Results 1 to 15 of 21
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10th July 2018, 10:12 PM #1
C1880 G J Lines Bow rocker restoration
Hi All,
I picked up this horse yesterday to restore it back to original appearance.
More to follow.
Ray
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10th July 2018, 10:16 PM #2
It is in very poor condition, most of the glue has failed.
The neck s broken about half way up & a couple of home repairs were done making it much worse.
There are breaks around the mortices for the leg tenons.
And the list goes on.
Looking forward to the challenge.
Ray
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24th July 2018, 08:12 PM #3
Making progress. The neck break had been repaired with some heavy duty hardware, however the neck muscle blocks had been cut through which meant no support & it was wobbling around & had to come apart. Turned the horse into a jigsaw puzzle.
Photos of where I am up to.
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24th July 2018, 11:28 PM #4
Great project Ray! And Im loving these pictures .
Its such an interesting aspect seeing one in bits.
A great opportunity to learn how to build a nice one if you wanted.
The hollow body and tenons on the legs are interesting. I see holes in some of the tenons. Had someone put Nails through them later or were they pegged originally ?
Id love to see the mortises for them . Any lay out lines where they were marked out to see?
Whats the timber ? looks like Red pine .
Rob
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25th July 2018, 06:16 AM #5
Hi Rob
The hollow body is a standard design.
The mortise & tenon varied between manufactures. The ones I make have the legs fitted into a compound rebate cut into the bottom body box, then fixed with glue & screws. A muscle block is then glued over the join. Photo attached.
The tenons were normally glued & a nail driven up beside the tenon into the body. There were no nails or pegs through these ones, but may have had them on a previous restoration.
No layout of the mortice but I have a photo of the bottom block on its side with the wall showing the rest of the mortice. The front legs were a different set up.
Not sure what the timber is.
Ray
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25th July 2018, 10:43 AM #6
Here is a front leg mortice. Sorry for the dodgy photo. You can see where a nail was hammered in. This caused a split that I repaired with glue & dowel
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26th July 2018, 11:38 AM #7
Moving along rough shaping done ready for blending into existing body. Detected a couple more spots that need to be cut & filled. I could use a filler but prefer to have glued in timber.
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26th July 2018, 03:39 PM #8GOLD MEMBER
- Join Date
- Nov 2012
- Location
- Brisbane
- Posts
- 596
That is a great horse, it has a lot of expression on its face - like a carousel horse. I'm enjoying reading about it.
I 'restored' (to useable condition only) a 1940s rocking horse for my children about 40 years ago, but it started out in better condition than this one so wasn't such a challenge. Ours is the type that swings on two U shaped iron "hoops" and were made here in Australia but I can't remember the maker.
David
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26th July 2018, 04:44 PM #9
Hi David,
Yes the flared nostrils & dished face were a feature on Lines horses of this era.
The main Aussie makers were:
Roebuck Sydney
Bartlett Melbourne
Lou Peets Brisbane although not to the same extent as the other 2.
Ray
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6th August 2018, 10:11 PM #10
Just finished this one. C1920s Roebuck size 2. (small horse) Can now concentrate on the Lines one.
Wasn't as challenging as the Lines one.
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8th August 2018, 05:33 PM #11
Gessoing started today on the Lines horse using traditional rabbit skin glue & whitning . Wait for this to dry & then sand back to a smooth finish. (I hope)
It is a messy business.
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13th August 2018, 12:46 PM #12
First undercoat done today. Shows up some fine cracking in the gesso, so will sand again & see how they look after another undercoat. Undecided about top coat. Maybe water based enamel or enamel. Despite a lot of sanding still not new horse smooth but I guess for it's age it is alright.
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18th August 2018, 01:51 PM #13New Member
- Join Date
- Jun 2015
- Location
- Australia
- Posts
- 4
Looks like a challenge Ray but then that's why we do these things Hey? Good work man.
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4th September 2018, 10:49 AM #14Novice
- Join Date
- Mar 2013
- Location
- Centralia, WA, USA
- Posts
- 9
You do some great work. Fast too. If it was me I'd still be puzzling out how I should start.
Neat project. I'll keep checking in.
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6th September 2018, 07:42 PM #15
Thanks mate. It is now slow time waiting for the kit to dress it in.
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