Originally Posted by
Thumbthumper
I've seen foot blocks that are square, and some that are rounded on the corners (only at the front of the chest). I have a small cedar chest that has rounded blocks, and I have a massive cedar chest that had square blocks all round. It seems to mirror the base of the chest (my large chest has a square base and my small chest has a round molded profile like this chest).
Having said this, I chose to make rounded foot blocks for this chest because I could see the age mark outline from the original blocks underneath. That made the decision simple :D
The pigment mix (which uses both red and brown) was used to colour secondary timber to emulate the cedar, which was getting scarcer.
Are your turned feet cedar? I can't quite tell in the photo.
If they are, what I would do is either coat them in a Potassium Dichromate mix and put them in the sun (a few times), or wash some 'dirty' polish over them (or both).
Potassium Dichromate is an oxidizing agent that is really good at darkening woods such as cedar and mahogany. I understand that not everyone has it in their shed :no:
If you have some old bits of furniture with original polish on them, you can scrub at them with steel wool and metho, and make a dirty polish mix. It blends cedar very well.
If your feet are pine, go ahead and purchase red and brown pigment. Mix it with metho, and make your own stain. The pigments will last for years and years.
Sorry for my rambling, I get passionate about colonial furniture and restoration techniques :B