signmeup
New Member
There has been a lot of talk on the forum lately about hand done things and lost arts. Here's a lost art I taught myself quite a few years ago. Not sign related but interesting, I think.
I haven't made one of these in at least 15 years. The whole task is done by hand. I use antique tools like an adze, a wooden spokeshave etc. Some of the tools were so obscure I had to make my own like my curved bladed spokeshave or Travisher. (I had to learn to forge tool blades)
The seat was chopped out with an adze and then smoothed with the curved shave. The legs are turned by eye on the homemade wood lathe in the photo. All the turnings are left as they came off the lathe with no sanding. One of requirements of a proper reproduction windsor is the correct toolmarks on the various parts. The only thing sanded will be the seat surface....nothing else.
The arms and back bow are steam bent ash. The photo shows the second bend being steamed. My steambox is too short to fit the entire arm so I had to do one side at a time. I usually make two seat settees....this customer talked me into making a three seater. After the parts have steamed long enough they are quickly bent over a wooden bending form clamped to my tablesaw.
The next step is to shape and attach the arm bows and shave all the back spindles. I'll post a few more pics as I go along. I have to let the steamed parts dry for a few more days though. Steam bent parts are generally made from "green" wood so they have to be held in the proper shape until the wood has cured to right moisture content.
I haven't made one of these in at least 15 years. The whole task is done by hand. I use antique tools like an adze, a wooden spokeshave etc. Some of the tools were so obscure I had to make my own like my curved bladed spokeshave or Travisher. (I had to learn to forge tool blades)
The seat was chopped out with an adze and then smoothed with the curved shave. The legs are turned by eye on the homemade wood lathe in the photo. All the turnings are left as they came off the lathe with no sanding. One of requirements of a proper reproduction windsor is the correct toolmarks on the various parts. The only thing sanded will be the seat surface....nothing else.
The arms and back bow are steam bent ash. The photo shows the second bend being steamed. My steambox is too short to fit the entire arm so I had to do one side at a time. I usually make two seat settees....this customer talked me into making a three seater. After the parts have steamed long enough they are quickly bent over a wooden bending form clamped to my tablesaw.
The next step is to shape and attach the arm bows and shave all the back spindles. I'll post a few more pics as I go along. I have to let the steamed parts dry for a few more days though. Steam bent parts are generally made from "green" wood so they have to be held in the proper shape until the wood has cured to right moisture content.