Here's where you come to follow the progress of your piece of furniture in the shop. No, wood doesn't talk--or does it? Sure it does! As we work on your piece we learn things about where it's been, how it's been used, maybe even who (or what) has used it, and often about where it came from originally. It's a lot of fun and typically quite interesting.

This space also gives us a chance to let you know about any special experiences or progress related challenges. We try to chronicle work completed on your furniture whenever anything significant occurs. So there may not be an entry every day, but when we document them, we hope you will find these journal entries are fun, informative, purposeful, and creative.

So, have fun "listening" to our dialogue with your piece, as it is, it's Wood Talkin.
Email: woodtalkin@gmail.com

Monday, July 2, 2018

Ebony Over Red Oak with Reveals

Hi Everybody...This was a lot of work....and a lot of fun! 
My customer asked me to take a look at an oak bedroom suite he had acquired a decade and one-half ago--nine separate pieces. He explained how he was tired of the Red Oak motif and that he wanted to change it out for something darker. I looked at it and we discussed a couple alternatives. But because I know a finished sample is often helpful to visualize how the outcome might look, I suggested I could take a drawer, finish it, and return it for his consideration.
And that's what we did.




His oak set is indeed beautiful and very well made (i.e., Oak Interiors, www.fineoak.com). His pieces' corners, trim, and floor plates were punctuated with beautiful carvings--all of which would be covered up--muted--if I just stained these pieces black. So, I suggested that we "reveal" the carvings so that instead of muting them they were actually highlighted. And that's another reason why I thought it might
Hope Chest
be important--even necessary in this case--for him to see a sample  to whet his visual appetite. So I finished the face of a drawer that included some carvings and took it back to him a few days later. He really liked it. I recognized a fresh enthusiasm about what this effort might promise. So, we were off and running--or sort of.


Footboard
Those of you who may have been to my shop know I don't have room for a nine-piece bedroom suite. So, this effort became something of a game of "furniture tag," getting and finishing a couple pieces at a time, then carefully delivering them back and taking a few more back to the shop. Similarly, you've got to know that a dresser, for example, is not just "a dresser." In this case it was twelve drawer fronts, twelve drawer
Armoire Top
boxes, and a large structural box frame--26 separate pieces taking up space in the shop. Then, too, there were virtually stacks of brass hardware to be catalogued and stored during the finishing for each piece! The work took a


Armoire Base

little over a month--and all nine pieces were happily delivered home. See how the reveals turned out? You're not seeing all the pieces, but I think you can get the idea. Yes, there were a few surprises along the way, but all-in-all the project ended with happiness on both ends: I was happily able to make him happy... and his bedroom suite is black and beautiful!! Check out the pics of some of his pieces and let me know what you think.

That's Wood Talkin for today....are you listening?

Dick






Wednesday, June 27, 2018

French Provincial Styled Antique Writing Desk

Here's a really memorable repair.



My customer brought this fantastic hand-made French Provincial styled writing desk to the shop. Her family history goes back at least four generations in the Denver area. In this case we're talking about a gentleman who owned a store in lower downtown Denver in the 1860-1880 time frame. Cool stuff. This was his desk!


It belongs to my customer now...a great, great granddaughter? She explained how that when she occasionally needed to move it, the back left leg complained a lot, then...it fell off. That's memorable in and of itself, but upon close inspection of the broken area it was obvious to me that the top bulbus flare of the leg had long been the tasty dinner for some now long gone worms. Many years ago they had eaten themselves out of the wood and disappeared "into the night." (see pic below)




This beautiful piece is the handiwork of a fine craftsman similarly swallowed up into that long night. But his workmanship still sings loud and clear in the glory of this beautiful piece. So, in a response to the challenge he has introduced, and for my customer's sake--to repair his work and to save this beautiful desk--the question at hand is about what to do now?

I began the project pragmatically. I carefully removed the entire leg from the desk. Then, I carefully cut away the spongy portion of the worm eaten bulb from that leg. The picture (left below) shows this spongy cut-out. Below, I'm holding it in front of (juxtaposed on) the newly finished leg so you can see where it fit.
Freeing the leg from the desk offered me a lot more flexibility. I was able to utilize several machines in the shop, and it enhanced the gluing, clamping, and final finishing processes.







 I carefully fabricated a new piece from raw Ash wood stock and glued it into the original leg. I also had to fabricate the hip portion, as a separate piece in this case. (It had apparently dropped off and was lost from the leg years ago as the worms did their tunneling throughout the upper portion of that leg...see pic below.)
With these processes complete, the last challenge was to securely replace the leg back into the desk's frame and supporting structures.


 




So, is this a beauty or what?! I've offered a few pics just to savor the lines and the patina of this special piece.



This is Wood Talkin for today. Wood talks---how often do you listen?


                                                           Dick

Monday, June 25, 2018

A Broken Leg.. A Marvelous Old Couch

Hi Everybody. In this situation my customer called me to look at a recently recovered couch. These older pieces are often very well built inside and outside. They often incorporate a quality of materials and workmanship that puts much of todays similarly priced items to shame. This one is a great case in point. The internal quality of this older couch is well worth the cost of a repair, and it will give the family another 20 years of flawless service.





What you see (left) are two pictures of the couch's right front leg socket. I've peeled back the upholstery and its foundation fabric in order to get to the joint area, and then I will try to see what has happened.








Here, in the picture (left) I've cleaned out all the shattered material in preparation to fabricate and place a solid new oak seat for the leg in that spot. The leg of the couch will then be secured--re-glued and multiply screwed--into this new oak seat. As you can see in the picture, two dowel tenons from the couch's arm structure will also secure into the new oak seat, AND I will be re-securing the dowels
--those 4-round circles that I had to cut--back into the new oak seat too (see the pic). As you can see, the new piece's placement, (I'm sorry it's not shown) will support the structural integrity (rigidity) of the corner at the floor and from the couch's arm above.

Yes, it was all very much worth the effort. My customer was very happy--and then so was I!

That's Wood Talkin. Take care of your pieces---cuz they all have some fun stories to tell!