I’ve spent quite a few hours around furniture designers, starting with the studio furniture maker I worked with years ago in Miami, and of course today in both the online and offline woodworking communities. I like to believe that I’ve learned a few things by osmosis, although I must admit I’m by no means an expert.
Next month we’re releasing a free woodworking download on how to design furniture. As I was assembling the materials I remembered something I’ve learned from every furniture designer I’ve been around – just press play.
The furniture design phase is one of the fun parts of building furniture! You don’t have to worry about wasting material, because paper is cheap. Here are some lessons I’ve learned from others.
How to Design Furniture with the Quick-Start Method
1. Find inspiration – any inspiration. This can range from ancient furniture styles to Lego models to the great outdoors. It doesn’t matter what it is for you. The important thing is to find it!
2. Sketch. It’s not hard. And again, it’s cheap. There is absolutely no reason not to pick up a pencil and paper and start sketching ideas. Don’t be a harsh critic of yourself or your drawing abilities. The hand-mind connection is a powerful thing that you’ll enjoy!
3. Get some good instruction on refining your ideas. As you begin to transfer your sketches into measured drawings and solid concepts, get a few outside opinions from people who know more than you do. It’s easy to miss some of your mistakes in this phase, regarding proportion especially. Play with a few different scales until you hit it right!
4. Play with surfaces. If you can do this during the design phase, with a mock-up or colored pencils, go for it. Many furniture designers continue to experiment with different surfaces and textures right up to the end of the building process. You can often work in an inlay at a later stage, but it’s also a good idea to think about colors and contrasts early on.
5. Source your lumber and hardware. Great furniture makers consider this part of the design stage, not the building stage. That’s because you’ll sometimes discover a new idea or two when you start playing with the material itself.
Here’s a resource for you that covers a lot of the above steps, and is itself a playful thing. Megan Fitzpatrick assembled her “Fitz’s Picks” value pack this month with an eye to furniture design and fun. Buy it now while we still have the price in place!
Are you more of a designer or a builder? Tell us your tips on how to design furniture in the comments section. Thanks!
–Dan Farnbach
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I looked at the Fitz Picks and didn’t see anything on buffing out a table top with a cat in each hand.
Dan,
I guess the slow-start method includes learning to trust your eye.
Chris