thumbsucker
2nd October 2023, 10:40 PM
I have been asked by a friend to restore this Blackwood chair.
It needs a new seat - the original was a spline cane seat, sheet cane or cane webbing seat - where is the best place to buy this?
The chair was turned and made from greenwood the legs and stretcher have an oval cross-section.
I would wage a guess that it was made on a pole lathe.
The glue is hide glue.
It has been repaired with a builder bog where the continuous arm has developed cracks from the steam bending.
The crown was steam bents not cut from solid - What is the correct nomenclature for the top section of the backrest
Where the rear spindle has cracked the short grain of the set - how would you recommend a repair - my instinct is to drill a hole across the crack and insert a large screw and cover the head with a blackwood plug. This would pull the crack together and reinforce the weak short grain.
I was thinking of using something like gum turpentine and a fine grey scotch bright pad to remove any surface dust and grime and then to oil with boiled linseed oil again. Maybe ubeaut EEE would be useful.
Thoughts ideas comments.
531103
531098 531099 531100 531101 531102
It needs a new seat - the original was a spline cane seat, sheet cane or cane webbing seat - where is the best place to buy this?
The chair was turned and made from greenwood the legs and stretcher have an oval cross-section.
I would wage a guess that it was made on a pole lathe.
The glue is hide glue.
It has been repaired with a builder bog where the continuous arm has developed cracks from the steam bending.
The crown was steam bents not cut from solid - What is the correct nomenclature for the top section of the backrest
Where the rear spindle has cracked the short grain of the set - how would you recommend a repair - my instinct is to drill a hole across the crack and insert a large screw and cover the head with a blackwood plug. This would pull the crack together and reinforce the weak short grain.
I was thinking of using something like gum turpentine and a fine grey scotch bright pad to remove any surface dust and grime and then to oil with boiled linseed oil again. Maybe ubeaut EEE would be useful.
Thoughts ideas comments.
531103
531098 531099 531100 531101 531102