Reproduction Oval Office Signing Table made for LBJ Library and Museum in Austin, Texas. Mahogany with polished poly finish. Scaled to fit Oval Office Display on tenth floor of museum.
Thanks to Gary Phelps, Exhibit Designer at LBJ, for photo! Click on photo for larger view.
A very successful two weekends for the Studio Tour! Thanks to everyone that came by the shop to look and/or buy. My only regret was having so little time to get out and see some other studios! Have a safe and good Thanksgiving.
Finally we are entering the fray. White Wind Woodworking will be participating in the East End Studio Tour this year: http://www.bigmedium.org/east.htm Come see the studio and current work in progress. We will also have work for sale. I will attempt to put those pieces for sale on the "To Purchase "page of the website before the tour. Also, White Wind will be hosting a group of stone carvers and friends who are calling themselves "The Flying Fingers Co-Op". They will have works for sale and be demonstrating their craft out in the parking lot. http://www.flyingfingersstone.com/ Hope to see you both weekends!
Finally getting around to posting some photos for this project which began last fall. White Wind was commissioned by Homeplace Architecture to fabricate the cabinets, doors and a variety of trim pieces for this project. The living area and entry hall cabinets are made of Lacewood or "Silky Oak" with a lacquer finish. All doors and drawers use a "touch-latch" mechanism for opening. In the middle uppers, behind bifold doors lies a 50" flat screen monitor.
In the baths and bedroom vertical grain Douglas Fir was used for cabinets and trim.
Black wenge was used for the transom screen and bedside tabletops. Each fir drawer has a square wenge inlay to indicate the area to "touch" to open.
All the main doors were sliding pocket doors built in the style of the large Shoji screens we fabricated for the bedroom.
In the main bedroom we built and installed a "Murphy" bed hidden away behind fir paneling.
On the face a of this bed is an inlayed flat screen monitor.
Thanks again to Steven Wigley for these photos and his help in the shop constructing a lot of this stuff!
For a much more detailed look at the finished project go to the Homeplace Architecture + Carpentry site:http://www.homeplace.biz/
At their Homepage andCraft pages their are many more photos of the completed project.