Driftwood Furniture: Practical Projects for Your Home and Garden

From the beach to the backyard.

"Offers readers a wealth of information... numerous tips and ideas for working and designing with driftwood... of interest to many woodworkers and crafters."
-- Library Journal

Driftwood is an ideal building material. It is abundant, renewable and - best of all - free for the taking.

It is also easy to work with, does not require complicated precision assembly or special tools and the results are guaranteed to be unique since no two pieces of driftwood are the same.

Driftwood Furniture will show anyone how to construct unique and useful chairs, tables and benches, arbors and decorative objects. Each project is clearly illustrated and fully explained with black-and-white illustrations. The materials and tools required are listed separately so you'll have everything ready before you start. The results are fun, whimsical and durable.

The projects featured in Driftwood Furniture will appeal to novice and experienced woodworkers alike and include:

  • Garden benches
  • Arbors
  • Adirondack chairs
  • Sleigh
  • Patio table
  • Hanging Flowerbox
  • Wine rack
  • Chaise longue
  • Hooded chair, conversation chairs and more chairs
  • Wheelbarrow
  • And much more.

From beach to backyard, driftwood furniture is a welcome addition to any home.

1112156341
Driftwood Furniture: Practical Projects for Your Home and Garden

From the beach to the backyard.

"Offers readers a wealth of information... numerous tips and ideas for working and designing with driftwood... of interest to many woodworkers and crafters."
-- Library Journal

Driftwood is an ideal building material. It is abundant, renewable and - best of all - free for the taking.

It is also easy to work with, does not require complicated precision assembly or special tools and the results are guaranteed to be unique since no two pieces of driftwood are the same.

Driftwood Furniture will show anyone how to construct unique and useful chairs, tables and benches, arbors and decorative objects. Each project is clearly illustrated and fully explained with black-and-white illustrations. The materials and tools required are listed separately so you'll have everything ready before you start. The results are fun, whimsical and durable.

The projects featured in Driftwood Furniture will appeal to novice and experienced woodworkers alike and include:

  • Garden benches
  • Arbors
  • Adirondack chairs
  • Sleigh
  • Patio table
  • Hanging Flowerbox
  • Wine rack
  • Chaise longue
  • Hooded chair, conversation chairs and more chairs
  • Wheelbarrow
  • And much more.

From beach to backyard, driftwood furniture is a welcome addition to any home.

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Driftwood Furniture: Practical Projects for Your Home and Garden

Driftwood Furniture: Practical Projects for Your Home and Garden

by Derek Douglas
Driftwood Furniture: Practical Projects for Your Home and Garden

Driftwood Furniture: Practical Projects for Your Home and Garden

by Derek Douglas

Paperback(Back In Print)

$19.95 
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Overview

From the beach to the backyard.

"Offers readers a wealth of information... numerous tips and ideas for working and designing with driftwood... of interest to many woodworkers and crafters."
-- Library Journal

Driftwood is an ideal building material. It is abundant, renewable and - best of all - free for the taking.

It is also easy to work with, does not require complicated precision assembly or special tools and the results are guaranteed to be unique since no two pieces of driftwood are the same.

Driftwood Furniture will show anyone how to construct unique and useful chairs, tables and benches, arbors and decorative objects. Each project is clearly illustrated and fully explained with black-and-white illustrations. The materials and tools required are listed separately so you'll have everything ready before you start. The results are fun, whimsical and durable.

The projects featured in Driftwood Furniture will appeal to novice and experienced woodworkers alike and include:

  • Garden benches
  • Arbors
  • Adirondack chairs
  • Sleigh
  • Patio table
  • Hanging Flowerbox
  • Wine rack
  • Chaise longue
  • Hooded chair, conversation chairs and more chairs
  • Wheelbarrow
  • And much more.

From beach to backyard, driftwood furniture is a welcome addition to any home.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780228104292
Publisher: Firefly Books, Limited
Publication date: 02/15/2023
Edition description: Back In Print
Pages: 144
Product dimensions: 8.50(w) x 11.00(h) x 0.38(d)

About the Author

Derek Douglas builds driftwood furniture and regularly wins driftwood art competitions.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Chapter 1: Why Driftwood?

Chapter 2: Acquiring Driftwood

Collecting
Selecting
Transporting
Sorting and storing
Cleaning and drying
Safe beachcombing

Chapter 3: Tools and Materials

Cutting tools
Drilling tools
Sanding and shaping tools
Other tools and materials
Workshop safety

Chapter 4: Working with Driftwood

Mirror-cutting
Joinery
Bracing
Drilling
Sanding and finishing

Chapter 5: Building Driftwood Furniture

Building a garden bench
Developing your own projects
Coming up with ideas
Possible projects
Typical furniture dimensions
The project plan
Sketches and final drawings
Materials list
Building sequence
While you are building

Chapter 6: Projects

Signpost
Garden stand
Trellis
Four-legged chair
Hooded chair
Three-legged chair
Conversation chairs
Chaise lounge
Small table
Wine rack table
Patio table
Garden bench
Wheelbarrow
Tricycle
Sleigh
Hanging flowerbox
Wine rack
Arbor
Boat

Conclusion

Index

Interviews

5 years ago, at the age of 65, when most people settle down to armchair activities and start deciding where their bones will be laid to rest or their ashes sprinkled, I discovered driftwood

My venture into creating garden furniture and sculptures began on the shores of Lake Huron I found an abundance of beautiful driftwood, shaped in all configurations that immediately stirred my imagination

I have always been interested in art and have indulged in painting, sculpting, woodworking, marquetry, drawing etc , with some degree of success However, now, with this new discovery of a latent talent in me to transform driftwood into pieces that everyone finds attractive, I am experiencing an excitement level that I have never quite reached with all my previous endeavours

Many people, when looking and admiring some of my creations would try to convince me to sell the pieces and they kept saying "I wouldn't know where to start "

Voila! The idea was born to maybe write a book and tell them how to start and finish all my projects I carefully selected pieces that rated from very simple to more challenging and wrote some "How To" chapters Digital pictures were taken during each stage in a lovely setting on the banks of the Maitland River in Goderich and then I presented them to Firefly Books

Two and a half years later my book became a reality and here I am in an adventure beyond words

Derek Douglas

Introduction

Introduction

I love a storm...

I'm not talking about the kind of storm described in Sebastian Junger's The Perfect Storm, with hundred-foot waves and terrifying intensity. No, the storms I love are the ones that Mother Nature throws at us now and again that find all the trees -- trees that have had their roots undermined by heavy rains or have been felled by beavers. Mother Nature sweeps up all the debris with wind and rain into the world's largest washing machine: the lakes and oceans. She debarks the trees, removes branches, thoroughly cleans them, then tumbles them around for weeks, even years. At long last, with the arrival of the storm, they're pounded onto beaches for the final bleach-and-dry cycle.

That's where I come in. Almost five years ago, as I walked along the boardwalk of my favorite town, Goderich Ontario, I found my first piece of driftwood. It was silvery white, with a finish smoother than sandpaper could produce, so hard it was almost petrified and had such an interesting shape that my imagination was instantly ignited.

Since then, hundreds of trips to the beach have allowed me to create garden furniture and sculptures that are strong, artistically appealing in a rustic way and will last for years to come. Mother Nature is ruthless about determining what pieces survive that pounding on the rocks and beaches -- the survivors dull my tools with their incredible hardness and make assembly a little more challenging. The result is well worth the effort.

One thing I have learned after traversing the beaches for the last few years is that it becomes obvious that whatever sinks out there in the lakes and oceans invariably ends up on our beaches --albeit in pieces. On our local beach I have come across parts of vessels that sank or were scuttled a hundred years ago. I've seen log beams 12-by-12-inches square with long 1 1/2 inch spikes through them.

During one particularly heavy storm last summer, there was a tornado warning. The result was a 5-foot rise in the water level of the Maitland River beside us. The floating debris that passed us the next day consisted of an assortment of driftwood logs, two picnic tables, a small overturned boat, dock remnants and an incredible amount of silt. All this material was swept out a mile or so into the lake, then picked up by the onshore waves and dumped onto the lovely sandy beach.

It was quite an eyesore. The beach had been so pristine and picturesque, but after the storm there was this band of tangled mess that stretched for miles along the shoreline. Now there was a race against time to retrieve some pieces of this driftwood before the "firebugs" got to it. In their haste to clean up the beach, town workers pile up the debris and burn it. Unfortunately, all the burnable pieces are usually those that are easily carried and, of course, are the nicest and most suited to my hobby. That day, though, I was quicker than they were and found some great pieces to add to my collection.

I hope to instill the enthusiasm I have for building driftwood furniture to my readers because, believe me, the satisfaction of finding your first pieces, putting your imagination in gear and making your first creation cannot be described. You will, I'm sure, catch the fever that I've experienced and will want to press on to your next project, and the one after that, and the one after that...

This book's purpose is to introduce you to a hobby that is not only absorbing and exciting, but the end result is that you wind up with some useful, long-lasting creations that you will enjoy along with everyone else. I have grown a passion for driftwood that borders on obsession. No, addiction is more the word. I can't resist the call to the beach, especially following a storm. I store the driftwood knowing that if I don't, someone will get to it first and burn it on a beach campfire.

On the following pages, you will find many ideas, information on ways to get started, production tips and detailed instructions for 19 driftwood projects. Great lengths have been taken to document the progress of some of the projects. Difficulty levels vary from nice and easy, right up to challenging and intricate.

This hobby can be enjoyed by the whole family or by any individual person. It is very economical, stimulating to the imagination and a thoroughly healthy outdoor pastime. The health benefits include the many walks along the beaches and river edges, the fresh air you get from working outside and the muscular activity required to achieve your results. I also think that the complete absorption of your mind while it's wrapped up in the creative process relieves you from the everyday stresses of world news, stock market fluctuations, housework, the kids' problems and so on.

It is true that you need somewhere to work and a bench. My workbench is my picnic table at the cottage, but you can scale down the size of any project to fit your available working quarters. The sun may be a factor to contend with if you work outside -- I had to buy a 9-foot umbrella to protect my fair skin. The tools required are covered in Chapter 3, but bear in mind that you can get away with just a few to start and as you get more ambitious you can expand your arsenal later.

If you live alongside or near a lake or river shoreline, then you are very fortunate and can begin almost immediately. Others will need to venture out when they can to find the pieces they need. Although I stress the source of wood to be off the beaches and rivers, I find that woodlots can also be loaded with interesting pieces. Weathered wood obtained from lightning-struck trees or those that have succumbed to rot invariably take others down with them, thereby making for some excellent supplies.

I believe this hobby provides one of the mose unfettered ways of building furniture for your home or garden. You have complete freedom to continually change your design (remember, almost everything is screwed or bolted together to enable you to do this) right up to the finish. You don't even have to worry about scratching any pieces, varnishing or painting, or even the odd hole drilled in error. Nothing can faze you in your endeavors.

It is hard to imagine that this might be the first book ever written devoted totally to this subject, but I'm sure from now on, there will be others. Building with driftwood is an entirely unique experience. And after all is said and done, there is a certain satisfaction in knowing that there is not another piece in the world quite the same as yours.

Have fun.

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