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-   -   Another staircase (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/1044034-another-staircase.html)

gduke2010 10-31-2019 09:57 PM

Another staircase
 
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1572587748.jpg

Doing another stair at the Lake

gduke2010 10-31-2019 09:59 PM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1572587927.jpg

gduke2010 10-31-2019 10:01 PM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1572588039.jpg

This is from one I did over the summer. Had to bend the rail.

gduke2010 10-31-2019 10:03 PM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1572588214.jpg

look 171 10-31-2019 10:07 PM

Wow, that's some seriously work. Is that what you do for a living? You must be good at scribing. Look like tremendous fun.

Are the raiser solid or plywood? The nosing on the thread a glued on piece? Got more pics? I did a few stairs ( one of them was a spiral ) in my younger days when were were just doing wood working and finish carpentry.

look 171 10-31-2019 10:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gduke2010 (Post 10642845)

Hand railing is lam. bending? How much spring back after drying?

look 171 10-31-2019 10:10 PM

I hope you are a young man with many years of this. Are there younger guys that want to learn the art? I have been at this since my late teens and still get exciting over see something like it at 53.

gduke2010 10-31-2019 10:13 PM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1572588631.jpg

Yes, they are solid treads. The first picture is walnut.

gduke2010 10-31-2019 10:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by look 171 (Post 10642850)
I hope you are a young man with many years of this. Are there younger guys that want to learn the art? I have been at this since my late teens and still get exciting over see something like it at 53.

I’m 57 and when I was young the really good carpenters that trains me were my age. Still learning every day.

gduke2010 10-31-2019 10:21 PM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1572589164.jpg

Top view the treads are acashia (sp) sorry I don’t know how to spell it.

look 171 10-31-2019 10:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gduke2010 (Post 10642852)
I’m 57 and when I was young the really good carpenters that trains me were my age. Still learning every day.

You were lucky. I have to learn it the hard way, read a book, lots of trial and erors and just figured it out. I was going to college when I started this. But I did go to all the trade shows and made lots of local contacts. I was doing smaller stuff for a few local guys then one thing led to another, I was able to hire these older semi retired craftsmen (they all knew each other from years of work) as subs to work for me. I basically stood there and watched just to learn. Then I started doing it myself to save a few bucks. Then my business grew into a monster just doing finish work and cabinetry. Still, what you do it a lot of fun and challenging.

Bill Douglas 10-31-2019 10:35 PM

It looks nice. Nice styling and nice and SOLID.

I'm presently working on a place of GF's and the staircase squeaks. It need to be glued and screwed. Not just nailed together.

madcorgi 10-31-2019 11:01 PM

I never fail to be impressed at the talent on this board. Really outstanding design and craftsmanship. It definitely is a dying art.

How is the acacia finished?

flatbutt 11-01-2019 04:58 AM

I'm assuming the rail is steamed then bent? How do you bend wood that much in one shot? :confused:

GH85Carrera 11-01-2019 06:31 AM

Wow. It looks like maybe you really have done that before. ;)

Nice to see real craftsmen man work.

fintstone 11-01-2019 07:31 AM

That is freaking incredible!

I have a very similar staircase in my house...but the baseboards are not the same quality work in the curved areas at the base. How do you get that deep curve with stained baseboards?

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1572622253.jpg

gduke2010 11-01-2019 07:43 AM

The stair railing comes cut in 1/4" stripes and is glued and quickly clamped. The base is alder and also 1/4", glued, clamped and nailed to the wall. Then a router is run for the detail.

DavidI 11-01-2019 07:52 AM

That is beautiful! Fantastic craftsmanship.

gduke2010 11-01-2019 07:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by look 171 (Post 10642857)
You were lucky. I have to learn it the hard way, read a book, lots of trial and erors and just figured it out. I was going to college when I started this. But I did go to all the trade shows and made lots of local contacts. I was doing smaller stuff for a few local guys then one thing led to another, I was able to hire these older semi retired craftsmen (they all knew each other from years of work) as subs to work for me. I basically stood there and watched just to learn. Then I started doing it myself to save a few bucks. Then my business grew into a monster just doing finish work and cabinetry. Still, what you do it a lot of fun and challenging.

I was in business too during the boom. I could see the money drying up before the bust and got out early. I was reading how people were cashing in on houses in California and renting before the bubble. Also, read and article in the Wall Street Journal written by a Japanese professor who was comparing our boom to Japans. Working for a contractor now with good health insurance. Made enough money during those years and don't want to risk what I made starting another business.


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