It has been said that the craftsman's eye is a gauge to measure beauty by. It therefore follows that good design is more likely to be the product of the workbench rather than the drawing board. The designers of our cathedrals served their apprenticeship as stone masons - Michael Angelo included. Thomas Chippendale was the son of a carpenter and began his career as a journeyman cabinet maker.
The case of piano that I am presently restoring dates from the 1950's, a period when interior design was hellbent on boxing in and straightening out any suggestion of paneling or curvature. The end result was either veneered or painted in gloss magnolia.
The original supports for the keyboard were so obnoxious that yesterday I tore them apart and substituted ones with kindlier lines - at least to my craftsman's eye.
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