My biggest influence was spending a couple years working in two of the very few remaining traditional chair workshops in Great Britain. Chair making there was a separate trade from other types of furniture making, and even within the specific trade, it was divided between some different types. A guy that made all wooden chairs like Windsors, wouldn't likely be making the type of chairs that had upholstered seats, and the upholstered type makers were generally ranked as a higher order of craftsman. I wanted to learn both types of work, and was lucky to find some great places to do it after a lot of searching. A rich history for that profession there, and I worked in a town that once had been the center of the trade. On the surface it appeared like any small light industry town surrounded by farmlands and woods, but those woods were Beech, and they fueled a trade that produced more chairs than any other place in the world, on up to the early 20th century. I walked down the alleys of the old brick buildings that had once been chair shops, mostly that had become vacant by then, but the atmosphere was still there, and the great old chairs could still be seen in the pubs, etc. It was very inspirational for me as a young person wanting to learn the trade, and the places where i worked still employed a few very highly skilled people, sadly then a dying breed. There are lots of depths to the work, so many methods and techniques, and it stretches back for over three hundred years as the designs changed to suit a vast market through the various periods. I have much respect for the history of the trade, and the blokes that were a part of it.