Where beauty meets efficiency
Our own design, and the oar that built our reputation. The Shaw & Tenney Spoon is a narrow-blade spoon oar, slightly wider in the middle of the blade, and it has been the right choice for casual and recreational rowing on pulling boats and fine rowing craft for generations.
Spoon oars are 20% more efficient than flat blades, and the Shaw & Tenney design earns every bit of that advantage. The narrow profile and curvature of the blade make it exceptionally forgiving in rough water: where a wide blade would dig and catch, the S&T Spoon skips cleanly over the tops of waves, keeping your stroke smooth and your hands in control. If you row in open water, tidal rivers, or anywhere conditions can turn quickly, this is the blade for you.
Available in lengths from 6'6" through 8'6", the narrow blade is well suited to those lengths and proportioned beautifully on the oar. For oars over 8'6", we recommend our Wide Blade Spoons, which will be more effective and better proportioned for larger watercraft at those lengths.
Each pair is handcrafted to order in our shop on the banks of the Penobscot River in Orono, Maine. They are shaped, finished, and leathered the same way we have been doing it since 1858.
Optional inlaid tips in cherry, mahogany, or walnut, are available and highly recommended. The hardwood tip is set with its grain running perpendicular to the grain of the oar blade, the same cross-grain principle used in fine furniture joinery, making a split at the tip virtually impossible. They also look fantastic. Read more here.
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Specs
- Blade profile: narrow carved spoon shape, widest in the middle of the blade.
- Grip: unvarnished. Read why here.
- Available lengths: 6' through 8'6". Custom sizes available, email info@shawandtenney.com. Our oar sizing formula and chart is linked below, under the "add to cart" button.
- Wood species: available in spruce only.
- Finish: one hand-brushed sealer coat of light varnish, followed by two dips in the varnish tank. Hand-sanded between coats. This process equals approximately seven hand-applied coats. Glossy finish only. The best finish in the business.
- Leathering: highly recommended, either by us or sew your own. Bronze oarlocks will ruin the varnish on the first row without leathers.
- Engraving: available on the end of the spoon blade only. Due to the curved shape, the set-up time is considerably longer than when engraving paddles. Instructions available here, pricing starts at $35 for small phrases and $50 for images, priced per oar.
- Handcrafted to order in Orono, Maine.
- Lead time: Approximately three to four weeks in the off season, and up to six to seven weeks in the busy season. If you have a hard deadline, please let us know.
Priced per pair.
Our History
While technically founded in 1858, this hand painted sign dug up from the archives shows that the company was actually doing business two years before that. Either way, we're still the second oldest manufacturer of marine products in the United States today.
From our simple workshop on the banks of the Penobscot River, we still employ time-honored manufacturing traditions. Here, a long time Shaw & Tenney craftsman sculpts an oar on a drum sander that’s more than 100 years old.
Our oars and paddles are all made to order right here, in our Orono, Maine workshop. Meticulously hand sewing oar leathers takes years (and years) of practice.
We’ve been dipping our paddles the same way for over 100 years. Of course there are probably easier ways to do it, but we’re convinced there’s no better.