Plank dining table |
According to archive.org Marfo, a "communications graduate," cited two offline books: one in the Fine Woodworking collection and another allegedly written by Anthony Guidice. The second doesn't exist (a book by that title was written by Kim Graves and Masha Zager), and the first has no plank table in the table of contents. It sure looks to us like Marfo faked her refs.
Besides, no book published by Fine Woodworking or any reputable woodworker would have the problems inherent in Amma's instructions, problems like
- Marfo clearly does not know that a 1-by-10 is not 10 inches wide.
- She clearly does not know that four 36-inch boards butted together will make a rectangle 36 by 37½ inches.
- Does Fine Woodworking really instruct its readers to, "Nail three nails across the width of each 10-inch board at both points where the frame boards rest below"? We doubt it: that's not particularly "fine."
- Amma's 3-by-3 legs are the right length, but attaching them to the table by nailing "through the frame into the post using two evenly spaced nails on the sides where the frame touches the post" won't be sufficiently stable for a table.
- What furniture maker anywhere is going to tell you to, "Space the boards roughly a ¼-inch [sic] apart" on the top of a dining table?
¹ The original has been deleted by Leaf Group, but can still be accessed using the Wayback machine at archive.org. Its URL was ehow.com/how_12030060_make-plankstyle-dining-table.html
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DDIY - FURNITURE
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