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Readers Gallery
From Fine Woodworking Issue #148
Charles Wiedman
Wiedman's client asked for a carved dressing mirror that would portray oneness with the earth and its solar system. Though Wiedman had never done any carving, he figured it was time to learn something new. The mirror (22 in. deep by 48 in. wide by 86 in. tall) features a carved mahogany frame with cherry legs and feet. Inset is a 1/4-in. beveled mirror.
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Peter Sangree
This bubinga coffee table (44 in. deep by 20 in. wide by 14 3/4 in. tall), Sangree said, was designed "to incorporate the inherent strength and beauty of the arch to support the functional top," which was cut from a single slab of bubinga.
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Michael and Paul Wilson
The Wilson brothers run Wilson Woodworking in Windsor, Vt., and built this home office for a local doctor who wanted to bring home work but be able to hide it. The unit is made of pine and stained, and we're told, has proven itself very user-friendly. Photos by Jerry LeBlond and Robert North.
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Joseph H. Willard
Though he studied under Tage Frid at the School for American Craftsmen at the Rochester Institute of Technology (two benches over from Jere Osgood), Willard decided to pursue woodworking as a hobby rather than as a profession. This desk is made of walnut with solid burl on the block front.
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