Do you use the "golden ration" when designing projects?
#11
I am laying out a wainscoting for my bathroom. The bathroom wall is 73" long. When I do the math I come close to the Golden Ratio with three 24" wide segments by 39" high. (The golden ratio is 1:1.618).

Or do you just divide it up according to what is convenient?

Golden Ratio: http://www.livescience.com/37704-phi-golden-ratio.html
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#12
Looks like you are good to go with GR and convenience. Doesn't have to be exact to look good.
Carolyn

Trip Blog for Twelve Countries:   [url=http://www.woodworkingtraveler.wordpress.com[/url]

"It's good to know, but it's better to understand."  Auze Jackson
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#13
I have and will continue to do so. You can't explain it, it just "feels" right. I did some frame panels of molding below the chair rail in my dining room, and on one section of a wall I had to slightly (1-2") modify two of the three panels to fit around a heating return screen, and when folks visit I ask them which of the three panels on that wall do they like best in terms of sizing, and they always pick the golden ratio one. Never fails.
Credo Elvem ipsum etiam vivere
Non impediti ratione cogitationis
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#14
Guaranteed most of the pieces built by our forefathers that we admire as valuable antiques are simply pleasing to the eye. Most of the people making those pieces couldn't spell their name, much less do mathematics.
Worst thing they can do is cook ya and eat ya

GW
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#15
Pardon my ignorance, but I've wondered how the Golden Ratio works with something say like a box. So you use it on one face and then again on the adjoining face and things start to go south. By the time you get to the third face you're pretty well locked into the dimensions and a long way from anything that could be called golden. So - do you only apply the ratio to one face, top, side and then go by guess and by golly for the rest?
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#16
Admiral said it:

"I have and will continue to do so. You can't explain it, it just "feels" right."
"I tried being reasonable..........I didn't like it." Clint Eastwood
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#17
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AJgkaU08VvY


The part about the golden ratio begins about the seven minute mark.
Or, watch the whole thing, it is very educational !
Mark Singleton

Bene vivendo est optimum vindictae


The Laws of Physics do not care about your Politics   -  Me
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#18
Steve N said:


Guaranteed most of the pieces built by our forefathers that we admire as valuable antiques are simply pleasing to the eye. Most of the people making those pieces couldn't spell their name, much less do mathematics.




Don't be so sure. We've had this discussion before with some pretty impressive resources dug up. The golden ratio does not require a college degree. It's actually quite simple to plot out.
Carolyn

Trip Blog for Twelve Countries:   [url=http://www.woodworkingtraveler.wordpress.com[/url]

"It's good to know, but it's better to understand."  Auze Jackson
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#19
As Carolyn and I can both tell you, all approximations to the golden ratio are usually inaccurate. The exact number is found by adding 1 to the square root of 5 and then dividing the sum by two.

I'm not sure if Fibonacci even knew that.
Rip to width. Plane to thickness. Cut to length. Join.
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#20
MarkSingleton said:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AJgkaU08VvY


The part about the golden ratio begins about the seven minute mark.
Or, watch the whole thing, it is very educational !




Thanks for posting that--one of my absolute favorite memories from school--so much better than most of the film strips!!

earl
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