Wall Hung Table
Wall Hung table
Veneer made from scrap lumber
Veneer Furniture Plywood contributes to a perception that veneer means a low quality, easily marred, low cost wooden objects. This perception contrasts historic use of thin wood slices that showcases the beauty of woods that are either rare, expensive, and/or possess natural artistic qualities. Adhering these slices to larger surfaces expand the size of the furniture that can use these unique natural resources. Additionally, by arranging grain orientation and color prior to the gluing, new visual appearances develop that are not available...
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Wall hung table The client wanted a custom fitted reproduction of a foyer hall wall hung table she had seen in a magazine. The piece was scaled from the photograph and the length modified to fit its future home. The bow front wall hung table is constructed from white oak. The table’s apron consists of steam bent pieces attached to a torsion box frame to provide superior stability and strength. A solid white oak panel tops the apron. The original piece was supported on the wall with two heavy corbel brackets. A steam bent curved...
read moreMahogany table update
Solid Mahogany table In 1956 my parents bought “Craftique” a antique reproduction of a drop leaf table and china hutch. The pieces were certified as solid genuine mahogany by the Mahogany Association (Certificate Number SO 138859). The china hutch has remained functional by today’s standards but the table’s space saving drop leaf design meant the table had “too many legs (8 total)” to allow a large gathering from sitting comfortably. When the “she who must be obeyed” and I added new chairs to the dining room suite, we...
read moreMission Style
What I think of as mission style may be classified by others as Arts and Crafts. I view the style as “square” highlighted with arches and spindles substitues for solid panels. White Oak was wood of choice for the majority of furniture made of this style. The examples shown here used American Black Walnut instead. The plant stand/side table was originally designed because a client had an extra tile left over from a renovation of fireplace surround that I did. The tile inlay was the perfect protective surface for the plant...
read moreBreakfast nook
Take a piece of wood and expose it to heat (steam) and the lignin that holds together the cellulose fibers will soften. When the wood is placed in compression it will bend (within the confines wood species fiber elasticity) to a new shape. When it cools and the lignin “hardens”, the piece will retain the new shape. This characteristic has been used in chairmaking (Windsor chairs bow backs are a perfect example), boat building, cane making, archery bows and other furniture. Bending allows furniture to escape the rectilinear...
read moreNatural wood slabs
Natural wood slabs can sometimes be found if you have a relationship with small private sawmills. Natural wood slabs will have “raw edges” that once were the growing bark edge of the tree. As the word “Slab” suggests, pieces usually exceed 1 inch thick. Some pieces might be cutoffs where wood of no commercial value is removed before the “real money” sawing starts. It is not uncommon to find knots, branch burls, rot, mineral staining or defect resulting in holes in natural wood slabs. These defects may...
read moreInside-out barrel
Have to admit I stole the concept for the design from a design spotlight in Fine Woodworking (Adrian Ferrazzutti page 83 April 2012). It was the most challenging project I have encountered in nearly 50 years of destroying forest resources. 16 ribs were steam bent from 3/8 inch cherry and white oak 2 inches wide slats. The fourteen inch radius was an easy bent. The cherry and oak pieces were bent together (cherry to the form, oak away from form) and the resulting “matched pair” formed a good glue bonding surface. I found that...
read moreReclaimed wood – Trash to Treasure
Reclaimed wood can sometimes found sitting on the curb awaiting trash pickup. This piece of broken and abused furniture was never a fine piece of craftsmanship. I guess it was a tourist purchase while on a vacation in the Caribbean or Central American resort. Sanding off the top finish showed a grain pattern and color hidden by the original maker. Cutting out the interesting part and placing it on a new base made it something worth the effort to pick it up off the curb trash pile and give it a new life.
read moreSandstone and steam bending wooden table pieces
Six clear white oak boards are steam bend to a 14 inches radius. Three pieces 2.5 inches wide are glued to form a triangular apron to support the top. Triangular blocks are added at the intersection to help attachment of the three 1.5 inches legs. Small pegs are added to help epoxy the top in place. The sandstone is easily cut with a diamond blade and the edges eased with a diamond rasp.
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