Sunday, March 28, 2010

Nice Legs!

Work table with re-purposed machine legs
Artefact; Schellville, CA

Conference table by Sit And Read Furniture for ACL

Cast iron table legs designed for Lee Valley Tools by Mike McGuire

Advertisement engraving via Antique Machinery Scans

Advertisement engraving via Antique Machinery Scans


Advertisement engraving via Antique Machinery Scans

Industrial kitchen worktable with cast iron legs
Modeled in Solidworks
Rendered in Photoview 360

Detail: Raised lettering on leg stretcher
Modeled in Solidworks
Rendered in Photoview 360

Worktable legs
Solidworks drawing

Several weeks ago, on a spin through Sonoma and the Napa Valley, I stopped at one of my favorite retail design establishments- Artefact in Schellville. Pick of the litter was the work table pictured above, made from a pair of antique lathe legs with a steel top and shelf, and skirts of wood salvaged from the factory that once was home to the cast iron legs.

A massive pair of cast iron legs salvaged from an industrial-sized Oliver lathe have served as the base for my woodworking bench since my days as a studio furniture maker, and they've been eyeing a massive chunk of end-grain butcher block sitting in my shop- threatening to hook up and become a work table in our kitchen.

My workbench legs are not nearly as elegant as the salvaged cast iron legs that Kyle Garner of Sit And Read Furniture used to make ACL's new conference table, and they are just a little too wide for the butcher block top. Usually the reverse is true- lathe legs are designed to support a bed that is long and narrow, and paired with a wide top, start to look out of proportion.

Some years ago, Lee Valley Tool started producing a set of cast iron legs for their workbench kits. They aren't all that attractive IMHO- especially compared to designer Mike McGuire's early concepts for the project- but the price is right, and they are a great idea.

So I set about designing a set of cast iron legs in the spirit of early industrial machinery, with size and proportion specific to supporting a work table top. Is the potential market large enough to justify the cost of making a pattern, and having these legs sand-cast?
Stay tuned...

Friday, March 19, 2010

Bad-Ass

Portrait of Russian poet Vladimir Mayakovsky
Alexander Rodchenko
1924

Monday, March 8, 2010

Herse-inspired Bicycle Crank


Rene Herse-inspired crank for a city bike that I am designing.
Modeled in SolidWorks, and rendered in Photoview 360.

Rene Herse Randonneuse

Rene Herse Randonneuse, Paris, 1946
Illustration by Daniel Rebour
via Vintage Cycle Press

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Southwest Icon

Southwest Icon frame
Stephen Gaines
Banded inlay, charred and polychromed wood

The frame made by longtime friend and buckaroo artist Stephen Gaines.
I found the Catholic holy card buried in the wall while renovating our ca.1905 bungalow.
It just seemed to fit...

Mark Knopfler- Quality Shoe

J. L. Powell

Waxed canvas Safari Bag

Black Hills Moccasin

Roosevelt Jacket

J. L Powell- The Sporting life.
Clothing and gear for the well-heeled sport

J.L Powell

Saddleback Leather Co.

Saddleback briefcase in dark tobacco brown

Dave Munson of Saddleback Leather Company in Texas designs and sells some really nice leather bags. Bloody expensive, and no doubt worth every penny.

What really grabbed my attention though, was the quality of his website- a little rough around the edges (mis-matched type &etc.) but transparent, honest, soulful, amusing. Marketing built around a growing and enthusiastic family of loyal customers.

Spend some time with his website (be sure not to miss the FAQ page) and his Facebook page.
I haven't had so much fun reading product copy since the early J. Peterman catalogs.

This is the new marketing- watch and learn grasshopper...

Saddleback Leather Co.
Saddleback on Facebook

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Dale of Norway Classic Ski Sweaters

Toni Matt and Luggi Foeger at Incline, Tahoe- late 50s


Dale Classic with pewter clasps


Vintage NOS Dale crew-neck

Heavy wool, made to last- a life-time purchase.

Dale Classic with pewter clasps- a keeper
Dale vintage NOS crew-neck- bound for E-bay


Dale of Norway

Friday, March 5, 2010

1962 Renault Dauphine Gordini



My old Dauphine Gordini in front of Shadetree-
5th Ave. Wharf, Oakland, CA
February, 2010

I was a young starving artist/art furniture intern, and living in a burned-out warehouse on one of Oakland's seedier wharves. I quickly learned that buying lumber in my convertible MGA was a tricky proposition, so I sold it and began looking for a more suitable car. Still more style than sense, I bought a 1962 Renault Dauphine Gordini from a race car mechanic in Pt. Richmond. The car was in prisitine condition, and came with enough spares to build most of a second.

In 2007, Time Magazine named the Dauphine one of the 50 worst cars of all time:
"
The most ineffective bit of French engineering since the Maginot Line, the Renault Dauphine was originally to be named the Corvette, tres ironie. It was, in fact, a rickety, paper-thin scandal of a car that, if you stood beside it, you could actually hear rusting. Its most salient feature was its slowness, a rate of acceleration you could measure with a calendar. It took the drivers at Road and Track 32 seconds to reach 60 mph, which would put the Dauphine at a severe disadvantage in any drag race involving farm equipment. The fact that the ultra-cheap, super-sketchy Dauphine sold over 2 million copies around the world is an index of how desperately people wanted cars. Any cars."

Actually, the limited edition race-modified Gordini model was zippy enough for a small car, and was raced and rallied successfully for a couple of years of its production life. It was a cheap POS tin can...but quirky in a mid-century French sort of way, and suited my needs well enough. Driving carefully, I could squeeze almost 50mpg out of it- important when you are working for slave wages- and with a roof rack, I could pack 50 board feet of lumber before the springs started to bottom out.

Several years later, I moved to rural Mendocino County and needed a truck to navigate the miles of unpaved roads to my remote cabin, so I sold the Dauphine to a local guy who bought it for his girlfriend, visiting for the summer from France. Of all of the stuff I've let go of in my life, I most regret selling this car. When he brought it by a couple of days later- fully detailed and polished- I nearly sat down on the sidewalk and cried.

Flash-forward 20 years:
A while back, I took my wife and daughter to see some of the places that I had lived and worked "back in the day", and there, parked in front of the old warehouse in it's old designated spot was "my" Dauphine. Somehow, over decades and miles, she had found her way home.


Thursday, March 4, 2010

Rockabilly- The Skip Rats play "Morse Code"




The Skip Rats, a rockabilly trio based in the Northeast of England (go figure).
There must be rockabilly this good happening in the US, but I don't know what it is.

New Boots- Red Wing No.9013



Known variously as the Beckman, 6" classic round, and the Gentleman Traveler, these are from Red Wing's "Lifestyle Heritage Collection." Am I the only one who cringes at the mention of "lifestyle" anything?
The first issues of these were made with Horween Chromexel leather uppers, and available, I believe, only in Japan and Europe. Later issues- including these- are made with Red Wing's own Featherstone leather uppers. Vibram roccia half soles, goodyear welt construction. These look like they were made to last a while, so I'll get back to you in 2020 with a field report...
A Valentine's day gift from my wife. Available from Sundance Catalog and other fine outlets.
I'd say these run 1/2 to a full size larger than true-to-size, so try before you buy.

Red Wing Shoes- Lifestyle Heritage Collection

Sundance Catalog

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Staking out my territory


Northern California
The Great Basin
The Columbia Plateau
The Sate of Jefferson
Cascadia
The ION ( Idaho-Oregon-Nevada in buckaroo-speak)
The historical range of the West-Slope trouts...

I've been thinking about what defines the territory that I consider myself to be a product of.
To simplify things, I'll define it as the country West of the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific, and including Hawaii.
Much of this Trad/Resurgence quadrant of the blogosphere originates in New York and New England and with the point-of-view of East Coast tradition and heritage. It is my hope that this blog adds one man's West Coast point-of-view to the conversation.

I have my East Coast bragging rights too- the first Hudson to pay a visit arrived in 1607, and became a permanent resident in 1611 (though not by choice.) He got a river and a bay named after him for his troubles. The first of my branch of the Hudson clan to settle in what is now the USA showed up in Virginia in 1635.
But it is my ancesters who came to Northern California from Sweden, England, and Missouri in the mid-late 19th century that most define me and capture my imagination. Ranchers, carpenters, miners, doctors, teachers...later heavy equipment mechanics, and my dear old dad who played an important part in putting a man on the moon. I am humbled by the hardships that they endured and by what they were able to accomplish.

Many of the heritage brands that we are buying, using, and cheering onward were forged in the Pacific West:
Levi Strauss
Ben Davis
Pendleton Woolen Mills
White's Boots
CC Filson
In my time, new brands have been born here that will be the heritage brands of the next generation:
The North Face
Sierra Designs
Pacific Iron Works/Patagonia
Mulholland Brothers
In your time- if you are younger than I (and you probably are) the next wave:
The bicycle builders of Portland- as good as anything that came out of post-war France
Archival Clothing
Rising Sun & Co.
Yuketen

In addition to the above with an international audience, there is a robust resurgence movement going on in the Buckaroo community that rivals anything going on in the larger Trad/Resurgence world for passion, quality, and authenticity and deserves a wider audience than working cowboys and cowboy poetry groupies.

If New England's poetic voice is Salinger, the Pacific Coast's is Steinbeck, Stegner, and Kerouac.

Northwest Coast wood carvings


Raven Mask
Donald Svanvik
Kwakwaka'wakw Nation
Red Cedar, Cedar bark, acrylic paint
Coastal Peoples Fine Arts Gallery



Grizzly Bear Mask
Stan Bevan
Tahltan-Tlingit Nation
Yellow Cedar, Operculum shells, horsehair
Coastal Peoples Fine Arts Gallery



Raven, Cormorant Dog- Bentwood Box
Andy Wilber Peterson
Skokomish
Red Cedar, pigment
Quintana Galleries


Coastal Peoples Fine Arts Gallery
1024 Mainland Street
Vancouver BC
Canada V6B 2T4

Quintana Galleries
120 NW Ninth Avenue
Portland, Oregon 97209