Chris & Morgan’s Bubinga Adventure
This was a joint project between myself and Morgan (AZMO). I was responsible for carving the edge and smoothing the surfaces. With the reversing grain, this translated to much sanding. Together, we finished the table with three coats of an oil/varnish blend. With the help of six men, we delivered the table to the client’s back patio and installed it on the steel poweder-coated base. Two horns at either end of the base tie the project to the African-themed back yard. It took about one week to complete.
Comments
I would drool to have a pc of wood like that. Very Nice
I live in Las Vegas, NV....Wood not to good here.
Chris,
OK you win. Your bubinga is nicer then my bubinga. Just posted the buffet.
ASK
Is that normal bubinga, or is it som special curly or flamed type?
Sure i a nice pice of wood!!
What a work of art. I can look at that grain all day. Its like looking at light prisms & ripples in a clear lake.
I'm going to learn more about this gorgeous wood.
Thanks for sharing!!!
Absolutely beautiful table. I have a piece of the curly waterfall bubinga that looks a lot like your table and I am having a heck of a time getting the surface smooth due to the crazy grain and sanding alone doesn't seem to completely smooth it out. Did you use scrapers or planes? Any pointers would be greatly appreciated.
Waterfall Bubinga is one of my favorite woods to work with. PM me for pictures of some veneer that'll knock your sox off. The Mngr of WWS showed me pics of this here in Tucson. It's absolutely beautiful.
danmark,
Sorry for the late reply - I don't get past Knots very often to the Gallery. The figure is known as "waterfall". So you are looking at waterfall bubinga.
zwoodchuck,
I am a hand tool fan and don't like sanding, but this table and the timeline we had to build it didn't leave me too many options. We sanded up to 320x. You can e-mail me directly if you have any more questions.
[email protected]
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