These two tables are made of maple, stained with a medium red
mahogany color and a high-gloss polyurethane finish.
At the time of this writing (2005), these were the finest pieces of
furniture I had made. This includes some subjective mix of the
craftsmanship, the complexity of the construction and the final visual
appearance.
When we moved into our house, we found a beatiful tavertine coffee
table that exactly matched our fireplace. This was not cheap, and the
cost of the two matching end tables was a little much. We also had an
heirloom type coffee table from my wife's uncle that would occupy the
living room. Thus, we had two coffee tables and no end tables for the
couch. Not wanting to spend for the tavertine end tables left me with
the idea of making matching end tables to the heirloom coffee table.
I set about trying to copy the construction and design of the original
table, though I had to increase the table height, while adapting the
wavy patterns to a shorter length table. I needed all sorts of
templates and jigs to gets the deisgns, the angles and such. All
sorts of things I had to do for the first time.
The trickiest part was creating the mortise and tenon joints that
joined the side to the legs. Aside from never having made a mortise
and tenon joint before, I didn't have any fancy equipment to do this:
just a table saw, drill press and chisels. Also, due to the
relatively thin legs, two sides tenons could not fit in a single leg
without bevelling the end of the tenon. Tricky business. It took me
a very, very long time (I had to make 8 of these), and I got some
serious blisters from all the chiseling (I wasn't very experiences
with chisels at the time). However, the final result was some pretty
tight fitting joints. In fact, these are much stronger than what the
original table appears to be.