Jacob":33vd0nfs said:
Jelly":33vd0nfs said:
They're very slightly different, in that normally the stiles have the mortise/female bridle and the rails have the tenon, ......
That's a St Jim detail. The bridle is also Jim's and never used normally except in very low grade work. :roll: Shakers would have hated it!
That detail on the doors is oddly appropriate then, as the second stage of the glue up went horribly wrong (I needed another pair of hands and couldn't get hold of anyone to come help) the whole thing began to wrack as it was clamped up and I'm concerned I may have damaged some of the tenons... Until I get it unclamped tomorrow, I'm assuming that it
is now very low grade... shouldn't have rushed it. In hindsight the composite of carcase and frame construction was always going to be a more challenging proposition to assemble by myself than straight one or the other. I'm afraid the shakers would have abhorred it anyway, as it's far from necessary and only arguably useful.
Inset stone - cheaper (and more interesting) to go out and find a free one (you see them on walls all over the place) and then adjust the design to fit. Visit St Davids cathedral for table with inset stone. Why look further afield when you have the rich vernacular of Welsh furniture? Sacrilege!
The stone was something that was specified by my friend... I don't really understand* why he requested it (and so specifically too), the merchant i spoke to is based at the quarry in Blaenau Festiniog, though I may see if i can get anything from the Pehnryn quarry just up the river from me (as much for convenience as being local)
In terms of furniture, I can appreciate your sentiments, there's a pub in Llanberis (The Heights), which is rammed with an eclectic assortment of surprisingly well preserved old welsh furniture, a veritable goldmine of inspiration.
Hows the shrinkage going?
Once it had acclimatised, not an issue... some of the thinner stock was through and through sawn sapwood which cupped rather more than I'd have liked, but nothing too awful really.
Glad you like Snowdonia! Wales is Britain's best kept secret IMHO. I lived there for 5 years and would still be there had it not been for circumstances. Mid Wales that was.
Looking back 7 years to when I chose to come here, the rugged beauty of the mountains won out over "the city of the gleaming spires" in about 30 seconds flat... took a bit longer to explain turning down that particular opportunity to my parents! I'm gutted at having to leave, but I'm unlikely to end up finding a decent job here and there's no point throwing what little money I have left to the wall on rent just for the sake of being here, when I can move back to my parents house** whilst I'm seeking gainful employment.
I've never taken the time to fully appreciate mid-wales, it always seems pretty but ultimately empty when I pass through on the A470.
*
Supposedly it's for chopping fruit for cocktails, only the person requesting it, is more of a lager drinker, who I've never known to drink a cocktail in all the time we've been friends
**
Wales is very much home in my mind, so whilst conventionally I'd be said to be "moving back home", it feels like the exact opposite