“Without craftsmanship, inspiration is a mere reed shaken in the wind.”*
by chuckofish
A couple of weeks ago my cousin Stephen sent me a marquetry plaque that once hung in my grandfather Cameron’s office.
Here’s a detail:
We can’t be absolutely sure that Bunker made the plaque, but given his penchant for woodworking, it’s a logical conclusion. I did a little digging around and discovered that marquetry kits were quite popular in the 1950s and ’60s, which, coincidentally, is exactly when our grandfather got serious about his carpentry. A typical kit included the backing board, directions and pieces of all the different woods involved.
You’ll notice that all the wood needed cutting, piecing together, gluing down and finishing — not an easy process by any means. On the back of my grandgather’s plaque is a list of all the exotic woods used and their origins, a fact that further supports the kit idea.
I am delighted to have the plaque, whatever its origin, and I have put it up in my newly renovated back hall.
It looks a little lost there on the wall at the moment, but I haven’t put the mudroom back together yet. The key holder is a pre-renovation leftover that they guys apparently painted around. Now I dare not move it for fear of wrecking the wallboard and paint work. A small cupboard, which awaits re-painting, goes in that corner by the door and I left room for more pictures. But you get the idea.
My grandfather was a tireless, painstaking craftsman. Alas, I have always tended toward being impatient and slap-dash, but I’m trying to improve. As I work I think of him and of my mother, who was also a perfectionist. The sideboard is almost ready to go into the kitchen.
I have one door to put on and new shelf-paper to put in and then we can move it. I let it sit all week so the paint could cure — does that count as patience? It turned out to be difficult to find the right brass handles, because they are single-post (one attaching screw, rather than the usual two), but I finally found something suitable online at Hardware of the Past, an online restorers supply. I wanted something simple and fairly plain, but that proved a challenge. I could not find the single post Hepplewhite style ones that had been on the cupboard. But I think these look pretty.
As for the kitchen, well, we languish in limbo like a ship stuck in the doldrums. In other words, we have heard nothing and no progress has been made, unless you count the marble-look contact paper that I applied to the plywood so that we could wipe it off more easily.
Someday, when we finally get real counters, they should look somewhat similar. We live in hope…
Have a jolly weekend!
*Johannes Brahms






I am so glad Stephen sent you the plaque–I wondered what was going on with it. Your blue sideboard looks terrific! Well done. As for the kitchen, this too shall pass…
I’m sure everyone’s tired of hearing about the kitchen, but it does loom large for us. The sideboard looks nice, but I had to take the doors off because I could not get them to hang right, and of course those particular hinges are not to be found anywhere. C’est la vie. Don’t you love our plastic counters?
They look amazingly good!!
I love the blue with gold hardware! And I think the marble contact paper is remarkably convincing…
That’s a really cool marquetry plaque!