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Thread: latest silky oak restoration
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25th February 2006, 06:37 PM #1
latest silky oak restoration
an old dressing table from ipswich, it had several coats of paint on it which had to be stripped off. It's had a hard life, the legs are dinged on the edges a lot from brooms and mops over the decades and there's a few stains/watermarks on the top which I couldn't get out but they add character anyway! I like this one a lot, a simple piece but attractive.
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25th February 2006, 07:33 PM #2
Nice - simple lines.
Good one.
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25th February 2006, 10:14 PM #3Registered
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Silky is nice to work with, I like the grain, but the grain can be too busy sometimes on large pieces.
Al
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27th February 2006, 12:11 PM #4Hewer of wood
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Nicely done.
Cheers, Ern
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27th February 2006, 01:54 PM #5
Friends of ours from Atherton got given a house full of furniture (dressers, cupboards, tables, chairs etc) when they bought their house up there. About 5 years later they paid $700 to have it all stripped back and finished. I reckon they have about a dozen family heirlooms now!!
Stunning looking work.There was a young boy called Wyatt
Who was awfully quiet
And then one day
He faded away
Because he overused White
Floorsanding in Canberra and Albury.....
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4th March 2006, 07:19 PM #6Member
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Restored Piece
I like it a lot. Well done. The silky oak is a beautiful wood
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17th March 2006, 09:13 PM #7
S'cuse me I'm a none wood type person but is that grain common to silky oak or is it only the best pieces of timber that present it? Is that what is refered to as fiddleback grain?
When I die I want to go like my grandfather. Peacful in his sleep.
Not screaming like his passengers.
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17th March 2006, 09:17 PM #8
Oh. And is silky oak a common timber? Where does it come from?
When I die I want to go like my grandfather. Peacful in his sleep.
Not screaming like his passengers.
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18th March 2006, 09:43 AM #9GOLD MEMBER
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Originally Posted by ChasingRainbows
You may recognise it as the tree that has the yellowy orange flowers that come out at about the same time as jacarandas- quite stunning when a whole suburb is planted that way.
Hope you get to make something out of it some time.
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18th March 2006, 10:12 AM #10
[quote=ChasingRainbows]S'cuse me I'm a none wood type person but is that grain common to silky oak or is it only the best pieces of timber that present it? Is that what is refered to as fiddleback grain?[/q
All silky oak can have that grain if it's what is called 'quarter-cut' (not called fiddleback), where the rays of the timber are shown, but since cutting that way produces a bit of waste most silky oak was cut normally instead. The grain is plainer then, but I still like it as well.
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18th March 2006, 02:51 PM #11Hewer of wood
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One of the authorities cites something like 12 species that go under the common name of silky oak.
There's plenty planted in parks and suburban gardens down here in Melbourne.Cheers, Ern
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18th March 2006, 06:38 PM #12Originally Posted by rsser
The strange noise in the middle of the night will be a furtive Auld Bassoon lopping off some stock with a chainsaw:eek:
Does anyone make a cordless electric chainsaw?
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18th March 2006, 10:44 PM #13
From memory, there's a large Grevillea Robust in the Melbourne botanical gardens. While there's up to 12 species that may be called Silky Oak, generally only two are marketed as such: Grevillea Robusta (southern Silky Oak) and Cardwellia Sublimis (Northern Silky Oak). NSO is generally a bit of a deeper colour and has more striking medullary rays.
Mick (collector of Silky Oak )"If you need a machine today and don't buy it,
tomorrow you will have paid for it and not have it."
- Henry Ford 1938
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20th March 2006, 08:04 PM #14GOLD MEMBER
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Looks brand new.
I've just become an optimist . Iv'e made a 25 year plan -oopps I've had a few birthdays - better make that a 20 year plan
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