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    Ruhlmann Desk

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Woodworking
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    • brooklynia373B Offline
      brooklynia373
      last edited by

      Here's a desk I've been working on. Ruhlmann was a designer around the turn of the century. He exclusively worked for the extremely rich and used the finest materials and craftsman. I tried to model this as I thought it would be built with joinery and all. (I'll post an exploded view later.) Not something that could ever live in my house, but fun to figure out.


      Front


      R desk iso.jpg

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      • D Offline
        davidheim1
        last edited by

        Excellent work. Ruhlmann's designs are maddeningly complex, but you've certainly captured him with the model.
        Fine Woodworking magazine had an article years ago about a couple of furniture restorers who specialized in repairing Ruhlmann pieces. As I recall, the article made it clear that Ruhlmann was just a designer and had a shop of craftsmen to execute his designs. I think the article also said that his pieces were all about surface: Under the veneer were rough pieces of wood often glued and screwed together.

        Great model and lovely rendering. Keep up the good work.

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        • brooklynia373B Offline
          brooklynia373
          last edited by

          @davidheim1 said:

          I think the article also said that his pieces were all about surface: Under the veneer were rough pieces of wood often glued and screwed together.

          That's interesting cause after looking closely at this thing for a while, you can tell that the carcass would have to be assembled somewhat rough with staves, then finished by hand to the profile, then veneered after assembly. I would love to see one of these up close, check out the interior and all.

          Thanks for the info!

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          • pbacotP Offline
            pbacot
            last edited by

            Beautiful job. Such a modern piece, I would have thought at least 1920's?

            MacOSX MojaveSketchUp Pro v19 Twilight v2 Thea v3 PowerCADD

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            • brooklynia373B Offline
              brooklynia373
              last edited by

              Thanks and you're right! The piece I modeled this after is at the MET here in ny. It's dated 1918-1919.

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