So Professor Dr. SWMBO has had this small, drop leaf, "PA Dutch" embellished table for many, many years. It's not an impressive piece of furniture and appears to have originally been a kit from the old Carol Wright company. It's primary job for a long time has been as a plant stand and, well...the water spills and moisture did a number on the painted MDF top. Some folks probably would have trashed this...and to be honest, that was considered here...but we actually had the need for either this table or something to replace it on our three season porch to compliment the seating area.
Hence, this project. Here's how it started. Please don't throw up on your monitor....![]()
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In general, I actually like this design for what it is. It's relatively simple, reasonably stable and the drop leaves make it both versatile and storable. The construction methods, well...drywall screws and MDF with a few pine sticks probably wasn't the best idea, but it's still lasted for many decades. AFAIK, The Professor has had this thing since long before I met her in 1997.
So what's the project? The base will be used as is, but I replaced the screws with "modern" square drive fasteners and tightened everything up before painting it with a fresh coat of a similar color from my "vast" collection of Orange Borg paint sample containers purchased off the "as is" table for like a buck apiece. It's functional. If I decided to make another one for whatever reason, I'd keep the size and proportions the same, but probably would use better materials and maybe other joinery methods...and glue.
The top is the real project here and took about an hour and a half, not including waiting for finish to dry but including glue time for the "board stretching".I had a bunch of bamboo plywood offcuts that were gifted to me a few years ago by another local maker. They were left over from a kitchen project he had completed. This was the perfect material for a replacement table top here...unconditioned space, sweating drinks, etc....and a color that was a very nice "match" for the teak seating area furniture. The existing top was the pattern.
First steps are pretty self-explanatory...
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One of the nice things about this material is that it's not unlike working with rift sawn lumber when it comes to grain matching. I had to glue a narrow piece onto the side of the one larger piece to get the width required and that joint is truly "invisible"...and that's straight off the sliding table saw. TB-III used because of environment and after a half hour of glue curing, the cutting could begin. (While I waited on said glue, I repaired, reinforced and painted the base so no time was wasted)
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