sixstringsamurai said:
Once a week stop by and ask if they are taking on apprentices, the education you would get is worth more than any paycheck.
if you are persistent, and it make take some time they'll see you are serious.
one thing....
DO NOT go in flipping knowledge to guys with a LIFETIME of experience over you.
I'll give you the best piece of advice my Grandfather gave me on the subject:
Keep your eyes and ears open and your mouth SHUT, and you'll learn all you will ever need to that way.
Cagey, Blackdog was spot on, shop floors always need to be swept, trash needs to go out...
Wax on, Wax off Daniel San....
+1
When I was a :binkybaby:, an old-timer once told me "Take the cotton outa yer ears, put it in yer mouth, an' ya just might learn somethin'!"
I wasn't as young as you, early twenties, when I lived in Las Vegas. I'd go to Mahoney's Pro Music & Drum Shop and hang out at the tech's workshop, lolling over the counter, watchin' him and asking questions for hours at a time. I'd show him stuff I was "workin' on"; hack-jobs all the way. He'd tell me how to fix my "f"-up's, but I knew a better way. Once I came in and asked to buy a sheet of pickguard mat'l for a project I had cookin'.
-He wouldn't sell it to me! -Gave me a sheet of tissue paper and a ship's curve and said "make an acceptable pattern first, then I
might sell ya a piece". I think I went through half a dozen sheets of paper and an equal amount of trips to and from Maryland Parkway before I got my eager little hands on a bit of white/black/white vinyl! "-What an A-hole!" I thought.
I could never thank that patient and caring Tech enough for the invaluable lessons he gave me. -For free, at that. Why did he do it? The only valuable thing I brought to the arrangement was that I was persistent; I showed up.