On Thu, Oct 8, 2020 at 11:00 Brian Lamb <blamb11@...> wrote:
This was for a house we had in Carefree, AZ. It was designed in ¡¯56 by a student of Frank Lloyd Wright and built by the owners I purchased it from. House was built in a V-wing shape and had odd angles in the kitchen by the windows. So I designed and built this table with an odd angle on one end so that when up to the window wall, it wasn¡¯t too tight on either side to the room. Mostly Maple, top was butcher block style about 1.5¡± thick, tapered on the edges using a 12¡± blade on the shaper spindle tilted at 5? to narrow the edges down to give it a lighter look. Legs were tapered on 3 sides and tipped with Bubinga, which I also used for the standoff¡¯s for the top and floating tenons for the leg to stretcher joint.
On Oct 7, 2020, at 8:21 PM, Mark Foster <mfsta2lt@...> wrote:
Very nice work here, I find these types of posts inspiring. Brian could we see a couple more photos of the table as a whole, it looks beautiful from the under side.
Mark Foster
On Oct 7, 2020, at 7:55 PM, Mark Kessler <mkessler10@...> wrote:
?Nice looking joints fellas, I haven¡¯t done a mitered one recently but I did just do a plain ol¡¯ one with just saw kerf and chisel It went pretty quick. Have to incorporate a miter one at some point although not with a shaper.
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Regards, Mark
On Oct 7, 2020, at 10:45 PM, Brian Lamb <blamb11@...> wrote:
?I did a similar joint years ago, one of my first projects with the Felder. A dining table and I did a double bridle/mitered joint¡ was fun and looked great.