bjm
Naturally different
A former colleague had some academic literature on the choice of timber in museum storage when I was looking into this but....he forgot to send it.....I will chase it up.Very much so.
A former colleague had some academic literature on the choice of timber in museum storage when I was looking into this but....he forgot to send it.....I will chase it up.Very much so.
.....I look forward to seeing how this project develops!
Not all. I know plenty of identical sets of books that are read regularly (or at least were until they were digitised). Some in rooms nearly as grand as Mike's photos.The ones you show, with beautiful matched sets of nicely bound books in matched heights, are for show, not for scholarship or reading.
I have completed an inexpensive upstairs bookcase installation (pine) and realised that my 300 year old house would not take the weight without distributing the weight between wall and floor. Whilst not answering your question it’s worth including this parameter into bookcase planning. I had to buy huge support brackets and reinforce the floor to distribute the weight!One of my forthcoming jobs includes designing a private library. This will be in solid timber, and I am curious as to whether or not there are timbers to avoid. Do any timbers (or any finishes) react with books?
PLEEEASE tell me there will be a secret compartment/door behind a bookcase, which you open by pulling a book down.....
Wowzers! Now that us fine! What a jobTo be clear, I'm not making this. I'm wearing my architect's hat and designing it (and I haven't even got close to starting it yet). I just know it's on the horizon, and wanted to be informed of the issues before having conversations with the other architects and with the clients. This project is a collaborative one, but I've put my name on the library....I've always wanted to design one. Just as a clue, it is going to be along the lines of this sort of thing, grabbed from the internet:
View attachment 91446
.........but maybe with glazed doors along the lines of this one:
View attachment 91447
Does the room have to be in a particular style to match the remainder of the building?
.......He does have a couple illustrations of the special hinges for glass doors. "Special butts were used called butterfly hinges." Basically a butt hinge shared by two doors. The butt hinge fitting between the ears of a piece screwed into the vertical member. The hinge pin having points to hold strips of wood into the verticals so the profile carries through from hinge to hinge. A continuous bead effect. The arrangement allows the doors to open flat against the next, letting you take the book out.......
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