Furniture Books


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Furniture Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Furniture
Ceramics for Gardens & Landscapes
Published in Paperback by Krause Publications (2000-02)
Author: Karin Hessenberg
List price: $29.95
New price: $7.26
Used price: $8.00

Average review score:

Art history plus technique
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-07
A bit heavy on biographical sketches for my taste, but the bios will be of interest to students of art history. Most bios are followed by a section on "Techniques" containing very useful details, but since the book is organized by ceramists, there is no quick way to find the technical info you are looking for. Well-written and good for casually browsing.

Great Inspirational Ideas and Technical Resource
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-18
Karin Hessenberg has done a wonderful job of pulling together enough photos, ideas and techniques to get the ceramic artist started in this technically difficult medium. Accompanying photos,schematic drawings and lists of materials needed are a welcome resource without overdooing the amount of steps in each project. I have found that resource books like this must fill 2 needs for me. One; to inspire me with wonderful examples of each art form by a variety of artists and, two; information enough to help me with technical problems I might not know about but, without giving me a step by step that fills up the book. I really do like to look at the pretty pictures!

Pretty Good Introduction
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-21
Offers an excellent visual guide to outdoor and garden ceramics and a nice insight into the minds behind these strange and beautiful things. If you're looking for an inspirational book, this works. If you're like me and are always looking for more tips and demos, you'll find it's a little on the thin side.

Not enough Technique
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-02
I was disappointed with this book. There is some lovely work illustrated and the biographies of the artists doing the work are comprehensive, but as a newcomer to doing work for outdoor installations I would have preferred more "how-to" information. For instance, there is no chapter on how to deal with the freeze-thaw cycle; you can glean some information from many of the artists about the techniques they use, but it is not organized as a comprehensive topic. The information about the mechanics for making a fountain is sketchy at best--basically, it's determined to be hard to do and must be figured out on a trial-and-error basis.

Furniture
Complete Step-by-Step Upholstery
Published in Hardcover by New Holland (2005-06-28)
Authors: David Sowle and Ruth Dye
List price: $29.95
New price: $16.29
Used price: $17.38

Average review score:

Out of date information
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-05
I purchased this because I am interested in starting upholstery. This book is European & the techniques are rather old fashioned. They use "vegetable fibre" as stuffing? The sources are all in Europe. Maybe if you are a purest, this might be a interesting historical reference. Not for a beginner.

Love this book!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-23
This is an excellent resource for beginners and experts alike! Great photos and step by step instructions.

Great book, with great photographs.
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 28 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-23
I have an old leather chesterfield couch that needs to be repaired in sections. I have no doubt that this is going to be a great help. The projects are all step by step with great color photographs. It also goes over all the tools needed. If my project turns out half as nice as the pictures I will be thrilled.

Beautifully photographed step-by-step instructions
Helpful Votes: 25 out of 25 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-04
This book directs the reader through several projects, beginning with a very simple one to one that is quite complicated. Covers a wide range of techniques, and displays each step quite clearly with many good photographs. The book is particulary valuable for upholstering antique pieces with materials similar to what would have been original to the piece. There is not a piece of foam used in any of the projects. Some upholsterers find that the vegetable fiber is more difficult to smooth out than foam, particularly for the inexperienced student. But if you want to see traditional techniques beautifully illustrated, this is the book for you.

Furniture
David Charlesworth's Furniture-Making Techniques Volume Two
Published in Paperback by Guild of Master Craftsman (2002-05-28)
Author: David Charlesworth
List price: $17.95
New price: $10.00
Used price: $8.59

Average review score:

Glad I bought it
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-13
I almost did not buy this book because of a bad reader's review. I liked the first book and decided to buy it anyhow. I am really glad I did. The chapters on making drawers is wonderful, and David follows it up with a chapter on aligning the drawers as well. Another great chapter brings you through the tapering process on curved laminated table legs.
More advanced sharpening techniques for scraper planes were a welcome addition. I have finally got mine to work properly thanks to David's advice.
There are many other good features in this book, and I am looking forward to volumn III and will buy it regardless of the reviews. Thanks David.

Not Adequtely titled book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-28
I bought this book thinking it would at least make reference to the title it bears. Instead it is just another approach to the already overlooked subject(in the 1st Vol.) of SHARPENING. Maybe if the books title would of been, "More demented sharpening techniques for woodworkers" I would not be so upset with it. THe book does not cover any angle of what the title suggests. The author might be a renowned woodworker but, his approach in this (and Vol. 1) is totally LAME.

This really should be titled "Focus on Hand Tool Woodworking"
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-07
Which is not necessarily a bad thing. If you want to learn about Power Tools, routers, sanders - then forget this book. But if what you want to discover is how to do extremely high quality work, than this is for you. Forget the comment above about sharpening. It is one of the most important skills to master if you want to work with hand tools, and there is an appropriate focus on it in this book. But also other skills, like planing techniques, fitting drawers, shooting an edge. Many skills the average woodworker seem to be lacking, but are important for great work.

It is on my top list.

Inspiring
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-21
Absolutely excellent, as is his first book. The author has a penchant for planning and careful execution that is inspiring. But, he is also very human in admitting the areas that give him trouble and suggests alternate methods for those of us who are also human and might not have the hand skills of James Krenov. He is also very honest in appraising tools by brand name and type. I have (budget allowing) followed his recommendations and been delighted with the tools he recommended. I read both of his books over and over again.

Furniture
Desks: Outstanding Projects from America's Best Craftsmen (Projects Book)
Published in Paperback by Taunton (2000-10-01)
Author: Andy Charron
List price: $24.95
New price: $9.95
Used price: $9.94

Average review score:

A Real Gem!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-23
I really enjoyed reading this book. Though, not easy to do this book simplifies and shows you how to make heirloom quality desks. One of the thing the author tells you that to make a desk you are really doing a lot of little projects and combining it into one whole project. I highly reccomend this book

Shame on the proofreader!!
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-29
I have to agree with Peter Anger....Venture very carefully when using this book for anything beyond an idea! It has beautiful pictures, awesome designs, great drawings, but very inconsistent and inaccurate dimensions. I am building the pedestal desk and have found several mistakes already including conflicting measurements within the same drawing. Make sure you double check all the wood dimensions given and you can make yourself some beautiful furniture.

Fine woodworkers do not necessarily make fine writers
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-13
I bought this book because I wanted to build the laptop computer table. I am astounded by the glaring errors in the "plans" for this table. I haven't yet finished building the table but have already encountered six errors in the plans.

The text is misleading and in some parts downright wrong. In many cases, you are left to figure out your own dimensions.

Do not cut anything based solely on the cut lists in this book. The best advice I could give you is to use the plans in this book as a guide - NOTHING MORE!

Make your own drawings and double - triple check the dimensions before you cut a single board.

Coming from Taunton Press - the publishers of Fine Woodworking magazine, I would have expected meticulous attention to detail in this book. Unfortunately, fine woodworkers do not necessarily make fine writers.

Excellent information
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-01
As usual for Taunton this book is full of very useful information. It covers several styles of desks, both usage styles and design styles.

There is information on storage design, with different storage nook options based on the expected use of the desk. Information on material selection for the desk based on how a desk is used. Different joinery methods and why they are better/worse for the usage of a desk.

If you are wanting to build a desk, of any style, this would be a very useful book to have.

Furniture
The Family Handyman: Toys, Games, and Furniture (Family Handyman)
Published in Hardcover by Readers Digest (1995-09-01)
Author: Family Handyman Magazine editors
List price: $19.95
New price: $44.81
Used price: $1.98

Average review score:

Superb plans; needs better binding
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-04
I also built the rocking horse on the cover (a couple of times) and some of the other projects, including a very cool wobbly fish. The review by "jeff_mcfarland" is right on the money. I can't imagine building it with a jigsaw, but I suppose it's possible.

In any case, the design of some of these projects is absolutely superb. It's the most handsome rocking horse I've ever seen, and both my son and my neice love it to death -- well worth the cost of the entire book. (The plans for this horse are nearly $20 if purchased separately!) The plans are quite easy to follow, but as Jeff mentioned, there are some holes in the descriptions.

My binding broke, too, also after moderate user in the shop. This is the ONLY reason I'd give it 4 instead of 5 stars. I'll probably end up taking it down to the office supply store and having it rebound (spiral bound). The pages are pretty high quality and durable, so this should work out just fine.

Again, hats off to the designer -- it's well thought out. For example, the back of the head and neck of the horse on the cover is curved in such a way that you can put the head pattern twice on the same board, back to back (one upside down) so that these curves nearly meet. (The two head cut-outs share the curve.) This saves a good deal of wood. Similarly, the leg and tail patterns can be overlapped to save wood. I ended up having a lot of extra wood when I was finished the first time!

This book is a bargain!

I built the rocking horse on the front cover
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-16
I built the rocking horse on the front cover of this book. It turned out pretty well. The drawings in the book are fairly easy to follow. However, the written instructions have some holes in the explanation. In addition, the instructions imply that stationary power tools are recommended for this project, but hand-held tools would work as well. I seriously doubt that this horse could be built properly using only a hand-held jigsaw and electric drill. The precision required to do this project *right* really call for bigger tools. One other gripe - after moderate use in the workshop, the binding on this book started to come loose, and a couple of pages came out.

But overall, I was pleased with the project and hope to build some more toys using the plans in this book. It was worth the price just for the horse plans

Any One Of The Projects Is Worth The Price Of This Book!
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-20
I made 2 of the Bunk Beds with the desk option. They turned out great. There were a few errors in the shopping list, so double check the list against the plans or you may have to make a second trip. I also made several modification to better fit our needs. The illustrations were exellent and don't be afraid to make changes. If you only use one project in this book, it is still worth buying.

I built the rocking horse on the front cover.
Helpful Votes: 30 out of 31 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-16
I built the rocking horse on the front cover of this book. It turned out pretty well. The drawings in the book are fairly easy to follow. However, the written instructions have some holes in the explanation. In addition, the instructions imply that stationary power tools are recommended for this project, but hand-held tools would work as well. I seriously doubt that this horse could be built properly using only a hand-held jigsaw and electric drill. The precision required to do this project *right* really call for bigger tools. One other gripe - after moderate use in the workshop, the binding on this book started to come loose, and a couple of pages came out.

But overall, I was pleased with the project and hope to build some more toys using the plans in this book. It was worth the price just for the horse plans.

Furniture
Home life in colonial days
Published in Unknown Binding by MacMillan & Co (1900)
Author: Alice Morse Earle
List price:
Used price: $15.00

Average review score:

Full of Mistakes and a Waste of TIME
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-07
As a historian who deals with life in the 18th century on a day to day basis I was appauled at the utter nonsense in this book. All right, I understand it was written over a hundred years ago but why anyone continues to reprint this book which has mistakes on each and every page is beyond me. And what is worse is that for the NON-HISTORIAN it is taken as truth. I know this for a fact, as I get teachers who come into my place of work saying things are are wrong and when I aske where they picked this information up it is usually this book. Please, with so much great and MODERN research out there don't waste your time and your money on this. You may have to read books on individual subjects but at least you'll know better.

Not bad, but a bit sterile
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-16
I frankly had a mixed reaction to Home Life in Colonial Days. Although Alice Morse Earle wrote it over one hundred years ago, there's a freshness and openness to the style that invites the reader along. It is certainly not a work of historical analysis, but nor is it quite a survey. Actually, my biggest issue with it was the lack of people. It might better have been called Home Snapshots of Colonial Houses.

The strengths are that the reader will get a detailed and engaging look at some of the tools and skills required for living in early days. There is considerable discussion on the houses themselves, on food preparation and consumption, on household chores, and other physical aspects of life. Three chapters alone are devoted weaving before we even get to sewing. This last example is, I suspect, one Earle herself had particular interest in. The style does manage to be engaging and detailed at once. The reader really does get a feel for what surrounded the colonists in their daily lives.

But as I mentioned, we get very little about the people. Only one chapter near the end is actually devoted to human customs (the subject is neighborliness). We find out more about the glassware than the people who drank from them. I'm not trying to put down Earle's choice of topics. As the author, she alone decides what to cover. The end effect left me feeling a bit blank, like walking through an old museum after hours with no one around. And I do have to say that for this reason the title is a bit misleading. It wasn't really about Home Life at all. So ultimately I would recommend the book for what it actually is to a reader who know what it is, but not for what it sounds like it will be, because it isn't.

Excellent early social history.
Helpful Votes: 35 out of 36 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-02
This hundred-year-old work retains its vitality and usefulness.
In her wonderfully readable narrative, Earle conveys life in the colonies with vividness missing from most conventional texts. Starting with basic shelter, which were sometimes actually caves in the earliest days, she goes on to describe in detail the critical element of food supply, with careful explanations of culinary practices and useful drawings to illustrate the often-obscure utensils. (This latter feature will fascinate antique buffs.) Also covered are the home production of textiles, the dress of the colonists, travel, religious and social practices, flower gardens, and other matters, providing modern readers an insight into everyday colonial life hard to find elsewhere.
Earle's work is a feast of enjoyable information for history readers, collectors, and anyone else who wants to know how the early settlers lived. (The "score" rating is an unfortunately ineradicable feature of the page. This reviewer does not "score" books.)

A Great Review of Daily Life in Colonial Days
Helpful Votes: 75 out of 75 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-22
Alice Morse Earle has written several books on life in Colonial America. This is the first one of her books I've read, and I am eager to move on to another volume, perhaps Child Life in Colonial Days. Mrs. Earle's "Home Life" is a fascinating description of everyday life --- the chores, the tools, the dwelling places, the foods, the sights and sounds --- that Colonial Americans knew. Have you ever seen a strange tool or implement in a museum, an antique shop, or hanging on the wall at a country restaurant, and no one seems to know exactly what it is or what it was used for? Read this book: its many illustrations will more than likely include that mysterious object; and Mrs. Earle will describe clearly what it was and how it was used. This book should be in the library of every enthusiast of American antiques. Without a doubt, this book contains information found nowhere else in a book now in print. This is not a history of Colonial America --- although it contains many interesting tidbits about our country's earliest days. It is, however, an excellent description of everyday life in America, 1600 - 1800, with special emphasis on New England and Virginia. As such, this book would be useful not just to historians and antique collectors, but to writers, museum curators, and anyone who wants to understand Colonial America.

Furniture
Jazz Up Your Junk With Linda Barker: Fabulous Furniture Makeovers from the Star of Bbc-Tv's Changing Rooms
Published in Hardcover by David & Charles (1999-04)
Author: Linda Barker
List price: $24.95
New price: $2.05
Used price: $0.46
Collectible price: $50.88

Average review score:

Practical and useful projects
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-07
Many books I've come across seem to have frivolous unusable decorative furniture makeover projects. Not with this book! I wasn't disappointed one bit, and much of the furniture pieces are items we've all acquired cheaply or simply have stored them in our basements with junk abounding on top of them. Easy to follow instructions and you don't have to be a pro at using tools, materials, etc. I was very pleased with the furniture that I was able to turn into something practicle and useable.

Great author!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 33 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-10
If this book is anything like the show Changing Rooms on BBC America, you will love this book. I personally have not looked at this book, but I have seen Linda Barker at work. She is a great artist and decorator who has an ablity to turn one man's trash to another's treasure!

jazz up your junk with linda barker
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-17
I was horrified by Barker's book. She destroys attractive, and often costly, antiques to make artsy-craftsy pieces which will look dated within ten years. It's hard to believe she purchased the original pieces at bargain prices. I fear readers may destroy even more valuable items now sitting in their attics. If someone owns the necessary power tools, is willing to buy expensive materials and replacement hardware, and has unlimited time to do these projects, they should head to the local unfinished furniture store and use their own ideas and creativity rather than purchase this ill-considered book.

Full of Great Ideas!
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-28
Linda Barker is a wealth of knowledge and know-how. She's got endless ideas that an average gal like myself can do without a second thought. This book allows that dusty junk in the basement to become a great new piece in your home. She's got so many creative and cheap ideas in this book. The amount of creativity is never-ending. Her work is so easy and natural. Great for Everyone!

Furniture
Making Dolls' Houses in 1/12 Scale
Published in Paperback by David & Charles Publishers (1996-03)
Author: Brian Nickolls
List price: $19.99
New price: $14.69
Used price: $6.30

Average review score:

R.Zahdeh a computer programmer and wood crafting expert
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-13
Very good book excellent ideas, could be a bit more detailed, but overall very good. Not always very accurate eg the ladder for the fishermans cottage should have 10 not 9 steps according to the measurments, but things like that are easily adapted

Neophytes beware!
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-17
Following the authors instructions may have you pulling your hair out. There are quite a few mistakes and vague instruction in this book.

I would not recomend this book to the inexperienced for it's plans, as it may prove to be quite frustrating and perhaps discouraging. It is however, a great book for inspiration.

If you are fairly experienced or really like a good challenge, then you will enjoy creating these designs. (Hopefully you will spot the errors 'before' making them!)

I would give this book 5 stars if it were not for the errors. A web site from the author and/or publisher for errata would be very useful.

All that aside, I did manage to buid 2 of the projects so far. (More like 10 if you count the times I did parts of them over and over and ...)

More, please
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-06
There are only 5 designs for this book. I am happy to learn that there is a second book available. I want to see more. The victorian store and thatched cottage are very nice. The fisherman's cottage is excellent and really tempted me to buy this book (got this out at the library) I liked the goergian house as well but it lacked a second staircase so there was no entrance into the attic rooms.
There are detailed instructions spanning many pages but I can see how some readers might find them a bit daunting. Also the photos are too dark.The tudor example given was an unusual design however there is no furnishings in the interior so it was not as inspiring.

Pretty good book overall. I would recommend looking it over at the bookstore or in the library before you buy.

Somewhat helpful....
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-11
I checked out this book from the library and used it for my FIRST EVER miniature project - the Georgian dollhouse. The narrative instructions are a little hard to follow, (perhaps because the authors are British and I am not), and there are only a few basic diagrams. But after a few months of mild to moderate frustration, I had a beautiful product! I wouldn't recommend this book to someone who hasn't done any woodcraft or miniature projects, but for someone with a little experience, the end results can be worth the effort.

Furniture
Mission Furniture You Can Build
Published in Paperback by Dover Publications (2007-06-26)
Author: John D. Wagner
List price: $12.95
New price: $7.72
Used price: $7.72

Average review score:

Recommended with Reservations
Helpful Votes: 103 out of 104 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-12
This book included chapters on Gustav Stickley, joinery and woodworking techniques, wood finishing and upholstery. The heart of the book is ten projects, complete with large color photos. They range from a hall mirror to a Morris chair. Some designs may be original, one is from Popular Mechanics' Mission Furniture, How to Make It, and the rest seem to be based upon articles from Stickley's The Craftsman magazine.

Not surprisingly, since most of the general designs are based on Stickley, they are on the whole quite attractive. They are simplified versions of production designs, and were originally meant for the home woodworker. Unlike the reproduction book Making Authentic Craftsman Furniture, there is a wealth of detail and all of the pieces have a place in the modern home. The author has included two pieces that I call Neo-Craftsman: a coffee table and a hall or foyer magazine table.

The engineering of the pieces, beneath the facade, may cause some problems. In particular, Mr. Wagner seems to be unaware of the problems that seasonal wood movement can cause when large panels are tightly secured. For instance, his coffee table top is doweled in place. I should be mentioned that the author is very fond of using dowels EVERYWHERE in the furniture. He even uses them to assemble drawers.

I recommend this book, with reservations. Like most similar books, you must have a shop full of power tools, and be familiar with their use, so it really is not for the complete novice. Knowledge of doweling and making mortises and tenons is a must, and it seems that one would have to have a jointer and a planer (or be accomplished with the hand tool equivalents) for the majority of the projects. There are a wealth of exploded drawings of the parts, but they are poorly drawn. I suspect that the illustrator Ms. Barbara Smullen is not a draftsman or a woodworker. Some of the perspectives are drawn wrong, and one would think that some tenons are haunched when they are not. However, all of the measurements seem to be correct, so one can go by them.

Note For The Advanced Woodworker:

It is useful to see completed pieces from the Stickley book. I don't like some of Wagner's joinery techniques, but you can use proper tabletop fasteners and can properly dovetail the drawers, etc. Another thing he has done is skip tenon shoulders for some spindles - I guess to make construction easier. Of course, then the edges of the mortises have to be perfect. One odd thing that I noticed in the photos is that he doesn't seem to use quartersawn oak anywhere. I wonder whether this book was a project assigned by a publisher...

Not the best book of mission furniture
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-14
After reading Blair Howard's "Arts and Crafts Furniture", I was expecting a lot from this book and it didn't deliver. I agree with all of Donald Thomson's complaints above. The joinery seemed questionable and he took short cuts I would not have made. Additionally, I felt his pieces lacked the elegance that the better mission designs have, both by Stickley and by others. However, the book is very detailed and easy to follow, so it should be easy for a beginning woodworker to follow. Joining boards and cutting mortices appeared to be the most advanced things he ever did, and he avoided cutting mortice and tenon joints whenever possible.

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 26 out of 29 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-17
When I became interested in building "Mission Style" furniture I purchased this book. The designs are wonderfully illustrated and easily followed. I particularly appreciated the comments provided by the author as to the skill level required to complete a specific project. The beginning of the book provides a brief but informative history of Gustav Stickley and some important techniques that are required in building the projects.

I would highly recommend this book to any beginning interested in building "Mission Style" furniture. This book has inspired me to read more about Gustav Stickley and to build more challenge pieces of furniture. Absolutely Excellent!

Great book for beginners
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-03
Wagner has done a great job explaining wood working techniques for the beginner. This is a great book for beginning woodworkers to use when building this Mission furntiure. I built the table. Had great results. (A nice historical introduction makes the best reading in the book!)

Furniture
Restoration Recipes
Published in Paperback by Quadrille Publishing Ltd (2001-07-06)
Authors: James Bain Smith and Julia de Bierre
List price: $20.65

Average review score:

Recipe for Disaster
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-03
There's one fatal flaw in this book. The techniques and tools used throughout the book do require some not inconsiderable practice to master before they can be applied, meaningfully, to wood. I appreciate the author's desire to make the subject of antique restoration more accessible to the public; however, the purpose of the book would be better served if it focused on the methods used to reach the final result, rather than vignettes of restoration projects. Admittedly, the subject is anything but impenetrable, but as with all things in life, the rewards reaped are commensurate with the practitioner's skill level. I can say without fear of contradiction, that if someone from the "Belt-sander and Varnish" school of restoration attempted to apply any of these methods-without bothering to master the techniques required to do them good service-on a valuable antique, the outcome would be a disaster.

Furthermore, someone who has already mastered the skills outlined in this book would have little use for the restoration vignettes peppered throughout the book; they'd be working on projects of their own.

Lastly, the completed projects are very poorly photographed. In almost every instance, the finished piece of furniture is either partially hidden by shadows, or arranged in such a way that the viewer cannot fully appreciate the affected repairs.

a good furniture reference
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-26
this book is a good reference for furniture finishing and restoration. Solid information about how to identify antique furniture and it's finishes and then how to repair it. it has information about staining, french polishing, and gilding among others. A straight forward, interesting book that will help me in many furture projects.

Lot's of pratical information, Excellent Value
Helpful Votes: 45 out of 50 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-28
This book is an excellent value. It is packed with useful techniques for restoring just about any kind of furniture. The entire book is in full-color. Each project and technique includes a material and equipment list as well as clear step-by-step instructions accompanied by small photos.

The book starts out with tips on where to purchase furniture and what to look for when you do. Then it gives you the basics of getting started including tools, finishing, cleaning, stripping, and treating infestation or wood rot. It also has a wonderful section on understanding wood with a nice chart on 15 wood types, their use, advantages and disadvantages.

Consolidation of furniture including deciding what parts to keep, dismantling a piece or simply making the furniture joints stronger follows. Consolidation sections specific to chairs, tables, and a chest of drawers provide useful details. They teach things like replacing a broken chair stretcher bar, evening chair legs, mending major cracks, replacing a table chassis, carving a new leg for a tripod table or repairing worn drawer slides. There are two additional sections on metal fittings and upholstery. Molding a backplate, antiquing new metal fittings and replacing a double stuffed seat are just a few of the techniques taught here.

The next section focuses on repairing and beautifying surfaces. This includes a great guide to solving common problems like white water marks, dents and scorch marks. Veneer repairs such fixing blisters and removing an old veneer and reusing it as are also covered. It then goes on to demonstrate several surface effects including French polishing, working with gesso, gilding, aging paint, staining, graining, marbling and waxing.

The last section includes 12 projects that use the techniques previously covered. In one project, clients need a sixth chair. They find one with a matching back but must replace the entire seating structure and reupholster it. In another project an empire-style night table needs its brass fitting replaced and its tambour door dismantled and refitted. It also needs new stain, French polish and wax.

The information here will enable you to take on some tough challenges with satisfying professional results as you restore or enhance fine furniture. To help with any project there is a nice list of suppliers in the back.

JUST ONE THING...
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-30
Having read both the book and the other review of it here, I'm in wholehearted agreement. But I did encounter one small downside. James Bain recommends only one source for upholstery material -- and that turns out to be a wholesaler to the trade only. I haven't checked the other recommdnations, but you should be aware that there's a possible problem here, however minor.


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Design-->Furniture-->83
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