At the 2002 Minneosta State Fair, the table and chessmen both won blue
ribbons, and I got the Peterson Memorial Award for Superior Craftsmanship. This
picture was taken with a new Canon PowerShot A40 digital camera, which, I think,
does a marvelous job. The others were taken with an older Toshiba digital
camera.
Here it is with the top tilted up.
Here it had the top down and the pieces set up to play.
This is a close-up of the chessmen, which I made from birch on the white
side, but the dark side is made from some other sort of wood which I had lying
about my shop, and I'm not sure what sort of wood it is precisely; it is far
harder than mahogany, and it emits a highly irritating dust when cut or sanded;
the colour and grain pattern, however, are similar enough to mahogany that they
look good together.
The following are views of the column and the sliding dovetail joints which
attach the legs to the column.
And this is a little box I made for the chessmen; it is made of Central
American Mahogany, and this picture illustrates very well the difference between
Central American, or "geniune" Mahogany (Swietenia mahogani), and African
Mahogany (Khaya senegalensis).