There was a beautiful curved arm design by Michael Fortune in FWW May/June issue "3 Outdoor Chairs" article. It looks quite do-able other than having to create a bending form and find/make 1/8" strips of material to laminate for the arms. Lots of tips on materials, finishing, and techniques for the outdoors in that article.Festoller said:Nico:
My Adirondack Chair made out of Western Red Cedar with no finish spend 16 years in German weather (rain, lots of rain, snow, frost and sun). The surface was pretty grey after these years, but the structure was still in perfect condition, except for two lamellos that had to be exchanged. I've just recently taken the chair appart and after sanding it looks as good as new. Even the cedar scent came back after sanding and the oil finish looks beautiful. If you're interested I can post some photos before and after. Maybe you should concider to use the same material and just finish with oil. If you put the chair under a ceiling over the winter and use stainless steel screws, I am sure it will last forever even without paint.
I've alerady bought some Western Red Cedar to build a new Adirondack Chair and I think 20 mm should be enough, since that's the thickness of my 16 year old chair. Of course you could use thicker material for the feet and structure.
I've also collected many designs (Fine Woodworking, Yankee Workshop and even Festool......), but couldn't decide for one since I would like to change the traditional design to a little more modern one. What design are you planing to use?
Wood_Junkie said:Take a look at the Lee Valley folding adirondack chair plan.
I don't know about others, but I move mine under cover in the winter (garage loft, actually), and a full-size adirondack takes up a ton of room. These fold down chairs are full sized open, but when folded down they're only about a foot high, and can be stacked or hung.
tms0425 said:I'm just starting to collect designs myself (for at least 4 chairs), but am trying to find something where I really don't need a band saw to do it right (don't have access to one). If I can make templates, my Bosch jigsaw and OF1400 router should be fine for cleanup. Cedar seems like the choice where I live in the Midwest, but I'm curious to see what other options there are too.
Steve F said:I was just about to start building a couple of chairs using the LV plans, but not the folding kind. Your post made me start to rethink whether it would be better to make to folding ones. Was the folding mechanism difficult to build? Did you use the LV hardware for it?
Wood_Junkie said:The first LV folding chair I made I experimented using Roto-hinges instead of bolts. http://www.amazon.com/3-4-Diameter-Roto-Hinge/dp/B001ENUA66
Nope. But since they're fully buried in the glue hole, and I used Titebond III I figured they'd be alright (the roto-hinge wood appears to be hard maple, FYI). I will store the chairs indoors during winter, so I'm not worried about the metal parts corroding, giving their immensely small exposure.CharlesWilson said:Wood_Junkie said:The first LV folding chair I made I experimented using Roto-hinges instead of bolts. http://www.amazon.com/3-4-Diameter-Roto-Hinge/dp/B001ENUA66
Those chairs look great! You'll have many years of enjoyment from them.
I noticed that the roto-hinges you linked to are specified for indoor use only. Did you use different ones?
Charles
Stoolman said:Nico, Your design is very close to Norm Abrams but less refined. I would add a curved back and seat bottom (like Norms). I've built a ton of chairs using his design and it is extremely comfortable. He has the proportions just right. I've sat on a few chairs with flat backs and seats and my arse fell asleep and back was sore too.
I made a pair of these as a gift. They're made out of mirante.
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