PM if you're interested
no dibs blah blah if i set a time to meet you i won't sell it to anyone else till you've missed your appt
$500 for all of it.
individually
$200 for the wood top
$300 for the legs (barely covers the powder coat btw)
i dunno what the hell to call this but it's a project i've lost the desire to finish. It WAS going to be our dining table but because we have a fairly narrow space to put it in, it's sorta too narrow to be that for anyone else. it's also not completely finished. stacked up and all together it would be about 37" tall, which is taller than standard. personally i think standard tables are too low so i'd be fine with it. you might not be.
the top:
~26"wide,
72" long (or cut the breadboard tenons off and it's about 67" long)
3" thick
weighs uuuh. heavy. 120lbs i'd guess. i'll help load it.
laminated douglas fir, most of the boards are 100+ years old. there is likely still some metal inside the core, nails, screws etc.
i started epoxy sealing it to make the large checks and dents be tolerable. filling the largest recesses with black tinted material then clear over that eventually.
breadboard ends have been roughly made of Claro Walnut, take em or leave em. they ain't perfect but could certainly be used.
legs:
cast iron, don't know what they were originally for
~33" tall
~24" wide at the feet
i had them powder coated but didn't mask all the holes so there are small areas of rust (they're stored outside) that wipes off the powder coat and can be easily hidden or cleaned up if the holes are left as Features
no dibs blah blah if i set a time to meet you i won't sell it to anyone else till you've missed your appt
$500 for all of it.
individually
$200 for the wood top
$300 for the legs (barely covers the powder coat btw)
i dunno what the hell to call this but it's a project i've lost the desire to finish. It WAS going to be our dining table but because we have a fairly narrow space to put it in, it's sorta too narrow to be that for anyone else. it's also not completely finished. stacked up and all together it would be about 37" tall, which is taller than standard. personally i think standard tables are too low so i'd be fine with it. you might not be.
the top:
~26"wide,
72" long (or cut the breadboard tenons off and it's about 67" long)
3" thick
weighs uuuh. heavy. 120lbs i'd guess. i'll help load it.
laminated douglas fir, most of the boards are 100+ years old. there is likely still some metal inside the core, nails, screws etc.
i started epoxy sealing it to make the large checks and dents be tolerable. filling the largest recesses with black tinted material then clear over that eventually.
breadboard ends have been roughly made of Claro Walnut, take em or leave em. they ain't perfect but could certainly be used.
legs:
cast iron, don't know what they were originally for
~33" tall
~24" wide at the feet
i had them powder coated but didn't mask all the holes so there are small areas of rust (they're stored outside) that wipes off the powder coat and can be easily hidden or cleaned up if the holes are left as Features