcycle exhaust and a coffee table built from motorcycle parts, that Robin notes, 鈥渢ruly needs to be seen to fully appreciate the detail that went into making them.鈥
And then there is the 'guardian of the gate' that Robin said does garner a lot of attention too.
鈥淪omething that catches a lot of attention is the seven-foot tall robot that we have as a guard at a gate in our yard,鈥 she said.
Robin said while social media has been great for sharing creations, she truly wishes people get to see them close up and in person.
鈥淧eople look at and 'like' the pictures we post on Facebook, but honestly seeing a picture just isn't the same as seeing our items in person,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou can physically feel how heavy these things are, and see how some of the items actually move.鈥
As they get more art out in the world, more ideas and demands have come along too.
鈥淲e have been doing some local craft/trade shows over the last few years and the interest has been growing each show,鈥 said Robin. 鈥淧eople are now asking us to do particular pieces for them, like house address numbers for example.
鈥淏asically we tell people, if you have an idea, tell us about it, and if we have the metal, we can create it.
鈥淥ur next big project we have coming up is a custom made double size bed frame made from motorcycle exhaust parts.鈥
The couple's studio is open by appointment for anyone to head out and check things out in person.
You can find them on Facebook under G&R Custom Creations.


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