Classic Arts and Crafts Furniture 14 Timeless Designs-2

(Bozica Vekic) #1

Arts & Crafts Bridal Chest


Contrasting woods highlight the elegant


lines of this Gustav Stickley-designed classic.


I


n days gone by, a chest similar to this would contain a bride’s dowry. The form


goes back to Gothic times , but this is an adaptation of a Gus tav Stickley piece


from 1901. Admiring the lines of this piece, I was curious to see how the design


would look with contrasting materials, not the usual Craftsman dark oak. The


panels are quilted bird’s eye maple, and the other parts are Jatoba, also known


as Brazilian cherry.


The original was made of quartersawn white oak with wrought-iron braces


on the corners. What makes this unusual for a Stickley design are the decorative


corbels on the panels. These also appeared on a few dining room case pieces


made in the early 1900s.


Decorative cur ved element s in Stickley furniture are usually associated with


Har vey Ellis , who worked for Stickley in 19 03. This design appeared well before


Ellis worked for Stickley, and before Stickley wrote against using purely decora-


tive elements in his furniture catalogs.


Stickley doesn’t always get the credit he deserves as a furniture designer.


Building this bridal chest with non-traditional materials takes his design out of


the Craftsman context, and shows Stickley’s remarkable sense of line, propor-


tion and texture.


In many of the original bridal ches t s I have seen, the center panels have


cracked. I think the corbels are the culprits, keeping the solid-wood panels from


expanding and contracting in the grooves of the stiles. To avoid this problem, I


decided to use veneered panels. The veneer is on a core of^1 ⁄ 2 "-thick Medium-


density Fiberboard (MDF), and the backing veneer is sycamore, a less-expensive


alternative to the fi gured faces.


3 34-39_A&CBridalChest.indd 34 4 - 39 _A&CBridalChest.indd 34 3 3/25/13 9:56 AM/ 25 / 13 9 : 56 AM

Free download pdf