Wife’s birthday is coming up. She has requested a desk for her craft projects. She mainly wants a basic mortise and tenon 4 leg table. I would classify it as a basic writing desk with a single drawer in the front apron.
I am using material out of my wood storage. The top is going to be a repurposed laminated maple top from a school science lab. I plan to refinish it, but leave the kid’s initials etchings on the top to show its history. The top is 1 3/4” thick and is 30”x 72”. My space will limit me to a 5’ or 60” by 30”. The aprons will be 4” maple, which will allow a reasonable depth drawer for her stationary and pens.
The desk will be 30” high, so the legs will be a little less than 29”. They will he made out of some 12/4 x 9” wide hard maple I had reserved for a small workbench one day. I normally would taper the legs, but this is going into a room in a timber framed house. It’a a spare bedroom with 10”x8” exposed timbers. I plan to mimic the framing by leaving the legs square with a matching chamfer on the edges. The tenons will be pegged through the legs to match the house construction.
My question is regarding the proportions of the legs. My original plan was to go square at the maximum thickness possible. That would be a max of 2 3/4” to 2 7/8”. Or I could go a little wider from the front view by making the legs rectangular. But, then I’m concerned that since the legs will not be tapered, it could look very bulky when combined with a 1 3/4” top. I’m looking for a visual compromise. Bulky legs with a thin top does not look good to me and thin legs with a thick top doesn’t either.
All opinions on leg thickness from your experiences are welcome.
I am using material out of my wood storage. The top is going to be a repurposed laminated maple top from a school science lab. I plan to refinish it, but leave the kid’s initials etchings on the top to show its history. The top is 1 3/4” thick and is 30”x 72”. My space will limit me to a 5’ or 60” by 30”. The aprons will be 4” maple, which will allow a reasonable depth drawer for her stationary and pens.
The desk will be 30” high, so the legs will be a little less than 29”. They will he made out of some 12/4 x 9” wide hard maple I had reserved for a small workbench one day. I normally would taper the legs, but this is going into a room in a timber framed house. It’a a spare bedroom with 10”x8” exposed timbers. I plan to mimic the framing by leaving the legs square with a matching chamfer on the edges. The tenons will be pegged through the legs to match the house construction.
My question is regarding the proportions of the legs. My original plan was to go square at the maximum thickness possible. That would be a max of 2 3/4” to 2 7/8”. Or I could go a little wider from the front view by making the legs rectangular. But, then I’m concerned that since the legs will not be tapered, it could look very bulky when combined with a 1 3/4” top. I’m looking for a visual compromise. Bulky legs with a thin top does not look good to me and thin legs with a thick top doesn’t either.
All opinions on leg thickness from your experiences are welcome.
John