At the risk of veering this thread a little to the side, that decorative scalloping effect reminded me of an occasion, way back in my working life for a trade association when we had regular meetings with DTI/DOE (as it was then, later DEFRA) in London.
For some reason the usual office venue was unavailable and we were due to meet in Church House, Westminster which is that huge building, next door to the Abbey. The room was beautiful, overlooking the quadrangle and on that day, what took my notice was the table.
From memory, it was about 10-12 feet in length, about 4 feet wide and best described as ‘substantial-dark-Oak-Victorian-refectory-style’. I spent most of the meeting working out how this thing was made. Probably heavily influenced by the Arts and Crafts style……. From that period, anyway.
This was in the days before cameras in phones and I didn’t have a camera with me but two things stand out in my memory:
First, the top. It was made of joined dark Oak boards about 2 inches thick – from the colour, it had been either stained or fumed. The top of the table was dead flat and had been deliberately finished to give a ‘scalloped effect’ but the technique used was very regular and even strokes with a scrub plane, or similar with a slightly curved blade, cut diagonally in both directions at about 60 degrees angle. Each cut was evenly spaced, smoothed over and dead straight across the top. This striking (to me at least) ‘unfinished’ effect was obviously deliberate. It was not a random facted scalloping, but gave that effect.
Secondly, some of the legs had a small discrete carving of a standing bird positioned in the corner, rather like one of Robert Thompson’s mice. I cannot recall now what sort of bird, perhaps a stylise pelican or falcon…..
We only had that one meeting there but that table has remained in my memory. I tried to replicate the scalloped top effect once out of curiosity and believe me, getting that effect achieved by the unknown maker over such a large area was not easy. His blade must have been extremely keen because the tendency with Oak cut at a diagonal is that the grain- side under compression slices and the other splits. I suspect that it may have been done with a tool rather like a convex float, rather than a plane-and blade. That's my theory.
As for the carved birds? I don't know. Any ideas whose trade-mark that was?