AG

"Alexander Galkin"

05/01/2005 7:45 PM

Rope molding

Is there practical way to make a rope molding in home workshop?


This topic has 2 replies

AD

Andy Dingley

in reply to "Alexander Galkin" on 05/01/2005 7:45 PM

06/01/2005 2:36 AM

On Wed, 5 Jan 2005 19:45:44 -0500, "Alexander Galkin"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Is there practical way to make a rope molding in home workshop?

"Practical" and "home" ? Well, if you mean "possible to make" and
"no-one is counting the labour costs" then yes.

You do a split turning, where two pieces of timber are stuck together
across a layer of brown kraft paper. Then you dry it (doh!), then you
turn it, then you split them apart again. This is fairly common for a
lot of Jacobean oak work - half spindles as decoration on the front of
cabinets.

As to the ropework, then it's a form of "barley sugar" turning, which
I'm sure you can find through Google or that paper-book-stuff. It's
less carving, and more like carving a piece held in the lathe and
turned gently by hand. The spiral is marked out in pencil beforehand,
then you shape it with a gouge. There are also router lathes (a fairly
simple jig) to hog off much of the timber under power, if you're
making big stuff.

tt

thos

in reply to "Alexander Galkin" on 05/01/2005 7:45 PM

07/01/2005 10:54 PM

On Wed, 5 Jan 2005 19:45:44 -0500, "Alexander Galkin"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Is there practical way to make a rope molding in home workshop?
>
Inside This Old House recycles some of the TOH shows from the 80's. A
few weeks ago they showed this same thing. Started off with half round
stock, pencil marked the rope lines and started at it with a handsaw.
Cut maybe half way through and then took at it with a chisel and
finished off with sandpaper. Looked like a fair amount of work.

TomL


You’ve reached the end of replies