Doug B":9d33tkzg said:Dave Dalby does that kind work of work Rog http://davedalby.com/handrails.html
Very nice bloke near Leeds if that’s any help
Eric The Viking":i8bkwhyi said:ISBN: 0-941936-63-5
It has good diagrams and explanations and staggeringly good examples of his work as illustrations, but sadly George diCristina seems to be no longer with us: I was interested enough to find his workshop In San Francisco on Google Street View - still there but looked abandoned around five years ago.
Those sweeping staircases of 1930s-1940s Hollywood? I suspect he made quite a few of them...
Point being, it's really hard to set out a curving handrail on its own. For the really complex stuff, he used to do full-size mock-ups in his workshop.
E.
PS: See also ISBN: 0941936023. I haven't got this one but it's available on Kindle, and one reviewer of diCristina's book says he has some of his geometry wrong and that this one is better. But ignore the diCristina review that says there are insufficient illustrations: in my copy, almost every other page is a diagram! diCristina does, however, assume the reader is a competent carver, which I most definitely am not!
ColeyS1":2e0fw3vv said:Bendywood.com worth looking at ?
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I think you're right. And I am thinking Richard Arnold, but I am not surexy mosian":qoj1ahcq said:Some time ago, possibly years, a member of this foum posted about the making of some curved sections for handrails. For use in high-end shops I think. If only I could think just what the thread might havebeen called.
xy
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