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Thread: Strange drawer
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14th December 2009, 07:25 AM #1
Strange drawer
Has anyone seen a drawer like this before? It's from a fall front bureau in Aus. cedar. It's the drawer under the fall, and when it's opened. the front half drops down so things can still be taken out of it. This means that when it's closed, there is a gap between the drawer bottom and front.
This may be common, I don't do much with old furniture. Anyone seen it before?
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14th December 2009, 09:49 AM #2
Alex
I've never seen one like it and, more importantly, neither has my mother (who spent more thn 30 years buying antique Australian furniture). She may ask some of her buddies in the trade, but then again she may not (she is 77 and sometimes has some short-term memory lapses).
I can see it as being very useful in a drawer that holds papers, but a bit of a PITA if you put things that roll about in there....
Perhaps a more satisfactory system would have overlapping leaves at the sides - if the leaf was attached to the inside of the front part of the side, it would swing up as the front dropped and stay out of the way, but when the drawer is slid back in it would cover the triangular hole.Cheers
Jeremy
If it were done when 'tis done, then 'twere well it were done quickly
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14th December 2009, 10:30 PM #3
Random musings from a guy who knows nothing about antiques...
If it was for something which fitted well, then it wouldn't matter about the hole. I'm thinking of something made to fit, like a writing box, maybe, or a tray?Cheers, Richard
"... work to a standard rather than a deadline ..." Ticky, forum member.
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15th December 2009, 07:52 AM #4
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15th December 2009, 08:15 AM #5
Is a pic of the entire piece possible, to see where the drawer fits?
Cheers, Richard
"... work to a standard rather than a deadline ..." Ticky, forum member.
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15th December 2009, 11:27 AM #6
it would be good to store full drawer width items that are deep, so that you don't have to lift them vertically out of the drawer. like a row of wine bottles stored with the neck facing forward. you would only need to pull the drawer out enough to pull the item out.
I forgot what i was taught, I only remember what I have learnt
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15th December 2009, 12:55 PM #7
Can't say I have seen one before but it would allow something that can't bend to be taken out. Takes no effort to do unlike hinging the drawer front panel. You would then have catches to undo.
Regards
John
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15th December 2009, 03:50 PM #8
Rekon the ream of paper would be close , good idea realy
Ashore
The trouble with life is there's no background music.
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15th December 2009, 04:07 PM #9
I think I'd agree with Timbre Surfer on something like wine bottles (though you'd expect some sort of holders to stop them rolling sideways).
Dunno about the ream of paper - seems ok, but when were reams invented? I would have thought for photocopiers or the like...
Cool drawer though Alex. Would love to see a pic of the whole piece too.
Cheers,
Dave...but together with the coffee civility flowed back into him
Patrick O'Brian, Treason's Harbour
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15th December 2009, 06:37 PM #10
Afraid I can't get a pic of the whole piece, I only took the drawer for repair. The drawer is immediately under the fall front, so it normally wouldn't be accessible when the writing surface is down. This way, paper or whatever could still be pulled out when the drawer was opened and the fall was down.
It's quite a niece piece, but I don't believe it was professionally made. It's Australian cedar, and I suspect it was made by a reasonably skilled amateur.
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15th December 2009, 06:56 PM #11
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16th December 2009, 02:15 AM #12
Of course one reason you - and we - have never seen another one like it is that it wasn't a success.
Paper in reams goes back a looong way, I'm guessing early 1700's with the first mechanised ( water powered) paper mills taking over from hand beaten pulp paper.
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16th December 2009, 02:12 PM #13
how does that work is the draw bottom short? or is the a groove that the excess slides past? or is there a split in the bottom that i cant see?
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16th December 2009, 05:53 PM #14
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21st February 2010, 11:59 AM #15
Just to clarify, in printing & paper industry - a 'ream' is 500 sheets of paper, of any size (many moons ago 480 sheets i.e. 40 dozen).
I agree that it looks like a document drawer.
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