Heywood you look at this!

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gansky1

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Here are my low and high dressers. The tops need refinishing but otherwise they cleaned up beautifully. When I inquired of an eBay seller about getting stain, he told me this was a rather rare color. Apparently, "Bleached" was only used for a short time and as he had no formulations for this color, would need to have the tops removed and sent to him for matching. Since I could probably have this done locally, I didn't see the point in all that extra work but have now dropped the ball and haven't done anything. I would love to have them restored and work them into my room with a suitable bed (queen size) possibly find the nightstands to go with the set.

9-13-2006-21-46-47--gansky1.jpg
 
Those are the Airflow models

which were made from 1937-1939. The benefits of these is not only do you have the Moderne look but a bit of Deco with the vertical handles. Very nice!

You can never have too many dressers, or too much Wakefield.
 
Heywood-Wakefield's finishes really are a nightmare, from what I understand. I have a friend who inherited her husband's grandmother's dining room set, and goofed up one of the chairs trying to refinish it, and had to pay a really heft sum to get it fixed, so be careful - not just any furniture restorer can handle it.

Or, just get yourself a few dresser scarves, and call it a day :-)
 
Great Heywood Wakefield furniture Greg! Steve (helicaldrive) in St. Louis has some of this. It is so classy. I love to refinish old furniture. Hope you can get the recipie correct for the color.

Steve
 
Convert a full to a queen

Nice stuff Mr. Gansky. Man, those really go back a long ways to the streamlined era.

There's no such thing as a Heywood Wakefield Queen size bed. However, you can get a Heywood Wakefield full size bed and buy a conversion kit. The side rails fit into the full size headboard and footboard slots but the rails will support a queen size matress. The sides of the matress will not be flush with the headboard. On either side, they will stick out a couple of inches, but it is not enough for anyone to ever notice. I've done that with both my wakefield full size beds.

Very cool set!
 
Wakefield Refinishing

I see there was a request in the other heywood thread for people to show pictures of their collection. I'll see what I can do tomorrow.

There's been a lot of discussion on refinishing wakefield pieces. I don't refinish furniture and I am not an expert. But I have talked to people who refinish these things for a living and this is what they told me.

Wakefield used unique "translucent" finishes that they concocted themselves. The stain part of the mixture didn't seep very deep into the wood but just enough to give it color (at least for the wood they were using). And then there was a "clear" aspect of it. So the effect was that it was very glossy, tinted, but still let the woodgrain through.

So, if someone "paints" a Wakefield piece, well you can strip it off and sand it down and restain it with an approximation of the original concoction (assuming that the paint did not penetrate into the wood to any great degree). But, if someone sands the piece and uses like a modern brown stain, that may penetrate deep into the wood. And in some cases, it is impossible to sand deep enough to acutally get all the stain out. And you have to. Because the professionally mixed wakefield stains like wheat and champagne allow you to see through the stain to the woodgrain, and it is is too light to cover up old dark stain imbedded in the wood.

In some cases, when someone has restained a wakefield piece, it is not possible to restore it to original. It's a lost cause. Someone said that restoring wakefield furniture is complicated and not everyone can do it. That is very true. You need someone who really knows what they are doing.
 
Another resource

I have talked to Chris at the website I have linked a few times. He is an expert on refinishing Wakefield pieces. He even designs his own "Wakefield" pieces including (and I could be wrong about this) a queen size bed. Anyway, he is really expensive. However, I've found that he loves to talk about this stuff and freely give tips on refinshing.

 
Thanks for the resources guys, I didn't realize the finish was so unique. I bought these from Gary in Minneapolis, he'd found them at a garage sale I think. I love the design and other than that one set on ebay and various pieces displayed on the web, I've seen very little HW locallly. I passed up a small hutch/china cabinet about 18 months ago that needed work but was in good condition - $150 looks like it would have been a steal. Oh well, there are sales every week!

Please everyone, post more pics of your collections when you have time, I started this new thread for everyone to chime in!
 
HW China Cabinet

I only have the time to post 2 pictures today. Here is my China Cabinet in champagne finish. The glassware is the official automaticwasher.org glassware, it seems, with is Federal's "Contemporary" but more commonly known as Boomerang or Amoeba.

9-15-2006-09-47-7--versatronic.jpg
 
HW buffet

Here is a HW buffet. The great thing about wakefield furniture is that even though this technically was for a kitchen or dining room, they look good in and are functional in any room, even a bedroom.

This is a super rare finish. It's call platinum. I suspect they call it that because the finish was tinted with a bit of silver. It's not very different than the wheat finish.

This piece had an optional shelf that could go on the top. Two shelves with sliding glass.

9-15-2006-09-52-3--versatronic.jpg
 

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