Oak dinette furniture
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Gidon,
I never thought of the possibility that I will be taken serious. I apologize for that.Eric
poster-ezk
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esk
That looks rather comfortable. Are there cushions as well?
Alan -
Alan,
as you should know, the origin for this type of chair is a 19th Century English Lawn Chair. Here is another one:
http://media.popularmechanics.com/documents/PMX0706Adiron.pdfThey were just left out in the rain. I never saw them displayed with cushions, they are comfortable without. In Eastern Canada they call them Muskogan Chair.
Have a nice day,
Eric
poster-ezk
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ezk
Thanks for the link. This end of the world that style is sold in this area with cushions. We must be wimps!
Alan -
Alan,
Here you go with your cushion
Cushion.skp -
100% down feathers!
poster-ezk
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Hi Gaieus
Now that feels better.
I think I'll go and have a lie down.
Thanks
Alan -
@not registered yet said:
100% down feathers!
[attachment=0:b1xz5cng]<!-- ia0 -->robleadirondack.jpg<!-- ia0 -->[/attachment:b1xz5cng]poster-ezk
I'm suspicious now, who is in control of mister "not registered yet"? -
@unknownuser said:
I'm suspicious now, who is in control of mister "not registered yet"?
This is a transferred thread form the old board (see original here).When an original poster hasn't registered yet, we use this dummy account. See details here, please.
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@alan wood said:
Hi Gully
The chairs look nice and comfortable and the table would appear to extend. Did you make this yourself?I'm tempted to ask Coen if the woodworkers on this site could maybe have a shed to play in, and maybe talk about methods of making etc.
Pass on a few tips etc.
Any views on that?
That would be really nice, because I might be soon to start a project, and i am all for any tips or suggestions that may alter my design to make it look better or be more useful.I have the model and have only sort of started dimensioning out individual pieces in my rather unprofessional way so I know what I need to make.
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