Just finished up on an armoire. Made of sapele; the door and side panels are pomelle sapele.
armoire_left_front.jpg
armoire_front.jpg
armoire_right_front.jpg
armoire_doors_open_way_left.jpg
armoire_doors_open_left.jpg
armoire_doors_open.jpg
Just finished up on an armoire. Made of sapele; the door and side panels are pomelle sapele.
armoire_left_front.jpg
armoire_front.jpg
armoire_right_front.jpg
armoire_doors_open_way_left.jpg
armoire_doors_open_left.jpg
armoire_doors_open.jpg
Last edited by Christian Hawkshaw; 04-20-2024 at 5:06 PM.
Chris
More pics...
armoire_molding.jpg
Here is a pic in natural light. The color is more accurate than the pics with artificial lighting.
armoire_natural_light.jpg
Last edited by Christian Hawkshaw; 04-20-2024 at 4:26 PM.
Chris
Wonderful pomelle figure on hte doors
It looks great to me and I'm guessing, almost 7' tall?
Nice work
Christian, very elegant. Well done, Sir!
Ken
So much to learn, so little time.....
Exceptional!
Very nice. I've never worked with that wood. Just for curiosity how much does it weigh?
Lee Schierer
USNA '71
Go Navy!
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Thanks Ken and Bruce.
Thanks Lee. Sapele is a little heavier than walnut, and a little lighter than white oak. This piece is not all solid wood (I usually only make solid wood furniture). The door and side panels are veneered ˝ inch MDF. The remaining panels are all ˝ sapele plywood with the core being some light soft woods (pine and something else it appears). I am not sure how much this piece weighs overall, but it is heavy.
Chris
Beautiful piece ! But what really makes it desirable to all , is it is lean . People used to like deep pieces , now they don’t.
Lot of them were cut up to make newer stuff.
That’s a piece to be proud of!
"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing."
“If you want to know what a man's like, take a good look at how he treats his inferiors, not his equals.”
That's a beautiful and functional piece!
--
The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...
That is a beautiful piece. Proportions are nice also.
Curious question: what type of finish did you use.
Thanks all.
This is the finish schedule:
- Sand to 180 (I could have gone much higher on the pomelle to enhance the chatoyance of the figure, but I did not want to sand through the veneer).
- Ammonia fume.
- Let air out for a week.
- Door frames only: Applied “Fumed” Rubio Monocoat tannin reactive pretreatment.
- Apply boiled linseed oil.
- 3 wipe-on coats of Arm-R-Seal gloss. Sand with 400 between coats 2 and 3.
- 2 wipe-on coats of Arm-R-Seal satin. Sand with 400 between coats.
For the shelves and drawers:
- Sand to 180.
- Ammonia fume.
- Let air out for a week.
- Apply boiled linseed oil.
- 2 coats of Arm-R-Seal gloss applied with a foam brush, sand with 400 between coats. For the drawers, only the fronts got 2 coats, the rest only got 1 coat.
- 1 sprayed coat of General Finishes High Performance Water Based Topcoat satin. I did this to reduce the gassing off of the oil-based finish inside the armoire.
The fuming and linseed oil helped bring the color of the various pieces to a more consistent color. Not as good as dying, but pretty good. I fumed samples of all of the pieces and went through the finish process to make sure it would look OK before fuming the armoire. The wood used for the door frame was much lighter than the rest of the piece. I have experimented with Rubio Monocoat tannin reactive pretreatments and found that “Fumed” is close to actual ammonia fuming. I also found that using this product after ammonia fuming will further darken the wood. So, for the door frames, I also applied the “Fumed” Rubio Monocoat tannin reactive pretreatment.
I will add some picutures later to illustrate the above.
Last edited by Christian Hawkshaw; 04-21-2024 at 2:19 PM. Reason: clarify
Chris
Oh that is a wonderful piece with some awesome looking wood. The design is restrained but elegant, with great proportions.
Take a well-deserved bow. And get the Bengay because I bet that thing was heavy to move.
John