This is for all you folks out there who have made furniture. I'm trying desperately to finish a hall table for a show in April. I've been working from a stack of select grade 12/4 Mahogany. I have the base pretty much completed.........except for doing a final fit on the drawer and applying the handrubbed finish. I am making the top of the table 5/4 thick. The table top is 14 1/2" x 47 1/2". Unfortunately, the widest piece of Mahogany I have is 13". So, obviously, I had to resaw and glue two pieces together to get the width. My meter indicated a 7% moisture level, so I've not had any trouble building the table. I cut out my pieces for the top yesterday. Carefully sawed to align the direction of the grain. And then glued the two pieces together. Got up this morning only to find the wood had bowed terribly. I've got it on stickers right now, with close to 800 pounds of weight on it to see if it'll move back to flat, but with time pressing, I may have to start over and put another top together with alternating 4" strips. Bummer, huh?

Oh well, my rant is over. Thanks for listening. Should I just write your receptionist a check when I leave?

