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    I know of no better place to ask

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Woodworking
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    • HornOxxH Offline
      HornOxx
      last edited by

      "...I know of no better place to ask" which is a nice comliment to the forum here - thanks!

      Hi Ryan - these are so great chairs πŸ‘ and aside from the fact that I'm not an antiques specialist, it's great to have them preserved and to use such precious old family items at all πŸ˜„

      I gave the decorations, which I think are the difficult part here, a quick & dirty try using SubD which works fine and pretty fast and I think this could be a way for you? (PS - could you please save down your skp above to a somthing earlier version please?)

      [ πŸ˜„ to send Dave one chair is not a good idea - better is to send ME all the chairs! πŸ˜„ ]


      chair to subd.jpg


      hxx - chair to subd.skp

      never trust a skinny cook

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      • C Offline
        CJRyan
        last edited by

        @hornoxx said:

        "... these are so great chairs

        Thank you HornOxx, and your subD example looks like it might be part of the solution.

        Here's the file saved back to SU6 so even pilou should be able to open it.

        Jacobean Chair SUv6.skp

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        • HornOxxH Offline
          HornOxx
          last edited by

          @cjryan said:

          ...saved back to SU6 so even pilou should be able to open it
          πŸ˜„ πŸ‘ πŸ˜„ so funny ! πŸ˜„

          never trust a skinny cook

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          • D Offline
            davidheim1
            last edited by

            Several years ago, Dave Richards explained how to model a Greek column capital using (I think) the Curve Maker plugin. It was a post on Fine Woodworking's "Design. Click. Build." blog. That might work if SubD doesn't. I searched the site but couldn't find the post. Maybe Dave can provide a link.
            As for researching the history of the chairs, I have three suggestions:
            One, the Furniture Study center at the Yale University Art Gallery (https://artgallery.yale.edu/furniture-study). The center specializes in American furniture, but one of the curators may be able to steer you to other resources.

            Ditto the Henry R. Luce center for American Art at the Metropolitan Museum, in New York City. (metmuseum.org).

            Third, call the Furniture Institute of Massachusetts and speak with its founder, Philip C. Lowe. Phil is a master restorer and quite knowledgeable about furniture styles. (http://furnituremakingclasses.com).

            Hope this helps.
            dh

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            • Dave RD Offline
              Dave R
              last edited by

              David, I wonder if you are thinking of the ascending volute.

              Etaoin Shrdlu

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              (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

              G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

              M30

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              • C Offline
                CJRyan
                last edited by

                As always, thank you, gentlemen, for the help.

                Thank you, davidheim1 for the links to those three resources.

                DaveR, I've just finished watching your "Fine Woodworking" video over on youtube. Nice presentation! So thank you also.

                I seem to be having a fair degree of success with HornOxx's suggestion of using subD, thanks to his model getting me going in the right direction. So thank you, sir, also!

                DaveR, I looked and found no makers marks. I did discover that the original seat was caned. although it's always been upholstered during the 67 years I've known it.

                So thanks again!

                Chris

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                • D Offline
                  davidheim1
                  last edited by

                  Dave R's blog on the ascending volute is the one I had in mind.

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                  • C Offline
                    CJRyan
                    last edited by

                    While I've not had the chance to look into the resources that DavidH gave me.

                    I have found this https://www.bidsquare.com/online-auctions/ahlers-ogletree/pair-of-jacobean-stained-oak-hall-chairs-17th-c-495968, which suggests that these chairs might be even older than I thought.
                    I find it hard to believe they could be a hundred years older than I thought.
                    And compared to these chairs, mine are in pristine condition.

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                    • L Offline
                      L i am
                      last edited by

                      I think there is one better place to ask....

                      https://designaddict.com/community/

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                      • C Offline
                        CJRyan
                        last edited by

                        Thank you, Liam I will give that a shot.
                        From perusing the site, I've not seen many requests for furniture as old as what I'm asking. But who knows.
                        Chris

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