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...Whitepower... 06-19-2015 9:24pm

Douglas..
 
Step your game up..


http://i58.tinypic.com/effbzq.jpg

Jeff '79 06-19-2015 9:24pm

That is sick!! Wow :drool:

markids77 06-19-2015 9:29pm

Remarkable.

JRD77VET 06-19-2015 9:34pm

Beautiful craftsmanship :clap:

Admiral Blue 06-19-2015 9:54pm

Whoa. :seasix:

DAB 06-19-2015 10:04pm

:faint:

He wins.

...Whitepower... 06-19-2015 10:11pm

:lol:

Y2Kvert4me 06-19-2015 10:28pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by DAB (Post 1370422)
:faint:

He wins.

He has more clamps than you, that's why. :D

The artist's site...
Trapart - staircase builder of elegant wooden staircases

OddBall 06-20-2015 1:52am

WOW! :cool1:

MrPeabody 06-20-2015 2:58am

Yeah, but how thick is his slab?

island14 06-20-2015 6:01am

Quote:

Originally Posted by MrPeabody (Post 1370461)
Yeah, but how thick is his slab?



GREAT... now they will have their wood out to compare sizes.

DAB 06-20-2015 8:36am

my stair railings:

http://i937.photobucket.com/albums/a...g/DSC_2026.jpg

:hide:

OldSarge 06-20-2015 8:39am

Quote:

Originally Posted by JRD77VET (Post 1370411)
Beautiful craftsmanship :clap:


:iagree:

Fasglas 06-20-2015 9:07am

Reminds me of:

http://www.rmstitanicremembered.com/...case-color.jpg

lspencer534 06-20-2015 12:58pm

DAB, you want to give us a history lesson?:

http://i57.tinypic.com/24q1zm1.jpg

LATB 06-20-2015 1:08pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by ...Whitepower... (Post 1370406)

Gaudy. IMO.

DAB 06-20-2015 1:08pm

Loreto chapel, Santa Fe. Handrails added later. No center column for support.

LATB 06-20-2015 1:09pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fasglas (Post 1370506)

Even more gaudy.

lspencer534 06-20-2015 1:20pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by DAB (Post 1370539)
Loreto chapel, Santa Fe. Handrails added later. No center column for support.

Two mysteries surround the spiral staircase in the Loretto Chapel: the identity of its builder and the physics of its construction.

When the Loretto Chapel was completed in 1878, there was no way to access the choir loft twenty-two feet above. Carpenters were called in to address the problem, but they all concluded access to the loft would have to be via ladder as a staircase would interfere with the interior space of the small Chapel.

Legend says that to find a solution to the seating problem, the Sisters of the Chapel made a novena to St. Joseph, the patron saint of carpenters. On the ninth and final day of prayer, a man appeared at the Chapel with a donkey and a toolbox looking for work. Months later, the elegant circular staircase was completed, and the carpenter disappeared without pay or thanks. After searching for the man (an ad even ran in the local newspaper) and finding no trace of him, some concluded that he was St. Joseph himself, having come in answer to the sisters' prayers.

The stairway's carpenter, whoever he was, built a magnificent structure. The design was innovative for the time and some of the design considerations still perplex experts today.

The staircase has two 360 degree turns and no visible means of support. Also, it is said that the staircase was built without nails—only wooden pegs.

DAB 06-20-2015 1:37pm

ok, got the spelling wrong. :slap:

way back when, nails were expensive, so frugal carpenters invented joints that didn't require nails or screws. i built my BIL a standing desk a few years ago with the same techniques, all mortise and tenon joinery.

my sister, not knowing this tradition, asked after it was done if i had done it the 'cheap' way....:toetap:....no, i did it the traditional way. the hard way. not using pocket screws, nails, etc.

sigh....


:DAB:


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