I have in my possesion a piano stool in need of repair. A leg has
snapped off. In my opinion it can be repaired and I'll shall endevour
to do so.
What I'm in need of is the age of the stool. This is just curiousity
because there is multiple damaged sections that strip its of value. The
owner of the stool likes it so she wants it repaired. I was wondering
as to how old it was.
The best description I can give is its a one height (non adjustable)
stool. It has a hinged lid and on the strecther joining the legs it has
a conch shell. This is a badge of sorts inlayed into the wood.
I'll see if I can get any pictures up for you.
Nick
<center>
<a href="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v297/TrailRat/Dscf0082.jpg"
target="_blank">
<img
src="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v297/TrailRat/th_Dscf0082.jpg"></a>
<a href="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v297/TrailRat/Dscf0083.jpg"
target="_blank">
<img
src="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v297/TrailRat/th_Dscf0083.jpg"></a>
<a href="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v297/TrailRat/Dscf0084.jpg"
target="_blank">
<img
src="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v297/TrailRat/th_Dscf0084.jpg"></a>
</center>
On 7 Jun 2005 10:38:23 -0700, "TrailRat" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>I was wondering as to how old it was.
My guess is around 1900.
Those cabriole legs were made on a bandsaw, not with a drawknife. Look
at the flat perpendicular sides and the lack of rounding to the outer
edge.
Those veneered ovals have been factory made for centuries. Especially
when placed on their own, not surrounded by all manner of extra
stringing and inlay, they were a cheap way to add a bit of "class" to an
otherwise undecorated piece.
You can probably restore the leg by adding a dowel stub tenon to replace
the one that broke (probably a tenon, maybe even a round dowel ?).
However a much better design of cabriole leg has glue blocks either
side, faired into the leg design - these are obviously stronger. You
may consider it wise to add such a block, where possible. You might even
add blocks to each leg. It would depend on how big the frame is, and how
much space you have to hide the blocks - obviously you don't want them
flush with the show-wood where you'd have to blend them into the visible
design.