Cabinetman
Sequoia
- Joined
- Oct 11, 2020
- Messages
- 5,229
- Reaction score
- 994
- Location
- Lincolnshire Wolds + Massachusetts
- Name
- Ian
Wow, that’s a LOT of work! I really like the claw detail, it’s very realistic.
Indeed!Wow, that’s a LOT of work! I really like the claw detail, it’s very realistic.
Is it just the angle at which the photo was taken, or are those cabriole legs bandy looking? Bandiness in cabriole legs is usually the result of not leaving at least a slender column of wood (e.g. at least 4 - 5 mm round or square) running through the length of the leg, as illustrated in the drawing below. At 1 on the left the slim continuous column of wood helps reduce the likelihood of grain failure as illustrated at 2. As can also be seen drawing 2's leg looks a rather bandy whereas the leg on the left,1, does not.
They do look very bandy on the photo. I will check them. As I copied someone else’s design I hope not. It was not a concern I had whilst making the legs.Is it just the angle at which the photo was taken, or are those cabriole legs bandy looking? Bandiness in cabriole legs is usually the result of not leaving at least a slender column of wood (e.g. at least 4 - 5 mm round or square) running through the length of the leg, as illustrated in the drawing below. At 1 on the left the slim continuous column of wood helps reduce the likelihood of grain failure as illustrated at 2. As can also be seen drawing 2's leg looks a rather bandy whereas the leg on the left,1, does not.
I do very much hope it's the angle or way the chair has been photographed. Slainte.
I think you're right and it was just the way the chair and its cabriole leg was photographed. It does appear likely that there is a column of wood running all through if I'm offsetting the edge of the straight edge to the right correctly in your photo.Here you go Richard:
View attachment 37947
You do not miss much Andy. Well spotted. I have decided to be a bit of a maverick. Hence no rebates on a glued up chair. My plan is to plant an ovolo moulding onto the rails and sit the the seat on the rails. When I designed the chairs there was two things I did not like about the traditional design first rebated rails and second cut away brackets. It seemed such a waste of expensive wood. So I will have planted on brackets and planted on moulding to form the seat rebate.Congratulations! I guess we'll soon see how you decided to cut the rebate for the inset seat pad...

I would not go that far Andy... You can even enjoy these finishing stages now.
That would have been a good idea but alas I decided to plant the quadrant on top of the rail.Ah, I was at cross purposes earlier. I thought your planted on pieces would be inside the frame.
25 years! Wow!A feature of my workshop the last 25 years has been the full size model of one of my chairs. Made in softwood. It is now redundant. The logical thing to do is to get rid as I would any other model or mock up. It is taking up valuable space. I really do not need it anymore as I have one finished chair and started finishing the second. But it has been with me getting in the way for 25 years.


Yes, sat in my hospital bed post op that was the thought I was having. It can still be fatal if it bursts which was why I had emergency surgery 9am Saturday morning. The surgeons made it very clear it was not a risk to take.Goodness me. We're only a generation or two on from appendicitis being a real threat to life (Harry Houdini died of it, for instance)...
That used to be the case, but it is now known that it's part of the immune system and among other things stores healthy gut bacteria that replenish supplies in the gut if you have diarrhoea for example.Yes what a thing to find out, am I right in thinking that nobody’s really sure what the pesky things for anyway?
My daughter had an emergency appendectomy at 3.00am a few months ago. They take it very seriously indeed. On a related note, my brother was opened up for an appendix operation 30 or 40 years ago. They found his appendix was fine but his spleen had burst. So, now he has to wear a bracelet or necklace explaining that he still has an appendix, despite the scar.Yes, sat in my hospital bed post op that was the thought I was having. It can still be fatal if it bursts which was why I had emergency surgery 9am Saturday morning. The surgeons made it very clear it was not a risk to take.
True......and it's also incredibly useful after a course of antibiotics, which kill off most of your gut bacteria. It's an organ that shrivelled over time through lack of use, because it's primary role was digesting cellulose. Rabbits, for instance, have a bigger appendix than intestine.That used to be the case, but it is now known that it's part of the immune system and among other things stores healthy gut bacteria that replenish supplies in the gut if you have diarrhoea for example.