Build an Adirondack Chair: the Ultimate Outdoor Furniture
You can make your own outdoor patio furniture — or just a comfortable chair for the front porch.
June/July 1997
By John Vivian
 |
Spend blissful days in an easy-to-build Adirondack chair.
WILL SHELTON
|
Spend blissful days in an easy-to-build chair.
RELATED CONTENT
These batter-powered lawn mowers are clean, quiet and easy to maintain and save gas. With cordless ...
Author Roy Kain gets off his stump and offers a step-by-step guide to building a chair....
HOME GARDEN'S EXPERTS DESIGN A VEGETABLE MINI-GARDEN FOR $10 May/June 1974 No, you don't need a cou...
Even if you haven't spent some of the most blissfully restful hours of your life in an Adirondack-style lawn chair, you've certainly seen them in ads, movies, or magazine articles about the elegant Lake Champlain estates where they evolved in the Gay '90s, (1890s, that is). Adirondacks are those great wide, wood-plank chairs with old-time charm and spreading arms that beckon you in ...but with a seat that is so wickedly comfortable and deep that you just may "...need a #@$*& spring in your seat to get out.. .," as my woodworking grandfather used to grouse when hauling free of a lawn chair (that he'd made two generations earlier) ... himself being well into his 80s then.
Their great, broad arms are perfectly horizontal so they can hold a cold drink, a small library of summer reading, and a big lunch all at once ... but this makes their arms so deviously high above the depths of the seat that your elbows are forced up ... so you don't have the leverage to do anything more strenuous than a crossword puzzle. Add in the warmth of the summer sun, lap of waves or crash of surf, maybe another of those cold drinks ... and an Adirondack chair can do marvelously destructive things to your ambition.
You can purchase pale copies of the true Adirondack chair, power-stapled together from cheap 1" (actually ¾"-thick) pine shelving in mall stores and unfinished furniture outlets for $35, or $150+ chairs constructed from domestic hardwoods, or $200+ chairs of redwood or plantation teak from mail-order catalogs.
For the most part though, commercial designs are "downsized" from the expansive original to be lightweight enough to ship by UPS. They lack the strength to stand up to decades of serious use or to the weather-beating that any outdoor furniture must endure.
Here's how to build your own amplesized, rock-solid Adirondack chair, plus a foot rest that makes the chair a lounger or can be made as a side table. Or you can build a double chair that can serve as a settee or be hung on chains as a porch swing. The design and construction is classic and will last for generations if you drag it onto the porch or put the legs on blocks and cover it with an old tarp during winter.
Our Adirondack Furniture Set
MOTHER'S chair frame is based on nature's most stable form—the triangle. Like a kangaroo, a child's trike, or a geodesic dome. Two triangles are backed together in a lazy "N" for the frame. Hardly anything can break it except time and poor maintenance.
You can use any wood you have at hand, though the plan assumes an industrial-strength frame built of inexpensive construction-grade 2-by building lumber and the rest from nominal 1" (actually ¾"-thick) pine. Most fasteners are self-tightening galvanized or (better, but more costly) stainless-steel drywall-type power-driven screws. The front legs and back support are held to the back leg-seat support with galvanized carriage bolts.
Page: 1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
Next >>