Results 1 to 15 of 26
Thread: Qld maple wardrobe
-
14th June 2011, 05:11 PM #1
Qld maple wardrobe
I was asked to restore this old wardrobe the other day. I imagine it is '30-50's vintage and has the European labour stamp in it. It is solid Qld maple on the show panels, kauri/hoop for the back, flat panels and drawer. The drawer bottom is ply.
Attachment 173167Attachment 173168
It had a good shunt at sometime or other and this cracked the top.
Attachment 173170Attachment 173171Attachment 173172
The bottom of the drawer was worn/broken away, the door was broken off its hinges and falling apart and the mirror is missing. There is one missing side of the maple crown moulding that will need replacing.
Attachment 173169Attachment 173173
Fist step was to remove all the old shellac - fortunately the original finish by the looks. I use a spray bottle of metho and plastic film and a small amount of patience to remove this. After resting 10-15mins the shellac has flaked and can be scraped off with a block of soft wood. I have only to do the very bottom of the wardrobe now. All the interior wood received a wash down with warm water to remove years of grime.
Attachment 173174
I disassembled the door, cleaned the joints and reglued it. The maple has some beautiful figure in it.
Attachment 173175Attachment 173176
continued...
-
14th June 2011, 05:15 PM #2
Using my new found skills with hide glue I repaired the top and planed it flat and clean, though left it with a tooled finish as a nod to the methods used to give it a new lease of life. The original wood was machine dressed as evidenced by the copious and obvious cutter marks
Attachment 173179
Finally I made up a couple of new drawer runners from some jarrah, cleaned up the drawer with a router and glued them on. I accept this may wear the cabinet faster so will address that problem too.
Attachment 173178
Still to do: clean base of cabinet, repair hinge panel, repair and mount crown moulding, mount hardware and do finish!
Attachment 173177
-
14th June 2011, 07:30 PM #3
Watching this one with interest.
Those were the droids I was looking for.
https://autoblastgates.com.au
-
14th June 2011, 10:32 PM #4
Beautiful wardrobe, Mic. It's always good to see a piece come back to life after so nearly making it to the tip.
Cheers, Richard
"... work to a standard rather than a deadline ..." Ticky, forum member.
-
15th June 2011, 12:19 PM #5Senior Member
- Join Date
- Jun 2010
- Location
- Canberra
- Posts
- 0
I love the workmanship and look of these old wardrobes but the ones with a single centre door are a PITA to use. They were generally made narrow for front-to-back hanging thus modern hangers can't fit across the width. Plus, with a few garments hung you can never see inside them properly. As you may gather I was happy to part with mine. Nice to see it come back from the dead though.
Are you going to put a rail across the width? If so you may want to consider coathanger length as a contraint... or you may have already done so.
-
15th June 2011, 02:31 PM #6
Hadn't considered the hanging problems at all. There is a rail across the back with coat hooks and there had been a central dowel fastened into a couple of brass fittings. I was just going to replace that so clothes could be stored on coat hangers. It is for his daughter so perhaps child-size coat hangers would fit. It may be an opportunity to drum up some more work
-
15th June 2011, 03:24 PM #7
Finished cleaning the lower parts and glueing miscellaneous bits and pieces back together. I've given it a wash in dilute shellac, about a 1/4lb cut to see whether the cleaning is OK. The bottom is a bit more weathered than the top but it's a gradual change so looks OK to my eye. All the blotchiness from cleaning has disappeared too so will start applying the finish soon. I'm going to use FW scandanavian oil and give it a burnished look.
Currently ageing the brass bits too.
Attachment 173233
-
15th June 2011, 08:54 PM #8
Keep going, it'll look beautiful! If it were mine, I'd use it for a hall cupboard for coats, hats, shoes etc, so the depth wouldn't be a problem. Seems a shame to hide it in a bedroom!
Cheers, Richard
"... work to a standard rather than a deadline ..." Ticky, forum member.
-
15th June 2011, 11:34 PM #9regards from Alberta, Canada
ian
-
16th June 2011, 08:47 AM #10Skwair2rownd
- Join Date
- Nov 2007
- Location
- Dundowran Beach
- Age
- 77
- Posts
- 0
That will look beautiful Mic!! And full marks to you for taking it on and doing such a great job!!
I hope you put a beveeled edge mirror int the middle panel. Such a piece cries out for it.
I think Ian may be right. I too think the piece is pre WW1.
-
16th June 2011, 09:53 AM #11
Thanks guys. There is a trick in the light in that last photo. The horizontal grain panels are really much closer in colour to the rest.
You may be right about the age of it, although the European labour stamp was used up until sometime in the 50's. I just don't know the tricks to date it more finely
-
16th June 2011, 07:47 PM #12
Other things on today so I dropped one of the pieces of brass hardware in my own 'bucket of wrath', well, it's more like a little bottle of wrath and kept an eye on it every now and then. This is the result after a few hours and it might do, but I put it back for an overnight run.
Attachment 173326
-
16th June 2011, 08:50 PM #13
Very interested to know what your 'bucket of wrath' consists of!
You are quite correct on the use of the European Labour stamp, at least in Victoria it was used until the late 50's and possibly even in the 60's. Some of the pieces I've restored are very late pieces but still have the stamp and only one piece from around 1910 has the Chinese Labour stamp. There was a write up about it in the Museum of Victoria website in there Chinese section but I don't have a link.
Look forward to some more pictures.
Peter
-
16th June 2011, 09:08 PM #14
Oh it's not a bucket of wrath That was an allusion to the brew of the Master, which has sadly for us remained cloaked in mystery. This is hardly a pale shadow of it and as woodwould says, is one of any number of patina brews that dulls brass rather than ageing it gracefully. I made this one by first making some copper carbonate from copper sulphate and sodium carbonate. Then added the copper carbonate to cloudy ammonia. I prefer this finish to fuming just with ammonia, but I'm still working on what's in the guru's brew
The link I have to the Museum of Victoria is now dead - might be the same one you had.
-
17th June 2011, 01:07 PM #15
The finished hardware. Didn't take before photos of the hinges and lock, but they were all bright polished brass.
Attachment 173368
First coat of Scandanavian oil has been done.
Attachment 173397Attachment 173398
Similar Threads
-
restoring an old Queensland maple-rimmu wardrobe
By lilon in forum RESTORATIONReplies: 4Last Post: 31st March 2009, 01:06 PM
Bookmarks