. Furniture for the craftsman; a manual for the student and machanic. eshould be treated to a half round mold, an ogee or a part halfround with a slight undercove mold. The Dining Chair The pattern shown in Fig. 213 is offered because it is littleseen in furniture stores selling at a popular price and is a typemore made to order, with specially selected upholstery is viery true in furniture that the solid and substantially plainis expensive. Good reason why if one is able to produce suchwork that he confine his efforts to that which will always sat-isfy—the plain and direct in constr
. Furniture for the craftsman; a manual for the student and machanic. eshould be treated to a half round mold, an ogee or a part halfround with a slight undercove mold. The Dining Chair The pattern shown in Fig. 213 is offered because it is littleseen in furniture stores selling at a popular price and is a typemore made to order, with specially selected upholstery is viery true in furniture that the solid and substantially plainis expensive. Good reason why if one is able to produce suchwork that he confine his efforts to that which will always sat-isfy—the plain and direct in construction. Two ways of treating the back and seat are indicated, theleather on the back and the heavier padded seat being the moredesirable but more expensive treatmen:. One may choose tomake the back with three flat splats, as shown, and the flatter 206 FURNITURE FOR THE CRAFTSMAN padded seat, and at some future time change the style of thechairs by the more sumptuous over-stuffed treatment, as chair without the upholstery in the back could be fitted 3 1. Fig. 213.—Front and Side Views of Dining Chair. with a I-inch saddle shaped seat if no upholstery is the chair be made for an all-over covered seat, as shown,the front seat and rear rails may be of some solid inferior the final gluing the edges of the legs and back posts andtop of strainer rails should be treated to a decided not fail to reinforce the seat rails by corner blocks firmlyfitted, glued and screwed. One or two arm chairs will be a desirable part of a set of diningchairs. With this particular pattern, and as would apply tomost any arm chair, the front should measure 4}i inches widerand the back 3^2 inches wider than the dining chair, and thedepth of the seat 2)4 inches, with the back post 2 inches higherthan the diner. The front leg is extended to the curved frontpost, as shown in Fig. 214. In laying this out on the drawingaim to combine the arm and post so that the
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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidfurnitureforcraf01otte