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    Tambours Take a Turn

    By Jonathan Binzen, Aaron Poritz #278-Nov/Dec 2019 Issue

    Open a typical tambour door and as you slide it aside, the slats disappear into the cabinet. You can only wonder where they go. Furniture designer Aaron Poritz wanted to keep the magic of the tambour out in the open. So he’s been designing cabinets with no fixed outer shell. The structure is on the inside and the tambours are on the outside. Open a door on one of his cabinets and the tambours ripple right around the corner, fully visible; they slide along the side and turn the corner to the back. Poritz’s collaborator, craftsman Karol Cylwik, who works with him in the Brooklyn Navy Yard, glues figured veneer to sheets of Baltic-birch plywood, slices the plywood into slats with a thin-kerf tablesaw blade, and glues the slats to canvas backing. The slats are slotted on the ends to fit over a narrow track, and once the tambours are in place the track is concealed, the action is smooth, and the visual effect is mesmerizing. To see the tambours in action, go to FineWoodworking.com/278.

     

    tambour door

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    Comments

    1. TKerestes | Oct 12, 2019 07:55am | #1

      Great, but how does he make it?

    2. ztifpatrick | Oct 22, 2019 09:56am | #2

      I was wondering the same, how about a good article on that!

    3. arcticwoodman | Oct 28, 2019 04:04pm | #3

      When will see how to make it?
      It looks like the fabric is put on back in pieces?
      I put mine on all in one piece. What holds it together? Can you see the baltic birch when it bends around the corners?

    4. arcticwoodman | Oct 28, 2019 04:05pm | #4

      any idea how he puts the fabric on in pieces and why?

      1. User avater FWW Editor
        BenStrano | Oct 29, 2019 08:01am | #5

        This article explains the concept. Different maker though, so I can't verify that techniques are exactly the same.

    5. TKerestes | Oct 29, 2019 08:30am | #6

      Ben... I am not sure I understood your response, but as "ztifpatrick" said, it would be a great article in your "advance techniques" section to show how the doors could be made. I would really look forward to reading it.

    6. arcticwoodman | Oct 29, 2019 01:18pm | #7

      ben, who is the different maker?
      is there a way to contact the author?
      i would like to know if you can see the baltic birch edges when the tambour goes around the corner.
      why is the black backing cut into strips and not left as one piece?
      help please.

      1. User avater FWW Editor
        BenStrano | Oct 29, 2019 01:35pm | #8

        Somehow the tambour link I posted in my earlier reply didn't show up. https://www.finewoodworking.com/2013/08/01/reviving-the-tambour-door

        We don't give out author contact information. Also, I can't figure out what you mean y cutting the backing into strips? Where do you see that?

    7. arcticwoodman | Oct 30, 2019 10:30am | #9

      in the video it looks like when they turn over the slats there is already black fabric on the backsides of the individual pieces.

    8. arcticwoodman | Nov 01, 2019 01:09pm | #10

      at 24 seconds into the video they are turning over the slats.
      it looks like the slats already have the fabric on the back. is this correct?

    9. user-7591560 | Dec 28, 2019 05:32pm | #11

      The slats are painted black on all but the face side, Thus you shouldnt see the baltic birch backing when it goes around a corner (just black). The black sides on the slats also give it a dramatic sort of on/off kind of flickering effect when it is rolled around the corners. Typically, the canvas is put on in one piece not multiple ones. That is the method I have used a few times in the quite distant past.

    10. arcticwoodman | Mar 20, 2020 07:46pm | #12

      yes i totally understand. i have just finished my tv stand with the tambour doors. it looks awesome. i put my backing on all in one piece, like i have always done. thanks for explaining the edges were painted black.

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