Walk into any home improvement store, and you’re immediately confronted with a space and industry built for one certain demographic: men.

The size of a brick. The weight of cement bags. The grip size of power tools. They’re all “designed for the male body,” said Erinn Carter, co-founder of Frailty Myths, an organization that provides workshops centered on leadership, diversity, equity and inclusion.

Carter and her team have set out to help make women and members of the LGBTQ community feel comfortable and accepted in these male-centered spaces – particularly through woodworking workshops. 

They are among a group of artisans who are opening doors for more LGBTQ and female woodworkers to enter the industry by increasing community visibility, growing online spaces and offering accessible workshops.

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In one of Frailty Myths’ classes on picking supplies at Home Depot, attendees are walked through how to respond when employees or other customers question their judgement because of their gender presentation. Carter and her co-founder, Georgia Faye Hirsty, said this workshop and others help dispel the assumption that woodworking is just for men.

“There is nothing about woodworking that is inherently masculine, and if you identify as feminine and you are woodworking, then that’s feminine,” Hirsty told USA TODAY.

Diverse woodworkers gain new spotlight

Women and gender nonconforming people have always been woodworkers – their work has just been minimized and called different names throughout history, said Deirdre Visser, author of “Joinery, Joists and Gender: A History of Woodworking for the 21st Century.”