I never cared for carved furniture until I saw some 17th-century American chests in Wallace Nutting's "Furniture of the Pilgrim Century." (A low-resolution GoogleBooks version is available here.) The book's first chapter is about carved chests, and as soon as I saw them, I knew I had to build one (especially the example on page 10).
The joinery in these chests is no problem ? lots of mortise-and-tenon work plus a few nails. But the carving always intimidated me. Actually, it wasn't the carving as much as the layout for the carving. I could see that many of the shapes were simple geometric forms, but how they were stitched together had me flummoxed.
So I've been chomping at the bit to see Peter Follansbee's "17th Century New England Carving" from Lie-Nielsen Toolworks. The DVD is due any day now, but the Lie-Nielsen folks took mercy on me and burned me an advance copy of the disc.
I watched it through a couple times this weekend and am energized to now tackle this project. Follansbee's instruction on layout, body stance and moving the tools answered all my questions about how these gorgeous carvings are executed.
The DVD begins with some nice footage at Plimoth Plantation, where Follansbee is the joiner. You get to see some of the furniture in period-appropriate settings. And you get to see Follansbee splitting an oak and riving it into blanks.
The real heart of the DVD is a series of exercises that Follansbee demonstrates that get you familiar with the gouge and V-tool to make some of the foundation shapes. Then he moves on to showing you how to execute several patterns, each one a little more complex, and introducing a new technique or tool.
All the while, Follansbee also instructs you in how his body is moving and shifting as his tools sweep over the work, including tips on footwork ? often a neglected area of the craft.
For me, the coolest stuff was the layout. I know that sounds boring. It's not. Once you see how almost all of the layout is done with a compass, awl, square and the tools themselves, the carving patterns make a lot of sense, and they become even more exciting to the eye.
The other nice feature of this DVD is that as Follansbee works, a floating "toolbar" appears on the screen that shows you which of the five profiles he's wielding in that shot. That's helpful, especially when he starts switching to the shallower gouges to remove the background of the more complex carvings.
Also on the DVD: a nice pdf that shows the exact gouge sweeps and size of the V-tool used in the DVD, which you can print out and take to the store or antique shop when looking for the correct tool set. There also is a pdf that shows all the layouts of the designs that Follansbee executes in the DVD. These are not to be pasted down on the work (that would be really slow). They are for reminding you of all the lines that need to be laid down with the compass and tools.
I think that 17th-century furniture doesn't get enough attention among woodworkers. That is, in part, my fault as well as that of my fellow woodworking journalists. I hope we can change that in the coming months and years, and I think that this excellent DVD will fuel the enthusiasm of many woodworkers. Case in point, Managing Editor Megan Fitzpatrick has already begun pestering me to borrow this DVD.
You can place your order with Lie-Nielsen Toolworks.
? Christopher Schwarz
Other Good 17th-century Resources
? Peter Follansbee's blog should be on your list. He's always exploring something interesting, whether it is some old work, or a reproduction he is working on: pfollansbee.wordpress.com.
? Jennie Alexander's site is another great source of information on the furniture and techniques of the 17th century: greenwoodworking.com.
? Rob Tarule, who built the Roubo-style workbench in "The Workbench Book," has an interesting site filled with photos of furniture he builds: heartofthewood.com.
? Adam Cherubini writes about 17th- and 18th-century techniques in the Arts & Mysteries column. A collection of his writings is available on CD: "The Arts & Mysteries of Hand Tools."
? "Seventeenth Century Joinery from Braintree, Massachusetts: the Savell Shop Tradition" at Chipstone.org.
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