Furniture Design Tips and Guidelines

Furniture Design Tips and Guidelines

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Developing design concepts in functioning esthetically pleasing pieces involves both an artistic feel for the finished piece along with knowledge of historically balanced proportions. Assuring a good design involves the proper balance of the new and the old.

design table

Proportions If you're like the rest of us, early on in your wood working experience, you've had the dubious honor of putting all your efforts into a special piece of work. You did everything right. All the joints fit perfectly. Fibonacci Numbers

When building a cabinet or piece of furniture, we routinely refer to these numbers, in an effort to create an aesthetically pleasing piece. The next time you build a rectangular piece, take the smaller dimension and multiply it by 1.618. It will then be a Golden rectangle and is sure to be pleasing to the eye.

Woodworking Design Tips

Standard Furniture Dimensions

Developing the Idea

It all starts with an idea. But how do you develop a general idea into something specific, something that you can build? For example, you know you want to build an entertainment center but you're not sure if you want it to be freestanding or built into an existing wall.

Design Tips

Design can be one of the most satisfying aspects of woodworking because it is an opportunity to express yourself, to put your spin on something. But what is design, and more specifically, what is good design? If you ask ten different woodworkers that question, you'll get ten different answers because design means different things to different people.

Designing for Modern Woodworkers

When starting your first project, it's a good idea to follow a plan. This way you can focus on your milling and joinery skills. Eventually though, you are going to want to start designing and planning your own projects. Thinking of the idea is the first part of the challenge, and coming up with a reasonable way to bring that idea to life is the second part.

American craft, with a history that begins before the written word, continues to evolve. The past two centuries in particular have provided a stimulus for craft artists—artists who work with clay, fiber, metal, and wood, rather than paint or watercolor—who find a wide and varied audience and market for their creations. Our communities and schools, our ethnic and religious groups have all played a part in this ongoing story. Today we are a country rich in men and women who transform the ordinary object into the extraordinary.