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Mortise and Tenon: The First Three Issues

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Code: AQ-11870
Price: $56.00
Shipping Weight: 4.62 lbs.
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With the publication of each issue of Mortise & Tenon magazine, we receive numerous requests for back issues from new fans of the magazine. The earliest issues have been unavailable for a while, so we are delighted that M&T has decided to publish the first three issues in a hardbound book, straightforwardly entitled “The First Three Issues.” The First Three Issues is not only a republication of the magazines; there are bonus essays by M&T’s editors that might induce a purchase even if you have one or two of the back issues -- Prologue: How Not to Start a Magazine, by Joshua A. Klein; Afterword: Revolution & Revelation by Jim McConnell; and Epilogue: Issue Three & Beyond by Michael Updegraff -- along with a Foreword by Christopher Schwarz of Lost Art Press.

The book is printed on heavy, matte-coated paper with a sewn binding that is appropriate for the in-depth, timeless explorations of woodworking that M&T offers. 496 pages. Printed in the USA.

Issue 1 - Table of Contents

  • From the Editor: The Mortise & Tenon Magazine Manifesto
  • Imbued With Story: An Interview with Furniture Conservator Jon Brandon
  • A Discussion on Period Craftsmanship with Phil Lowe
  • Rural Refinement: Recreating the Parson's Card Table by: Joshua Klein
  • Analysis and Details of a Federal Era Boston Secretary
  • On Curation and Scholarship: A Conversation with Curator Gerald Ward
  • Ex Nihilo: The Genesis of Classical Proportion by: George Walker
  • Adorned with Feathers: A Carving Tutorial by: Al Breed
  • The Dominy Shop: New Discoveries Striking a Balance by: Freddy Roman
  • Distinguishing the Marks of an Artisan by: Martin O'Brien
  • Before Our Very Eyes: A Visit to the Yale Furniture Study

    Issue 2 - Table of Contents

    • Perfection & Risk: The Making of a Banister-back Chair by: Joshua Klein
    • Quiet Grace: An Interview with Chairmakers David and George Sawyer
    • Examination of an 18th-Century Drop Leaf Table
    • Dividing the Line: Assessing the Eye of Blue-Collar Geometers by: George Walker
    • Decoding the Roman Workbench by: Christopher Schwarz
    • A Furniture Conservation Primer by: Donald C. Williams
    • An Unjustified Mystique: Period Dovetails Up-Close
    • A Case for Cadwalader by: Timothy Garland
    • An Interview with Tool Collector Skip Brack of Liberty Tool Company
    • Fidelity to the Past: An Interview with Zachary Dillinger
    • Everybody Who Knows 'Why' is Dead by: Peter Follansbee
    • Woodworking in Estonia: Book Review by: Michael Updegraff


    Issue 3 - Table of Contents


      • "The Spring Pole Lathe: Design, Construction, and Use" by Joshua Klein
      • "On the Trail of Two Cabinetmakers: Reconstructing the Careers of Samuel Wing and Tilly Mead" by: Shelley Cathcart & Amy Griffin
      • Essential Human Work: Reimagining a Legendary School on the Coast of Maine" - Interview with Drew Langsner & Kenneth Kortemeier
      • "Modern Revivalist Toolmaking: What Yesterday’s Tools Can Teach Us Today" by Brendan Bernhardt Gaffney
      • Examination of Two Period High Chairs
      • "The Best of Both Worlds: Embracing the Art in Craft" by Danielle Rose Byrd
      • "Patterns in Shop Practice" by Garrett Hack
      • "Making a Stand: Form & Function for $1.50" by Michael Updegraff
      • "Through a Wilderness of Ornament: Making Sense of 18th-century Pattern Books" by Bill Pavlak
      • "On Perfection: Both Practical and Practiced" by Jim McConnell
      • "Resurrecting the Derelict: Hard Choices in the Conservation of a Chest" by Joshua Klein
      • Book Review by Vic Tesolin: "A Field Guide to Identifying Woods in American Antiques & Collectibles" by R. Bruce Hoadley

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