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This table lends contemporary design to the traditional form of a gateleg table. The legs are a bent lamination of white oak, shaped to a taper on the back side, and curved in cross-section on the front. The top is white ash, burned to char the wood, then hand scraped to reveal the pattern of the wood grain.
The construction is traditional throughout: mortise and tenon joinery holds the table together. The gate legs pivot around a knuckle joint and the leaves swing downward on a rule joint.
This table lends contemporary design to the traditional form of a gateleg table. The legs are a bent lamination of white oak, shaped to a taper on the back side, and curved in cross-section on the front. The top is white ash, burned to char the wood, then hand scraped to reveal the pattern of the wood grain.
The construction is traditional throughout: mortise and tenon joinery holds the table together. The gate legs pivot around a knuckle joint and the leaves swing downward on a rule joint.