what is it?Rustic furniture is hand-made wooden household or garden furniture that is quick to make, using wood from trees in a natural state with a minimum of processing. Items retain the character and natural beauty of the tree they were made from. what are the benefits?Furnishing our homes can be very expensive. A major benefit of rustic furniture is that you can make your own very cheaply, if not for free. Making rustic furniture is joyfully simple. Pieces can be made using a modest selection of basic hand tools, which makes it accessible for anyone to make – you don’t have to have power tools or the experience (and power) required to use them. This also means that you can make your furniture in the woods where the tree has been felled. Once you own some basic tools, the materials that you need will have a very low embedded energy, and hopefully won’t have been transported far. Your raw materials will be local, biodegradable, renewable, produced by solar energy, and during its lifetime will have provided a habitat for many creatures.
When your rustic furniture wears out, or you want a change, you can quickly replace it, and turn it into firewood. This style of working means that you can use low-grade wood from non-timber quality trees – for example local coppiced wood, or wood harvested from gardens or estate management. This can often be free, or very cheap. But you can still use large, sturdy pieces of wood to make furniture that will last a lifetime. what can I do?First, get some tools. The basic hand tools needed for rustic furniture-making are the same as for any green woodworking project. These may include an axe, froe (splitting tool), draw-knife (shaving tool), rounder (rotary plane), a good wooden mallet (that you can make yourself) and a bow-saw. These can be obtained from a variety of places, some mainstream, some specialist. For example, new side-axes and other tools can be purchased online, or alternatively, good-quality second-hand tools can be found in second-hand shops or antique stores, or at wood fairs / festivals / markets.
In addition, a shave horse and/or pole lathe could be useful (although you can make good pieces without them). A shave horse is used with a draw-knife for shaping things like chair legs. A pole lathe is used for turning wood to make round objects, again – like chair legs. You can buy them from specialists, or make your own. You have various options for upholstering your rustic furniture. Woven fabrics can be used for chair seats – such as sea-grass, tree bark or reeds, although often rustic furniture needs no upholstering. You can, of course, add cushions, mattresses, throws etc. You can choose to finish your furniture with various natural oils or stains, but often it will need no finishing at all. You can learn how to make rustic furniture from books – see here and here. But as it is a practical skill, probably the best way is on a course. You can also buy rustic furniture – you could find suppliers through word of mouth if you’re lucky, or via an internet search, or you may come across people making rustic furniture in your area from local coppiced wood. Your finished product can be as rough-and-ready or as well-crafted as you like, depending on taste, what it’s for, and how much time you are prepared to put into it. In theory you can produce any type of domestic furniture in this style. You are limited only by your imagination.resources
Thanks to Adrian Leaman for information. |
ladderback chair: a traditional green wood rustic furniture project; the bark has been left on some pieces, and the seat is made of woven sea-grass
using a shave horse and draw-knife to roughly shape a chair leg; the techniques required are easily learned by all ages and skill levels
shelves made from a combination of rough-sawn timber and tree branches; if you don't think these are more attractive than anything you could buy from a furniture superstore, then rustic furniture making is probably not for you
stick chairs - more rough and ready than the ladderback above, but perfectly functional nonetheless |




