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Design journal: A tea box gets a face lift
comments (2) January 4th, 2013 in blogs
I've written in the past about being haunted by past missteps in my work and how remaking a piece is a good opportunity to exorcise those demons.
Here's a case where I took another stab at a design that I was fairly content with, and still found a way give it a different spin. I taught a class on making a tea box at Connecticut Vally School of Woodworking recently and used this box for demonstrations. Finishing up the box in my shop over the holidays gave me a chance to address one of my favorite, and least favorite, parts of the box- the rope handle. Asa Christiana, FW's editor, summed it up well when he first saw the original, "I get what you're trying to do, but it looks...well... not quite finished."
I liked the rope as well, but wondered what else I could do with it. I tried wrapping the two lengths together on each side to possibly give it a more finished look. The result adds a little different flavor to the finished box. I really like the English brown oak of the original, but the wenge certainly adds some drama.
posted in: blogs, modern, dovetails, box, arts and crafts, white oak, asian inspired, ebony
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Comments (2)
Posted: 9:25 pm on March 2nd
Posted: 3:00 pm on January 9th
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