woodbrains":3pk8z2h3 said:
Hello,
It is funny that someone can (personal preference of taste aside) decry the Arts and Crafts makers, who were craftsmen that actually stood at benches and made stuff, but praise the Bauhaus design movement, which was largely interested in not making stuff traditionally, but designing things for industrialised machine manufacture.
No they were interested across the spectrum trying to bring together architecture, arts, crafts, music, industry etc.
One rooted in tradition and still exists to an extent today,
They made up their own set of "traditions" and were somewhat blind to stuff outside, particularly industry
the other lasting about 13 years IIRC.
But with a deep influence on modern design worldwide, to this day
....... and how we should not be evolving our methods beyond what was done before.
Not me squire - evolve as much as you like but don't throw babies out with the bath water
Then he will tell us we are moralising when we talk of the evolution of modern furniture making.
Arts n crafts hasn't evolved much - pretty static by and large. And they do moralise :roll: .
It gets copied a lot and is easy to spot.
The Cotswold school Arts and Crafts makers were by no stretch of the definition, amateur, neither the designers nor the fine craftsmen.
Their origin was amateur in the sense of being from outside the trade. Obviously they were pretty good at it
Incidentally, London pattern dovetails require the same number of sawcuts as any other half blinds, so are no quicker or easier to do. In fact they need a lot more waste chopping from between the pins, so may take a bit longer. I don't know where the idea that they are more economical to do could possibly come from, it is an aesthetic choice.
Mike.
They are easier because you can very quickly space by eye and cut the single starter kerf and the second kerf drops tidily into it. It's a natural if you are doing it freehand. That's why they are so common - nothing to do with aesthetics except coincidentally.
I got the idea by doing it a lot of them and thinking about it.
woodbrain if you want to know a bit about design history there are some excellent books, ignorance is no excuse nowadays!
This is a good one here.
One of my favourites is "1000 chairs" (Taschen).
Don't bother with a similarly titled "500 chairs" which is tedious in parts being mostly post-modern arts n crafts decorative etc.
Nobody should miss "Welsh Furniture 1250-1950" Richard Bebb; an eye opener to the richness and diversity of trad design - making arts n crafts look pretty feeble in comparison
"Irish Country Furniture" by Claudia Kinmonth is also excellent and one of my favourites