Skip to content
Fine Woodworking
Main Menu
Subscribe
GET THE MAGAZINE & MORE
Magazine Cover
  • Save 69% off the cover price
  • Or, get everything with UNLIMITED, including 40+ years of the online archive.
Subscribe Now!
Subscribe
  • Projects & Plans
  • How-To
  • Shop Tips
  • Tools & Materials
  • Videos
  • Magazine
  • Video Workshops
  • Members
  • Forum
  • Gallery
  • Blogs
  • More
    • Log In
    • Join
    Fine Woodworking Main Menu Subscribe

    Fine Woodworking Project Guides

    Tables and Desks

    Guide Home
    Chapter
    • Design and Techniques
    • Dining Tables
    • Side Tables
    • Coffee Tables and Hall Tables
    • Desks
    Projects and Plans

    Designing in Three Dimensions

    Yuri Kobayashi used 3-D modeling to develop the design of her eye-catching table.

    Author Headshot By Yuri Kobayashi #278-Nov/Dec 2019 Issue
    3-D drawing

    Synopsis:  When working on furniture designs, Yuri Kobayashi eschews the sketchbook or computer in favor of modeling in three dimensions. When a small model develops into an idea for furniture, she makes a full-scale mockup. This 3-D workflow allows her creativity to thrive.


    I am a raw and low-tech woodworker. Even knowing that doing everything by hand can take more time, I enjoy designing and making with my hands, rather than using the aid of a computer or other technologies.

    When working on designs for a functional piece of furniture, I don’t use CAD or even a sketchbook and pencil. What I picture in my head is not translated well on the two-dimensional field. So I work in three dimensions, shaping or bending wood or wire to make small models. They allow me to illustrate what I see in my mind and better define the piece. This is my version of 3-D drawing, and it provides me with plenty of information.

    At the model stage, I imagine objects freely and try not to think of joinery, process, or the nature of the material. Later, when I have an idea I want to pursue, I make a quick full-scale mock-up out of cardboard, plywood, or poplar, representing the whole piece or part of it, to seek out techniques, joinery processes, and problems.

    3-D Drawing wood steaming
    Bend in the bag. After steaming, Kobayashi leaves the wood in a poly tubing steam bag so the wood stays pliable longer. She wraps the wood around the form, clamping as she goes.

    torque wrench wood bending 3-D Drawing
    Twist and clamp. A shopmade torque wrench helps grab and twist the length of wood that forms the legs. Stops in the bending form and clamps hold the loop in place while it dries.

    I began noticing a diversity of manufactured objects as well as things in nature that are made up of curved lines and surfaces. From boats and wine barrels to seed pods and plankton, so many objects and life forms are flawlessly designed and visually appealing. Inspired by them, I focused on manipulating clay and shaping, laminating, and bending wood to familiarize myself with curvatures. I was particularly drawn to the possibilities of steam-bending techniques.I have an architectural background, and my early designs in wood relied heavily on grids and geometry. A straight line would always be the first thing to appear, one followed by another, and then another. This habit became so apparent that halfway through my graduate study with Wendy Maruyama, she encouraged me to explore more curved shapes and forms.

    long bar clamp 3-D Drawing
    Add a compound curve. Squeezing the loop of wood in a long bar clamp gives the leg its final arching curve.

    Once in a while, I would return to a furniture maker’s mind and contemplate the what ifs. That is when I thought of a basic three-legged table. To make a model, I joined three looped parts with zip ties and made the triangular stretcher system quickly out of three thin strips of wood. Bending and twisting the thicker and longer material for the legs in the real piece was challenging. In fact, my first three trials failed. By tweaking my bending form and making a wooden wrench of sorts to hold the material and bend it, I was able to succeed. With moderate shaping, I refined the form further. Luckily, my play and experimentation with my building block parts bore fruit.The form of this table, Triumvirate, came out while I was working on an installation project for a solo exhibit. For that project I aimed to use one simple bent form repeatedly to liven up the space. The looping form I used had been reoccurring in my 3-D drawing sessions and it served as a type of building block—first as a single shape, then as a repeated shape, and finally in this table. Discovering different ways to join or weave the looped forms together to create a variety of curved lines and volumes filled me with amusement. I explored winding lines, circles, spheres, and other forms.

    I gain such delight and benefit through my version of 3-D drawing. It is a process that connects my hand and brain without hindrance. If I had been holding a pencil to paper or flipping pages of furniture design books to look for ideas, I would not have come up with this table design.

    From Fine Woodworking #278

    Designer’s Notebook: Ross Day’s Wishbone 2

    Designer’s Notebook: Inspiration Surrounds Us

    It’s common to get furniture design inspiration from the furniture of other designers, but if you want to expand your design horizons, try an alternate approach

    Designer’s Notebook: Kumiko coffee table

    A good lesson in less is more

    Sign up for eletters today and get the latest techniques and how-to from Fine Woodworking, plus special offers.

    Sign Up

    Get woodworking tips, expert advice and special offers in your inbox

    Sign Up
    ×
    X
    X
    Previous: Designing Table Legs Next: Kumiko Coffee Table: The Story Behind the Design

    Guide

    Tables and Desks

    Chapter

    Design and Techniques

    Comments

    1. User avater
      jkatzowitz | Oct 03, 2019 08:39am | #1

      Your table design is a wonderful combination of function and aesthetics.

      I am an industrial designer and spent half of my professional career designing through hand drawings and the other half designing through 3D computer modeling. Having experienced "creative design" through both of those processes, I totally agree that designing through actual 3D mockups is the best way to cultivate creativity and refined concepts.

    Log in or create an account to post a comment.

    Sign up Log in

    Tables and Desks

    Tables and Desks

    Expert design and construction advice to help you build tables and desks that are comfortable, useful, and attractive.

    View Project Guide

    View All Project Guides »

    Become a member and get unlimited site access, including the Tables and Desks Project Guide.

    Start Free Trial

    Design and Techniques
    • Design
    • Tabletops
    • Legs and Stretchers
    Dining Tables
    • Tables with Aprons
    • Trestle Tables
    • Pedestal Tables
    • Expandable Tables
    Side Tables
    • Side Tables
    • Stands
    Coffee Tables and Hall Tables
    • Coffee Tables
    • Hall Tables
    Desks
    • Design
    • Techniques
    • Projects

    Get the latest from Fine Woodworking Magazine

    • #292-NOV/DEC 2021

      • Kerf-bent wall cabinet
      • Online extras from FWW issue #292
      • How to tame curved parts with patterns
    • #291-Sep/Oct 2021

      • Build a modern coffee table
      • Online Extras from FWW Issue #291
      • Editor's Letter: Something old, something new
    • #290-July/Aug 2021

      • Build a Shaker chest of drawers
      • Online Extras from FWW Issue #290
      • From the editor: What we make matters
    • #289-May/June 2021

      • Arts & Crafts Coffee Table with Story-Book Charm
      • Links from Fine Woodworking issue #289
      • Step-by-Step Guide to Tuning Your Block Plane
    • #288-Mar/Apr 2021

      • Phil Lowe: A craftsman and gentleman
      • Online Extras from FWW Issue #288
      • Phil Lowe: craftsman, teacher, friend

    UNLIMITED membership - Get access to it all

    Start Free Trial Upgrade Membership

    Fine WoodWorking

    Follow

    Newsletter

    Get woodworking tips, expert advice and special offers in your inbox

    Sign Up

    Membership & Magazine

    • Members
    • Digital Libraries
    • Join Unlimited
    • Magazine Subscription
    • Magazine Renewal
    • Gift a Subscription
    • Customer Support
    • Manage Preferences

    Taunton Network

    • Fine Homebuilding
    • Green Building Advisor
    • Fine Gardening
    • Threads
    • About
    • Contact
    • Advertise
    • Privacy Policy
    • Careers
    • Copyright
    • Terms of Use
    • Accessibility
    • California Privacy Rights
    • Site Map

    © 2021 The Taunton Press, Inc. All rights reserved.

    Get step-by-step instructions, woodworking tips, expert advice and special offers in your inbox. Sign Up Now!

      Main Menu

    • Projects and Plans
    • How-To
    • Shop Tips
    • Tools & Materials
    • Videos
    • Gallery
    • Magazine
    • Video Workshops
    • Members
    • Forum

      Popular Topics

    • Design
    • Small Projects
    • Beds
    • Chairs, Benches And Stools
    • Built-ins
    • Storage And Shelves
    • Cabinets
    • Carving
    • Casework
    • Desks
    • Tables
    • Shop Storage And Furniture
    • Woodturning Projects
    • Workbenches
    • Surface Prep

      More

    • TV
    • Forum
    • Blogs
    • Webinars
    • Podcasts
    • Customer Support

      Account

    • Log In
    • Join

      Magazine

    • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
    • Digital Libraries
    • Magazine Index
    • Subscribe

      Membership

    • Member Home
    • Start Free Trial
    • Gift Unlimited
    • Log In

      Shop the Store

    • Books
    • DVDs
    • Taunton Workshops

      Events

    • Fine Woodworking Live
    • Fine Woodworking HANDS ON

      Account

    • Log In
    • Sign Up

    Newsletter

    Get woodworking tips, offers, and expert advice in your inbox

    Sign Up

    Follow

    UNLIMITED

    Become an UNLIMITED member and get it all: searchable online archive of every issue, how-to videos, Complete Illustrated Guide to Woodworking digital series, print magazine, e-newsletter, and more.

    Start Your Free Trial

    Upgrade Membership