Tuesday, February 11, 2014
Table for the Cockatoo Chairs
The table made it to its garden home in Boston
The garden was beautiful ... and everyone is happy ...
We finished the table for the cockatoo chairs yesterday ... Itll be off to Boston next week sometime with the porch furniture in the post of 9/16 ...
We first glued up two of the ends with 15 minute epoxy on the metal to wood connection. .. Click the pictures to enlrge them ...
Then we clamped the two ends together with the connectors ... Once we screwed in the short bridge pieces in the middle of the steel parts, the table became incredible rigid ... We added the small steel pads at the base of the legs as a design detail and to protect the end grain of the legs where they will sit on the stone patio ...
Update 9 7 ... waiting for approval of the finish samples ...
Last week we delivered the Cockatoo Chairs to their new home in Boston, and a beauty of a home it is. An H.H. Richardson ( great bio of the architect on Wikipedia) shingle style design from the 1880s. Beautiful home, beautiful furnishings, beautiful artwork and gardens. The chairs have landed in a VERY special place for sure. They are residing in the recessed area in the lower right corner of the photo below, near the front door, overlooking the garden ... perfect spot ... Now for a table to go with them. We used, as a starting point, an Arts & Crafts style table that the client has been using there previously with other chairs ... We made a couple sketches and today we made a quick mockup of one end of the table to work out the more mysterious construction details. Legs are mahogany; the aprons are 3/8 x 1.5" steel with wood verticals. The top will be slats of mahogany in a mitered frame ... Were considering 3/8 x 1.5" metal pads where the table sits on the stone terrace and perhaps some other small decorative metal details which well either mockup or discuss with the client ... More later .... Click the photos to enlarge them ...
1883 H. H. Richardson designed home with serious wisteria
Sketches ... The client selected the bottom one
Our two dimensional mockup elevation exploring how the curved and straight steel elements will join to the wood legs. The curved pieces will have to be mitered once they enter the leg as they are nearly as wide as the leg is thick ... Well do a test, but after fitting them up, we imagine that well epoxy them iside the leg using a West System product of some kind. We rolled the steel into acurve using our new Boss ring roller, an amazing piece of equipment.
The straight top pieces will also have to be mitered in the corners and then screwed into the end grain of the mahogany legs
The elevation stretched out using photoshop.
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