ARealBoy
10th March 2013, 08:20 PM
Hello,
a few weekends ago I bought this table from a junk shop for $65. What caught my eye was the lovely turning on the legs. It was terribly ugly otherwise... a masonite top and the whole thing was slathered with dark stained, drippy estapol. Underneath the estapol was a coat of white paint and underneath that was a coat of buttercup yellow paint.
257268257269257270257271
Anyway I climbed underneath it in the shop and a little scrape showed some lovely red cedar so I bought it. I've started stripping it <you can see in the photos> and after the gunk comes off it looks very nice.
257272257273257274
The real job will be to make a new top for it.
Luckily my local timber yard has plenty of red cedar.
Here is the timber yard. :U My aunty's old house. It's on my brother's place.
257275
Anyway, 5 minutes work and I've got a bit of already milled cedar.
257276
Looks alright, about 50mm thick, I could get a bookmatched top out of this I think?
257279257280257281
The other way to go is to get a bit of cedar in one piece for the table top. My brother has a couple of cedar logs in the shed, about 1m in diameter and about 3 metres long. I could just knock out a slab with the chainsaw but really I'll probably mill one of the logs. They were felled about 40 years ago and buried in a bog on my place. I pulled a couple of bits out a year or two back and they have been drying in the shed for about 2 years now.
Couple of questions for the experts please.
I was planning on polishing it with ubeaut shellac and wax. Is this the right way to go?
Also.. should I mill a single piece for the top or have a go with some cedar from the door? It's not a big drama to mill the timber btw .. a mate nearby has a great mill, two blades and a VW motor punching it and it's only really an afternoons work to get the log down there and cut up.
Thanks in anticipation of some good answers.
Up in the mountains,
Mick.
a few weekends ago I bought this table from a junk shop for $65. What caught my eye was the lovely turning on the legs. It was terribly ugly otherwise... a masonite top and the whole thing was slathered with dark stained, drippy estapol. Underneath the estapol was a coat of white paint and underneath that was a coat of buttercup yellow paint.
257268257269257270257271
Anyway I climbed underneath it in the shop and a little scrape showed some lovely red cedar so I bought it. I've started stripping it <you can see in the photos> and after the gunk comes off it looks very nice.
257272257273257274
The real job will be to make a new top for it.
Luckily my local timber yard has plenty of red cedar.
Here is the timber yard. :U My aunty's old house. It's on my brother's place.
257275
Anyway, 5 minutes work and I've got a bit of already milled cedar.
257276
Looks alright, about 50mm thick, I could get a bookmatched top out of this I think?
257279257280257281
The other way to go is to get a bit of cedar in one piece for the table top. My brother has a couple of cedar logs in the shed, about 1m in diameter and about 3 metres long. I could just knock out a slab with the chainsaw but really I'll probably mill one of the logs. They were felled about 40 years ago and buried in a bog on my place. I pulled a couple of bits out a year or two back and they have been drying in the shed for about 2 years now.
Couple of questions for the experts please.
I was planning on polishing it with ubeaut shellac and wax. Is this the right way to go?
Also.. should I mill a single piece for the top or have a go with some cedar from the door? It's not a big drama to mill the timber btw .. a mate nearby has a great mill, two blades and a VW motor punching it and it's only really an afternoons work to get the log down there and cut up.
Thanks in anticipation of some good answers.
Up in the mountains,
Mick.