I'm sorry I've been away from the blog for so long, kind readers. It's been a very busy time at the shop. I've recently completed a suite of museum cases for our state capitol (more about that in another post soon), several stain-grade architectural projects, and a variety of smaller odds-and-ends.
Presently I'm working on the library table below. It's in red oak which will be bleached and limed. The photo shows the piece where I left it tonight. Tomorrow I'll be refining some of the shapes a bit more and adding feet--almost more like big toes--to the ends of the bases.
For those of you who follow theses posts and wonder if I actually turned the big columns on my grandfather's old lathe, the answer is yes.
Here's a series of shots detailing the construction of the breadboard ends. This first photo gives you a sense of the overall design. A 3/8" stub tenon fits into a groove running the length of the breadboard. Longer tenons are spaced along the tabletop's width.
During the penultimate dry fit I bore 17/64" holes through the breadboards and the tenons on the end of the top. You'll see below how the outermost holes in the tenons are elongated to allow for the top's expansion and shrinkage. In fact, only the two center tenons are glued for this same reason.