A Little JK Something....

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woodbloke65

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An interpretation of Jim Krenov's cabinet that he made for his wife Britta in 1970. The original is still owned and used by his family; all the rest of his work was sold or is in a gallery. This is made in air dried English Oak, much of it pippy including the book matched door and back panels. The drawer has a centre runner and a Paduk base, all ancillary detailing (handles, wedges, door catches etc) in Yew. This was 'tricky' to make and required a lot of thought regarding the process of construction - Rob
 

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An interpretation of Jim Krenov's cabinet that he made for his wife Britta in 1970. The original is still owned and used by his family; all the rest of his work was sold or is in a gallery. This is made in air dried English Oak, much of it pippy including the book matched door and back panels. The drawer has a centre runner and a Paduk base, all ancillary detailing (handles, wedges, door catches etc) in Yew. This was 'tricky' to make and required a lot of thought regarding the process of construction - Rob
Hi Rob
Superb design and craftsmanship
Fred
 
There are a lot of little details in that which aren’t obvious on first glance but give the whole piece a real sense of togetherness.
Very nicely made
 
Does the cabinet 'free stand/hang' inside the frame?
Thanks chaps, appreciated. The cabinet 'floats' inside the frame so it took quite a lot of pondering to work out how assemble it. The top and bottom frames were glued precisely in place with the legs glued last of all - Rob
 
Beautiful craftsmanship. Do the legs flare out at the top or is it just the camera lens. ?
 
That is so good. Well done that man.

I don't want to detract from the design and execution, which really is flawless. I do however wonder, is it a project for yourself, a gift or is it something you will sell? What is the value of something like that - The hours alone not to mention the materials must put it quite high.

Please keep posting beautiful things like this.
 
That is so good. Well done that man.

I don't want to detract from the design and execution, which really is flawless. I do however wonder, is it a project for yourself, a gift or is it something you will sell? What is the value of something like that - The hours alone not to mention the materials must put it quite high.

Please keep posting beautiful things like this.
Something I did for myself and nothing I make is for sale. Not a clue what the value is but probably well into four figures; took about six months to build - Rob
 
Beautiful. Krenov would have been proud to have made it. What stunning woodworking. One of the finest pieces I've seen posted on a woodworking forum in a very, very long time -- maybe ever.
 
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