Artisan Gallery

News — by Robert on September 7, 2009

Artisan Gallery

We’ve been invited to a showing at the Artisan Gallery in Sacramento. Please come if you can. We will have most of our pieces on the floor, along with the work of several other talented artists. The gallery has a café located inside and there will also be live music for your listening pleasure while you browse. Here are the details:

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Artisan Gallery in the Artisan Building
1901 Del Paso Blvd.
Sacramento, CA

6:00 p.m. – 10:00 p.m.

On the Horizon

News — by Robert on August 7, 2009

Veneer Samples

With a slowdown in commissions comes an opportunity to get caught up with show pieces, tool tune-ups, and general back-burner projects. It is easy to blame the economy for slowdowns, but in over 30 years of work, there have always been ups and downs. It is time to reflect on positives and negatives; to re-group and re-energize. This time cannot be misused.

The place is buzzing with enthusiasm. Eric and I are designing an all new line of modern furniture that will be launched on its own website. Original designs made for batch production. We’ll sell right off the website and ship to your door. The prices will be attractive and the process streamlined relative to custom made. As an addition, it’s great to have a wider offering. We’ll continue to make commission work as well as art furniture. Preparing enough pieces to get a booth full for showing takes some time, and we don’t want to spoil the surprise just yet. Stay tuned!

Working on an Island

Craftwork — by Robert on June 25, 2009

This week’s post is a commission of an arts and craft style island. The most prominent features of this island are the 4″ thick (164) hardrock maple posts. After the joints are cut (to receive the panels), the outsides are roughed on the bandsaw and routed to a jig for precisely matched shapes. That’s a long router bit. A larger outfit would just run these through a shaper in one pass. With a limited need, I can’t justify that sort of equipment and setup. Taking multiple passes is slower but effective, none-the-less.

Maple Island Cabinets

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Three New Projects

Concept, Craftwork — by Robert on June 9, 2009

We have three exciting designs on going.

First, the carving of the Lord Baltimore is the fifth and quite likely the final piece in a nature series of cabinets. This will be painted but because of the delicacy of the leaves and petals, the wood choice is hardrock maple. Slow going, but it holds up well.

Hardrock Maple Carved Hibiscus

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Walnut Desk: Carved and Ready

Pieces — by Robert on June 1, 2009

Walnut carved cabriole legs with roses

The completed office set of matching computer desk and writing desk. The pair offers different functions with the same detailing, and matching veneers were part of the requirements.

Several thicknesses of solid walnut were used: 44, 84, 124, 164. We used both manufactured plywood and custom-veneered plywood made in the shop with figured, raw veneer. All of these elements are part of what makes custom furniture making so fun and unique; designing and building a piece with an individual in mind. This is one of our latest commissions to be completed.

 

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‘09 Cab: Ready to Rack

News, Pieces — by Robert on May 21, 2009

'09 Cab Carved Grape Cabinet

The fourth piece in our accent line is complete. Rustic and relaxed, the ‘09 Cab is a snapshot of our local winery culture. El Dorado county is recognized as an American Viticultural Area and we felt the urge to pay homage to the wonderful sights of expansive vineyards and their delectable tastes.

More views and information in the gallery.

Hibiscus: Work Begins

Concept, Craftwork — by Robert on May 14, 2009

Hibiscus Flower Cabinet Sketch

I’ve begun work on the fifth and probably final piece in our accent line. Using the same case shape, this piece will feature hand-carved hibiscus flowers. Alder frames bisect the carvings and each carved pane is maple for extra resilience.

We’ve had the Lord Baltimore hibiscus flowers in our garden for a few years now. They bloom with gorgeous 10-inch flowers that usually last for just a single day. I wanted to capture that momentary beauty forever in this piece.

The original drawing was exploded to full size and transferred to each pane. A small router was used to waste the majority of the panes, leaving a clear outline of the flowers. The plan is a jet black finish on the body and frame, with vibrant greens for the stem and striking red and yellow on the petals/stamen.

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Rainbow

Pieces — by Robert on May 4, 2009

Rainbow - Carved Fish in Honduras Mahogany

Occasionally I like to step away from furniture making. This departure, simply called ‘Rainbow,’ was dreamt up, drawn up and started to get roughed out longer ago than i care to remember. I kept this covered and protected for many years until the time was right to complete the handwork. The betta (Siamese fighting fish) has such fluid and graceful movement, swimming in the ribbons of stylized eelgrass. Hanging on the wall, a soothing aquarium comes to mind. I originally intended to paint the fish with iridescent colors. With this beautiful piece of Honduras mahogany, at nearly two feet wide, it may very well remain clear. Now presentable with the handwork complete and clear finish on, we’ll hang it and study it.

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Tech Savvy

News — by Robert on

Eric: Computer Guru

I would like to take this opportunity to thank and introduce my computer guru. Please meet my youngest son, Eric. He is responsible for all things technology at Robert Howard Studios. From website creation to postcard design/layout to integrating software with our CNC router, he makes it possible for you to read this and see into our shop. Thanks Eric, for helping me to be a better woodworker.

 

Grape Cabinet: CNC Mill

Craftwork — by Robert on April 26, 2009

3D grape model for CNC routing

For the next accent piece design we are taking the grape motif from the the gate and applying it in a smaller scale. We had the opportunity to purchase a small (2′ x 2′) CNC machine nearly ten years ago which has made this project much more approachable. By taking a 3D file and computing it, we are able to generate a toolpath file that tells our machine what to carve. My son (with the majority of the computing skills) imports, scales, tweaks and renders the CNC files for routing.

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