Rustic Furniture

Information about rustic furniture

RUSTIC PURR-FECTION

Posted By admin on December 2, 2010

Jay Uhlenbrauck of Log Home Design Ideas profiles ‘Natural TREE Furniture’ in ART of the HOME, a section devoted to furnishings and accessories for your log home.

Ray Smith knows what it’s like to work for finicky customers. He started his woodworking career building amusement devices for cats.

“My wife Annie wanted me to make an environmentally friendly cat tree,” he explains. So he rounded up some wood and got to work, but after seeing the first one, Annie sent him back to the drawing board. “I built it with screws,” Ray says. “Annie didn’t like it because it had synthetic materials.” So he bought a book on rustic furniture design and learned how to do mortise and tenon joinery.

Annie loved the 100 percent biodegradable cat tree so much, she insisted Ray build more and sell them. Over the next several months, Ray built several cat trees, along with some rustic furniture and brought them to local cat shows. He was pleasantly surprised how well the rustic furniture sold — especially considering how much he enjoyed building it.

Once Ray Smith perfected the joinery for his rustic furniture, the next step was to build in comfort. “It’s hard to make wood comfortable,” he says. “I saw other rustic furniture and it looked pretty, but if you can’t sit in it, what good is it?” Ray’s solution was contoured seats and backs.

“There are no plans, no right angles, no jigs,” Ray says. “The branches all come in at odd angles. You move the stick and drill the holes. It’s all hand-eye. To me, it’s just natural.” The style fits in with Ray’s do-it-yourself personality.

“I love fixing and troubleshooting,” he says. “It lends itself to woodworking. You’re always problem solving.” All of the furniture Ray builds for his company Natural Tree Furniture falls under the category “rustic” and he wouldn’t have it any other way. “If I built Victorian furniture, I’d be judged by how it should look,” he says. “With rustic furniture, I’m free to build whatever I want. There are no rules.”

Ray uses elm for many of his pieces, but he had a breakthrough when he discovered Osage Orange. “I was looking for an outdoor wood,” Ray says. “Miles of Osage Orange trees were planted in Kansas as a windbreak during the dust bowl era of the 1930s. They used it for fence posts [all over Kansas] and the posts have been around for 80 years.”

He uses mostly dead standing wood, which he kiln-dries for three days to sterilize it. Next he wire brushes the wood to bring out its natural beauty.

“The texture is beautiful once you get down to the wood,” he says. “It polishes like glass. It’s beautiful.”

For more information on Mexican furniture, rustic furniture, and prices on rustic furniture, please visit our rustic Mexican furniture informational site.

For more information on Mexican furniture, rustic furnitures, and prices on rustic furniture, please visit our rustic Mexican pine furniture informational site.

For more information on Southwest furniture, Southwest rustic furniture, and prices on rustic furniture, please visit our Southwest rustic furniture informational site.

For more information on Southwest furniture, Southwest rustic furniture, and prices on rustic furniture, please visit our Southwest furniture informational site.


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