Northwest Indiana
Woodworkers Association

Established 1990
MERRILLVILLE | It can be slow, painstaking work but members of the Northwest
Indiana Woodworkers Association make toys at Christmas for the joy of it and
for the pleasure it brings on the faces of toddlers.
The association met Thursday night at Pierce Middle School, and brought more
than 1,000 wooden toys that were made by members and displayed atop tables and
chairs in the school's cafeteria. Members were beginning the task of boxing up
the toys.
Each year, the association makes and distributes the toys to 15 organizations
throughout Northwest Indiana which, in turn, distribute the toys to needy
children.
Emery "Skip" Brazil and his wife, Claudia, of Valparaiso, said the
toys are generally made individually, then woodworkers come together and
invite friends to help sand, paint or varnish.
Skip said most of the work is done by hand, but this year the group
also bought more than 4,000 wheels. Brazil, who has a woodshop attached to his
house, said they spend plenty of time using a scroll saw, sanders or a drill
press to put the toys together. He pointed to a brightly painted circus train, which he said takes hours to
put together because each piece has to be cut individually.
Tables were loaded with all kinds of long-lasting, wooden toys, including
airplanes, a soft pink cradle holding a baby doll with handmade blankets, a
John Deere farm tractor and wagon, and a crayon tote filled with crayons and
coloring books.
Claudia Brazil said the work is a "good fit" for the couple, which
has been woodworking for 20 years and serve as co-chairmen of the
organization's toy committee.
David and Marcie White, of Cedar Lake, who are president and vice president,
respectively, said there are about five women in the association. Marcie, a surgical nurse at St. Margaret Mercy Healthcare Centers in
Dyer, said the work also is relaxing.
Nancy Distel, of Highland, said she and her husband, Merle, worked with
others; the men made the cradle and the women painted it and bought dolls for
it. Retired from Dawn Foods, Nancy said she isn't a member of the
association, but enjoys working with her husband and others on activities that
are worthwhile and social.