Showing posts with label wooden desk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wooden desk. Show all posts

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Recycling, Repurposing, and Reusing


You've heard all the terms: recycling, repur- posing, reusing. Basically they mean salvaging what you can from an old piece of furniture and putting it to use in building a new one. Example: twenty years ago, I bought a large library table at an auction for $60 or so. Made of a heavy mystery wood that had been stained very dark, the table served a number of purposes over the years -- writing desk, crafts worktable, and computer table, to name three. A year or so ago, I decided it had lived its useful life. So I disassembled it to determine what kind of wood it was and whether it was useable. My discoveries were noteworthy. First of all, the wood turned out to be 5/4 cherry. With a little ingenuity, and accepting the fact that some waste was inevitable (for example, the aprons had a decorative profile on the bottom edge; it had to go) I was able to strip and reclaim every apron and most of the top. I had no use for the legs, but they were in good shape so I gave them to a friend. I even salvaged the heavy-duty metal clips that were used to attach the top to the aprons. Since its "repurposing", parts of the one-time library table have made their way into three projects: a writing desk (shown in the photo), a small sofa table, and a mirror frame. Some lengths of stock still remain; I plan to use them in the building of yet another desk. Since I regularly buy cherry, I know costs well enough to estimate that had I gone out and bought the equivalent amount of wood from my local hardwood dealer, I'd have spend upwards of $200. Not a bad deal! Perhaps more important than the cost savings, I feel the satisfaction that comes from having made good use of an item that might well have found its way into the trash.