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Antiques! => Antique Questions Forum => Topic started by: wendy177 on February 26, 2010, 05:19:00 pm

Title: Not an antique
Post by: wendy177 on February 26, 2010, 05:19:00 pm
Hello all this is not an antique but I know nothing about furniture and I  have found many here are very knowledgeable!!!!! This is a one of a kind, designed and made by my husband & assisted by my 6 year old   (as is most of my furniture) It is all solid wood - Cherry with a walnut inlay & mahogany feet. Would love to have a ball park on value as to know if I should have it appraised for insurance purposes. could never part with it - to me it is priceless!!!!! thank you all
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: Dean Perdue on February 26, 2010, 08:06:40 pm
could never part with it - to me it is priceless!!!!! thank you all

Something tells me it will gain more & more value with every passing day.
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: wendy177 on February 26, 2010, 08:29:01 pm
Dean hopefully  all his furniture will stay in our family for generations to come!!! Would love it to be on antiques road show 100 years from now & be worth big bucks as a piece made by a local artisan. I love how he signs all his pieces to me, this one was for an anniversary. I will print out the history and attach them to all his pieces he has made me. I also love that my little one helps him & Dad is passing his skills on. This piece was  my Christmas present all solid wood ,cherry.  Love it!!!!
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: Dean Perdue on February 26, 2010, 10:47:19 pm
Very nice work.
Imagine what memories this lucky kid will have when he's passing down the table to his grandchildren and telling them...me and my old man built this when I was 6.
Where did your husband learn to do this kind of work?
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: talesofthesevenseas on February 26, 2010, 11:27:21 pm
AWWWWWWWW!!! Love the signature! Beautiful furniture. You have a talented husband and it sounds like your son is learning from him!
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: wendy177 on February 27, 2010, 07:34:15 am
Thanks Tales, he is very talented. My little one had all his own tools at age 4 I was terrified he would drill through his foot with his big boy drill he is not strong enough to hold the wood to drill so he stands on it with both feet and drills between them but as of yet no injuries!!! Dean Nicholas (my little one) will have many wonderful  memories as him & Dad do so much together they are even building a monster truck together (1978 Chevy stripped down to the frame now) and restoring  a 1955 ford F600 dump truck. As far as where he learned to do this kind of work he is all self taught, he has been a builder and does residential and small commercial property design plans for over 25 years. He loves finish work in homes but furniture is his passion. He reads everything he can get his hands on woodworking  magazine is a must in our house!!!
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: D&b antiques on February 27, 2010, 08:04:20 am
That  is nice work ! & it's signed & dated.
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: KC on February 27, 2010, 12:47:38 pm
Building memories, skills (and possibly a carreer).  Don't forget to document the information and have it go along with the piece!!!!
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: OLDZ06 on February 27, 2010, 01:10:06 pm
Nice work done there. Hard to put a price on something that has personal value. Priceless in many ways.
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: Chinese Antique Furniture on February 27, 2010, 01:41:11 pm
OMG!!!

What a BEAUTY!!

The problem with insurance is that this truly is not replaceable.  If it were to be lost in a fire (God Forbid) then there really is no amount of money that would replace it.

I certainly agree that you should document the history of the piece - as well as the other furniture you husband and son have made, and keep copies in your safe deposit box. 

This is one of the few things I've seen that truly is priceless.
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: wendy177 on February 27, 2010, 02:16:04 pm
Thank you to all, Chinese Antique Furniture great idea about the safety deposit box I will put photos with the written history. I would  also like to place the history on each piece  in case it ever leaves our family & ends up with wonderful collectors like all of you. How should I do this?? I am afraid taped paper after many years will fall off and be lost. Should I write it on the back or bottom of each piece in  pencil, marker etc.... As I type Dad & Nick are in the garage making a desk for our oldest son, This is being made from Bubinga & Bird's-eye maple I can tell you the wood alone for this piece was $1,200.00!!!! Will post photos when they have completed it. Thanks to all again.
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: D&b antiques on February 27, 2010, 02:39:10 pm
Wendy some times I work another  furniture Blog, some one thru out a Birds Eye table. the question was there any value? of course it's nothing short of rare.

Birds eye is rarely seen any more. when it comes up it attract's attention!
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: OLDZ06 on February 27, 2010, 02:49:49 pm
A desk with Birds Eye Maple that will be one nice desk. I have always liked Birds Eye Maple and Tiger Maple/Curley Maple.
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: wendy177 on February 27, 2010, 03:22:18 pm
OMG D&B how could someone just send a Birds eye table  to the trash it is so beautiful !!!! The birds eye took weeks to get the order in, the Bubinga took weeks to receive also as it is from Africa. The only pieces I have seen recently of birds eye have all been small pieces from  veneer and made by private owners. oldz I love tiger maple also maybe that will be next. (lol)
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: talesofthesevenseas on February 27, 2010, 11:50:35 pm
A funny little bit of trivia on birds eye maple- Sarah Winchester loved it so much, that she actually had the redwood trim in her fabric storage room meticulously HAND PAINTED to fake birds eye maple!
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: cogar on February 28, 2010, 05:30:25 am
A Bird's Eye maple gunstock will cost a pretty penny also.
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: wendy177 on February 28, 2010, 08:25:09 am
Tales godbless those men who did the painting for Ms. Winchester must have been a pain staking job!!!! Cogar have never seen a gunstock from bird's eye !! would love to see one close up.
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: cogar on February 28, 2010, 09:29:21 am
Wendy, this is the best picture I could find. There are a lot of pictures out there that people are calling Bird's Eye maple but I wouldn't. Anyway, this is what it should look like. And I have seen better ones than that with the little "eyes" all over it.

(http://savagela.org/ROMAC/ROMACBirdsEYE1.jpg)
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: D&b antiques on February 28, 2010, 09:33:11 am
That is Nice !
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: cogar on February 28, 2010, 09:49:57 am
Oh, and ps, the prettiest and most expensive Walnut gunstocks are cut from the stump of the Walnut tree. They actually dig the stump out of the ground and saw it up.

Quote
Walnut is highly sought after but the stumps and trunks are particularly prized. They contain what is called burl wood. Burl wood is sliced into thin strips called veneer. This veneer is used for the wood trim on high end automobile dashboards and furniture. A single walnut tree stump can be worth as much as 10,000 dollars.
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090709162114AAHmO4m (http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090709162114AAHmO4m)
Title: Re: Not an antique
Post by: wendy177 on February 28, 2010, 10:06:59 am
cogar  BEAUTIFUL!!!  My husband & I need to start a Walnut tree farm!!!!!