"personalizing" your furniture
Bill Tindall, E.TN.
Several things came together to get me thinking about how "perfect" one should strive to finish furniture. I attended a lecture on making drawers and the builders philosophy was to make a drawer as perfect as could be done. This approach went beyond a well fitted drawer all the way to "fixing" dovetails on the back of the drawer with epoxy filler so that any offending cracks would not be visible to the casual observer casually scritinizing the back of a drawer. Then immersed in my 14 volumes of "Home Furniture" I came across an entry on Shackleton Furniture and the statement that "a lot of woodworkers make furniture for other woodworkers" (the furniture is made anticipating scrutinizing by woodworkers not ordinary clients). I was finishing up the details of waxing drawers on the line and berry piece and was about to remove the penciled parts labels from the back corners (1L, !R, 2L etc. ). Which got me to wondering about Krenov . I suppose he made perfect drawers. But when I am examining an old piece of furniture I take great delight in discovering a mark left by its maker- a pencil line, a notation, or some other personal indication that the was his piece (or hers). One wonders if given two otherwise "identical" pieces of Krenov furniture would the one with a pencil notation of say grain orientation or other stray indication of the maker fetch more in 2120 than the "perfect" one.
I decided to leave the pencil marks stay. I carry that philosophy on to other areas as well. I don't "fix" any interior dovetail. If it is part of the process and doesn't detract from a first impression it stays, so that would include any interior surfaces and joinery. The compass points on the line and berry stayed too. The only person to notice and comment on them was a woodworker scrutinizing the stringing inlay.