use in creating the oval frames. There are several quicktime movies to help illustrate these steps. Click on the movie images to start the download process, we invite you to keep reading the article as the quicktime movie downloads, but you can only download one movie at a time. If you have questions on how the download process works or what plug-ins you need for quicktime please read here. To read and hear the artisans own words click here.
A typical order might be: one gold-leafed oval mirror frame, turned
with profile number 558 (from the Schwamb production collection) and having
a 16-in. by 20 in. inside dimension.
The first task is to develop a template for one quadrant of the ellipse.
Schwamb ellipses (and circles) are constructed of regular quadrants of kiln-dried
lumber, bandsawn and finger-joined. One template serves for the whole job,
and is gotten from the quietest corner of the main floor, where a trammel
board rests on an old barrel. The surrounding walls are an orderly fish-scale
jam of the cardboard quadrants that the Schwambs cut over the years.
The finger joint is made on a gang saw, a set of blades with teeth protruding
through a wooden plate and between two fixed parallel wooden fences. Each
quadrant is gripped like a pistol and pushed through the blades.
Frame blanks are taken upstairs to the glue room as soon as the joints are cut. Here, amid the iron heat pipes and old hide-glue pots, quadrants are ganged up face to face,
Titebond is brushed on the joints, and the frame is loosely pieced together on a steel-topped assembly table. A steel band clamp at one of several stations is placed around the frame blank and drawn up quickly with a handwheel, which winds
in the slack. The quadrants align, the shoulders draw up, and beads of glue bloom at the joints as the strap comes to full tension.
After overnight curing, glue-squeeze is chiseled away from the back of the blank, which is then jointed flat so it can be mounted on the lathe faceplate. Frame blanks are fixed to the lathe with four
screws positioned so they will neither come through a finger joint nor be exposed during turning.
The lathe differential, which governs the proportions of the oval, is set by moving the headstock ring plate to the proper calibration. After a liberal oiling of the mechanism bearing surfaces, the blank is rotated,
testmarked and the setting checked for accuracy.
The lathes all run considerably under 1000 RPM. Low speeds are easy on the equipment, but dictate several turning challenges. The action of worn ellipse mechanisms can become exaggerated, tools grab more easily, and scraping smooth surfaces is more difficult than at
higher speeds. Nevertheless, turning circles or moderate ovals is usually a pleasant, direct joy, free of the racy hum and tense power delivery of the typical light modern lathe.