There are more than fifty rooms here, all needing wooden furniture.
With wooden furniture, the rooms finally have a homely feel.
Otherwise, this place would still look only like a primitive tribe.
This means everyone needs to make a lot of furniture.
More than fifty small square tables, big enough for people to play cards.
Over a hundred small chairs.
More than fifty long benches.
Over fifty large and small cabinets.
Ma Lin explained to 'Little Tree' that to improve craftsmanship, it must be tackled in two ways: more hands-on work and endurance to fatigue, and more learning of mathematics.
Only with good mathematics can one comprehend difficult problems.
The more hands-on, the more skillful the hand, and the more flexible the thinking.
Ma Lin didn't know how the ancient palaces of China were designed and made; he only knew that carpentry was the main force, and they were formed by many wooden parts interlocking with each other.
