NickM
Old Oak
This is a project I've been thinking about for a little while. I spent some time before Christmas working on the design and doing some experimentation but I haven't done much this month due to a shoulder injury and a bout of shingles (not recommended...). However, I'm getting back into it now. Progress is likely to be glacial though as I've just started a temporary part time job.
The main design features I want to incorporate are an oval top, because it lends itself to the fairly tight space I'm working with, and pedestal legs to avoid legs getting in the way of chairs/knees etc.
I started off by making a mock up of the table top out of a piece of hardboard. This was to help decide how big the table could be.

As you can see, it's a little wider and longer than our current rectangular table. We'd normally have 6 chairs around it, but could seat 8. It's fairly tight, but not as bad as it looks in the photo.
Taking inspiration from some of the work I saw when I was at Edward Barnsley, I wanted curved pedestal legs tapered in all dimensions. After playing around with a few alternatives and drawing them in Fusion 360 (a huge test of my very rudimentary CAD skills), I settled on this design.


The second drawing shows how the legs in each pedestal will be tied together at the top by a brass 'square' (let in to the tops of the legs) and a long stretcher and cross rails.
I haven't settled on choice of wood for this yet, but I think the 'undercarriage' will be made from oak not least because it bends well. I might make the top from oak, but I'm also considering sycamore for a lighter colour (our kitchen is quite dark). It's likely to come down to what I can find when I start trawling timber yards.
You might also be wondering about chairs. They're for the future...
The main design features I want to incorporate are an oval top, because it lends itself to the fairly tight space I'm working with, and pedestal legs to avoid legs getting in the way of chairs/knees etc.
I started off by making a mock up of the table top out of a piece of hardboard. This was to help decide how big the table could be.

As you can see, it's a little wider and longer than our current rectangular table. We'd normally have 6 chairs around it, but could seat 8. It's fairly tight, but not as bad as it looks in the photo.
Taking inspiration from some of the work I saw when I was at Edward Barnsley, I wanted curved pedestal legs tapered in all dimensions. After playing around with a few alternatives and drawing them in Fusion 360 (a huge test of my very rudimentary CAD skills), I settled on this design.


The second drawing shows how the legs in each pedestal will be tied together at the top by a brass 'square' (let in to the tops of the legs) and a long stretcher and cross rails.
I haven't settled on choice of wood for this yet, but I think the 'undercarriage' will be made from oak not least because it bends well. I might make the top from oak, but I'm also considering sycamore for a lighter colour (our kitchen is quite dark). It's likely to come down to what I can find when I start trawling timber yards.
You might also be wondering about chairs. They're for the future...












































