<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=376816859356052&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
 In Shop Blog

We may receive a commission when you use our affiliate links. However, this does not impact our recommendations.

American furniture of the 18th century has always been something I’ve liked OK but I’ve never become a nut about, like Brussels sprouts, Cheney hammers and classical music. This week I’ve been consuming a couple books about 18th-century furniture that have long been on my list of things I’ve been meaning to read.

Until this point, my favorite books on the topic were Wallace Nutting’s “A Furniture Treasury” (Macmillian) and “American Furniture of the 18th Century” by Jeffrey Greene. Nutting’s book, though flawed, is fantastic for designing furniture because it offers hundreds of pages of photos of old pieces (for example, there are 77 pages devoted to low chests of drawers). Greene’s book is great because it marries woodworking technique, history, the tools and design.

The two books I’m reading now are similar. Albert Sack’s “Fine Points of Furniture” (Crown) is a visual lesson of what is ugly and beautiful in pieces of early American furniture and consists of nearly 300 pages of photos and commentary. “The Cabinetmaker’s Treasury” (Macmillan) by F.E. Hoard and A.W. Marlow is more like Greene’s book, though it was published in 1952. “The Cabinetmaker’s Treasury” consists of a discussion of techniques and offers plans for many pieces of early American furniture.

My copy of “The Cabinetmaker’s Treasury” was a gift from our art director, Linda Watts, who picked it up at a book sale in Dayton, Ohio. I think I was the first or second person to open it because it’s perfect in every way. And on first reading, I was delighted by the drawings and text.

But then I started really picking apart the construction details shown in the book. I think that misters Hoard and Marlow must have had some stock in the 3″-long screw market because that is the primary way they join everything (except the chairs). No dados. No sliding dovetails. Fewer mortise-and-tenon joints than I would prefer. The lowboys in the book are all screwed together. Screw the web frames together. Then screw the web frames to the sides. Don’t forget to screw the partitions!

So bottom line: It’s an OK book for a couple bucks.

“The Fine Points of Furniture” seems a bit of a gimmick at first. Sack shows photos of three different pieces of furniture. They’re all the same form (chest on chest, for example). But one is labeled a “good” design, one is labeled “better” and the other as “best.” Then he offers some commentary under each photo explaining why.

Sack insults the piece labeled as “good” designs, and I was getting a complex at first because I kind of liked the “good” designs. They were usually simpler and less ornamented. Sack reserved “better” and “best” for pieces with elaborate carving, vigorous turnings and aggressive lines.

But after 300 pages of the stuff, I began to see things Sack’s way. The “good” designs started to look clunky and less refined. I was exercising my eye for 18th-century design. It’s still a bit sore, but going down to work on an Arts & Crafts sideboard should give it a chance to relax.

By the way, you can get “Fine Points of Furniture” for a song. The revised edition “The New Fine Points of Furniture” is ghastly expensive. If there’s anyone out there who has both, I’d love to hear a comparision of the two versions.

– Christopher Schwarz


Product Recommendations

Here are some supplies and tools we find essential in our everyday work around the shop. We may receive a commission from sales referred by our links; however, we have carefully selected these products for their usefulness and quality.

Recent Posts
Showing 2 comments
  • Christopher Schwarz

    Ron,

    Thanks for the detailed comment. I don’t own the Gottshall book, but I will endeavor to get my hands on it. And I agree completely with your priase for "Illustrated Cabinetmaking" — but have you checked the price on that lately? Since it went out of print the price has been soaring.

    I hope someone does something about that.

    And it sounds like I need to get Glen Huey to pring in his copy of the "New Fine Points of Furniture" for me to check out.

    Thanks again,

    Chris

  • Ron Knapp

    I like the new version more then the old one. The pictures are better and I think the examples are more detailed and more categories have been added. The old version which I have is a very good book and worth having on its own merits. The new version is as you say very expensive and I hope someone will be able to get the rights to reprint it. I have a couple of local libraries which have the book available and with checkouts being a month at a time I usually have it in my house.

    Norm Vandal’s book on Queen Ann furniture was one of the best and fortunately Lee Valley has a new reprint available. The price of this book was getting rather high.

    Two other used books that I can recommend highly are:

    How to Design and Build Period Furniture – Gottshall
    ISBN 0-517-02263X

    Rodale’s Illustrated Cabinetmaking – Hylton
    ISBN 0-7621-0183-0

    The Gottshall is a little unlike his other books which can have a few problems This book is a basic discussion of the various styles of furniture with several pages of excellent examples of the details that make up each style.

    The Hylton book covers its material by breaking its main chapters by furniture type such as: Desks, Chests, Beds and tables. The exploded artwork gives a very good overall view of the primary construction attributes and then goes in to giving a cross reference of book and magazine articles showing period variations of that style.

    Along with the two books you mentioned these are my favorite reference books for basic design and technique.

Start typing and press Enter to search

We don’t recommend dropping anvils on your furniture, but studying how and why joints fail can improve your woodworking.