There are several components of antique furniture which take a beating over the years. Often it is the drawers that show their age first. The constant opening and closing of the drawers during use causes the wood to wear down quickly on the sides of the drawers and creates uneven grooves in the runners. At the same time that the sides wear down, the bottom of the drawer starts to drag on the blades of the case, and if the drawer stops are nailed in place on top of the blades, the nails will eventually saw completely through the bottoms of the drawers.
I am not even mentioning the shrinkage of the drawer bottom which pulls out of the dado in the front, which then allows the bottom to fall out when the drawer is over loaded with junk.
Just a note: Traditional drawers were intended to hold clothing...not books, or dishes, or a large coin collection or fishing weights. Just clothing. I have seen it all. Nothing would surprise me.
However, there is another part of furniture which is often more damaged than the drawers and that is the feet. People push furniture around without lifting it, they bang the feet with vacuum cleaners, they put things in storage for years and let the feet sit in standing water, they tilt heavy cabinets up on their side putting pressure on the legs, they sit in chairs and lean back or twist the chair around without getting up...
Again, I thought I had seen it all, until this latest project appeared.
A collector in Colorado saw a good French Regence Commode in an auction in San Francisco and placed the winning bid. He then hired a mover to deliver the commode to his residence on the top of a mountain. This mover put the commode in his truck and placed the heavy marble on top, wrapped it in blankets and drove to the client's house. I doubt that the mover even checked the feet to see if there was any previous damage or bug infestation. He also did not consider putting the valuable marble in a wood crate and packing it separately. It is fortunate that the marble did not break as well.
When he arrived and opened the door there was a surprise. All the feet had broken off and the commode was sitting on its bottom. This was no real surprise. The surprise (and mystery) was that 3 of the 4 feet had somehow completely disappeared! Since the two front feet had original mercury gilt bronze mounts, of course they had also somehow fallen out of the truck and probably are laying on the road between San Francisco and Denver. The only surviving foot was a single back leg, which we used as a pattern.
The client delivered the commode to us for restoration at the end of 2019. But before we began the process of making new feet we thought it was appropriate to photograph it while it rested in a handicap zone...
When we returned to work Patrice indicated he wanted this job, and I went to work on the legs of a wonderful French Louis XVI commode. So Patrice put the commode upside down and took much of it apart. Since the legs were badly damaged by years of bugs, we immediately had it fumigated with methyl bromide. Patrice also had to lift up much of the veneer to get to good solid wood and attach the new leg elements.
Finally we were able to receive the replacement bronzes from Paris and spent some time to "age" them to match the original surfaces of the rest of the piece. All the bronzes (except our two feet of course) were completely authentic and original to this commode, so it was important to complete the set.
Meanwhile, I was occupied with the legs of my Louis XVI marquetry commode. They were originally veneered in purple heart, but the veneer was so badly damaged it was necessary to replace it. I have posted videos on my YouTube channel (3815Utah) about my method for veneering columns using Old Brown Glue. In this case, the legs were solid oak and tapered. The same process worked perfectly.
It was fun work and Patrice and I ended up completing our respective projects at about the same time.
2 comments:
nice mover ... and, sadly, naive costumer,
though anyway it seems that the catastrophe would inevitably occur some day or the other, after the big work of bugs
Greetings from France, and thank you for this beautiful blog and work(s)
It's great to read stories and articles. Thank you for sharing this.
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