And the adventure begins
After delivering the side table and confirming it met all the technical requirements of colour, look, feel, etc. I embarked on the daunting task of making the rest of the set. A trestle table, four bowback Windsor chairs and a Windsor-style bench (and yes I know there is no such thing, but stylistically speaking it is a Windsor).
I took a somewhat random approach to things in order to mill up the larger pieces of material that were underfoot in the shop:
Let's get started on the chairs...
Gluing up the seats was the first step in breaking down material, as I needed the widest boards for this. This is birch and will be stained dark brown like the tabletop. |
All the seats, with the cherry one I will build the prototype from on top. Lots of turning for the legs, so I like to get started ASAP to break up the wrist-slitting monotony involved! |
All the seats cut to rough shape, drilled for legs and bowback, and most of the legs turned rough to 1-3/4" round |
The easiest piece is the table:
The trestles with a coat of paint and the final fitting of the cross-piece which will hold them together. Just need to cut the mortise for the key to hold it together. |
Table base complete, in the "paint booth", amazing how simple these are built. Pretty easy to bang together in about 2 days. |
Now for the tabletop
The top glued up and the breadboard ends rough cut |
Marking the mortise on the end pieces; this ebony marking gauge (sorry mate - cutting gauge) was a gift from Chris Vesper and yes it is as nice to use as it is to look at... |
You think I am going to cut these by hand? 5/16" mortises for the table's tenon to slide into |
All the table parts ready for me to cut the tongue - as soon as the new edge guide for my router gets into Lee Valley - anytime now would be nice... |
Back to the lathe
The turning for the chairs are significant, there are 13 different turned elements for each chair. The leg design chosen has a number of complex elements (at least complex for me with limited spindle turning experience). It was time to turn the first leg to work out my strategy for efficient turning and confirm the paper measurements look good in actual material.
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