Thanks - that is a better source for the same article
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Fuzzie
Hi Franklin,
It is exactly the same article. Thanks for the link as that will help other readers of these forums:2tsup:. I found the article reprinted somewhere with only his name as credit so I didn't get the link. I do not agree with the "art of manliness" bit. Especially as the best antiques restorer still working in my area is a woman!
Regards
David
Books on restoration or related
As an addition to my earlier response I wanted to mention that not all books or articles on restoration are good to follow. Just like in building restoration there was a phase where "professionals" were very impressed with new materials and believed, incorrectly, that they were automatically superior to the old ways. For example, soft lime mortars were replaced by "better" hard cement mortars - and that resulted in ghastly damage to old stone and brisk buildings (lime mortar let water out but the cement mortar was impervious so the water and salts rotted away the adjacent stone and or brick).
Likewise, some restoration "professionals" enthusiastically embraced modern techniques and adhesives without understanding the damage they were doing and the reduction in value their repairs caused. I have a book by a Frenchman, Michael Doussy, Antiques professional Secrets for the Amateur 1977 Book Club Associates, London, that exemplifies how not to do it. He includes techniques that remove original material and recommends the use of inappropriate adhesives from vinyl to contact adhesives. I pity the people who will have to make good his style of repairs later on.
Some older books however, were much better than others and a couple may be available in second hand bookstores locally or on-line if forumites are interested. The ones that I have are not necessarily the definitive books on the subject, they are just the examples that I picked up along the way.
Charles Harding, Furniture Doctoring and French Polishing, 1970, W. Foulsham and Co, London, (0-572-00710-8 may be the SBN), was a very useful book for me when I was first learning.
Other books that are useful and informative have focussed on the frequency of reproduction or faked furniture being passed off as antiques. One example of these books is an old one that I have by W. Crowley, Is It Genuine? A Guide to the Identification of Eighteenth-Century English Furniture, 1971 Eyre & Spottiswoode, London (but relevant to later periods too).
One much lighter book that forumites interested in furniture history and restoration may enjoy is by Norman Lindsay Dust or Polish. I do not have the other details because the person I lent the book to some years ago has not returned it - but it is a fun read.
The Furniture History Society (UK) Home | Furniture History Society or the Australian Furniture History Society The Furniture History Society publish journals with interesting articles on antique furniture and the Australiana Society publishes a high quality colour magazine with lots of information about some fascinating items of Australiana including furniture.
If there is any interest I can also list some of the furniture books that I own, but this post is probably quite long enough for now and I need to get some workshop time!
David