woodbrains
Established Member
Hello,
Ironically, it is because of IKEA and the like that 'ordinary' stuff, as you put it, is not done anymore. It doesn't matter how fast and sloppy I can make dovetails, I can't crank out stuff cheap enough for people to buy in preference to IKEA. Besides they look bad too, so even less chance of selling. So you make them fine by taking a bit more time and hopefully there is a slim market who will buy high quality.
Incidentally, you are wrong about those dovetails being for ordinary stuff for ordinary people. I've seen enough Cuban mahogany chests of drawers, with flame veneered drawer fronts, **** beads and drawer slips etc. for a high end Victorian market, with sloppy, overcut dovetails. It was just tolerated in those days, it simply isn't now. I have never seen antiques (perhaps very, very rarely) with dovetails as fine as those done as a matter if course by modern makers. You are backing a losing argument if you think we are ever going to go back to work like you seem to prefer.
For this reason, I think Peter Sefton's would be a more useful course to do. Or Chris Tribe for that matter, I know him personally and know him to be a fine craftsman. Perhaps you should sign up and find out how it is done these days.
Mike.
Ironically, it is because of IKEA and the like that 'ordinary' stuff, as you put it, is not done anymore. It doesn't matter how fast and sloppy I can make dovetails, I can't crank out stuff cheap enough for people to buy in preference to IKEA. Besides they look bad too, so even less chance of selling. So you make them fine by taking a bit more time and hopefully there is a slim market who will buy high quality.
Incidentally, you are wrong about those dovetails being for ordinary stuff for ordinary people. I've seen enough Cuban mahogany chests of drawers, with flame veneered drawer fronts, **** beads and drawer slips etc. for a high end Victorian market, with sloppy, overcut dovetails. It was just tolerated in those days, it simply isn't now. I have never seen antiques (perhaps very, very rarely) with dovetails as fine as those done as a matter if course by modern makers. You are backing a losing argument if you think we are ever going to go back to work like you seem to prefer.
For this reason, I think Peter Sefton's would be a more useful course to do. Or Chris Tribe for that matter, I know him personally and know him to be a fine craftsman. Perhaps you should sign up and find out how it is done these days.
Mike.