A R
Archer Ltd

Finest Quality Bone Lace Bobbins
About Us

Tony Archer - Bobbin making Suffolk 1986

The inspiration for my Rapunzel bobbin - carved by my father in the
early 1980's.

Bobbins that didn't make the cut. It takes practice....!

Keeping up the tradition - a staff training day - 2009
A
R Archer takes its name from my father Anthony Archer. An accomplished and
much respected craftsman, he spent many years making furniture before then making the slightly unusual transition to becoming a maker
of chess sets. These he sold around the world but, being before the days of
the world wide web, getting known was an expensive and far trickier affair
than it is today. It was during these years that he learnt the fine turning
skills that would later serve him so well as a bobbin maker.
He turned his
talents to bobbin making in the late 1970’s after a chance enquiry from a
customer in his shop. Within three months of making his first wooden bobbin
he had to start a waiting list and it was only shortly after this time he
embarked on making his first bone bobbin. Within a relatively short period of time the
demand for bone bobbins far outstripped that of the wooden bobbins
and turning to the
exclusive production of bone bobbins the business
was in need of an extra pair of hands. It was at this time that my
mother Susan Archer joined the business and took on the role of
preparing the bone blanks and then painting the engraved bobbins.
By
the mid 1980’s there was a waiting list of two years and the only
way of hoping to get a bobbin sooner was to find them at one of the
half dozen or so lace days they attended every year. I know these
were times that both my mother and father thoroughly enjoyed but
sadly in 1990 my father was diagnosed with a terminal illness which
left him unable to work with almost immediate effect. It was at this time that I stepped into the breach and took on
the rather daunting challenge of working to my father’s standards. I
had grown up around the tools of his workshop and when I left school
I spent many a happy hour being taught the finer points of turning.
In the last couple of years of his life he taught me the skill of
freehand engraving which, little did we realise then, was rather
sadly in the nick of time. We were fortunate that my father
was with us for a further year and in this time I also had the
benefit of being able to use him as the ultimate quality control for
my work. In early 1991 my father died and I carried on the business
as a partnership with my mother until the mid 1990’s when she
decided it was time to hang up her paint brush and devote more time
to her life long passion of gardening.
I now run the business on my own albeit with a helping hand from
my wife Vicky who keeps on top of the administration for me. Over
the past 19 years I am proud to say that I have more than doubled
the range of bobbins to over 200 designs available in my current
catalogue. I like to think that I do justice to the much
respected work of my father and follow in his tradition of combining
quality with innovative design - not to mention the element of
humour that appears in some designs of which I know he would have
whole heartedly approved.
Another aspect of the business that has changed is the waiting
list. A two year wait was, I felt, an unreasonable amount of time to
ask people to be patient so it was with reluctance that we gave up
attending lace days and used the time saved to cut the waiting list.
This did have a beneficial effect but it was only with the
introduction of the Bobbin-a-Month Club in the late nineties that it
was really brought down and I’m happy to say that in the last year
we have managed to achieve a much more acceptable eight to twelve
weeks (see page 20 of the catalogue).
I hope this brief history of the business is of interest - in
recent times I’ve been contacted by a growing number of people
seeking to know more due to an increasing level of interest in
Archer bobbins on internet auction sites. I thought therefore that
this would be a good place to explain how Archer bobbins came about,
who my father was and how I fit into the picture. I hope you enjoy this site and if you have any comments or
feedback please get in touch.
Ben Archer

My father was keen to get me started early, Norfolk 1968

Just a few pieces from one of my favourite chess sets - alas it
was sold in the 1970's

Very early Tony Archer bobbins -probably from the late 1970's - early
1980's

Me