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File: IMG_6506.jpg (1.86 MB, 3264x2448)
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I have this cool antique table and I want to restore it.

It has a lot of different problems but let's start with the wobbly structure. It's so wobbly it can barely stand.
Immediately I could notice that some previous owner had attempted to reinforce the structure with nails. Some of them were super crudely hammered in but I managed to remove the extra nails without damaging the wood any further.

Then I realized the 3 symmetrically inserted nails were actually original to the table. Believe it or not, this table doesn't have traditional woodworking joints. These carved galleries keep the whole table together and they're nailed (and glued) to the legs and the top.
So here's the crux: the table is wobbly as hell, but most of the original nails are still in place and so deep in the wood that I can't pull them out. This means the table can't be taken apart for reassembly. And even if I could do that, there are areas with so much wood loss that I can't put new nails in. I was thinking I could rebuild this table with peg joints but it would sort of break the originality.
What's my next move?
>>
Here's the full view.
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In case someone doesn't believe that the original nails are a real thing, here's another piece presumably by the same maker. You can see 3 black dots where the nails are

https://www.1stdibs.com/furniture/tables/center-tables/19th-century-french-chinoiserie-style-mahogany-table-attributed-gabriel-viardot/id-f_11269441/#zoomModalOpen
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>>2973303
stabilize do not restore. if it has any value, it will lose it if it is restored.
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>>2973303
>This means the table can't be taken apart for reassembly
by you.

the way you fix wobbly nail or (if they have them) screw holes.

you remove the nails or screws.
separate the joints. drill the original holes out to a size where you can install dowels, trim the dowels flush, and then pilot drill the dowels with holes for the nails that are slightly narrower than the nails. so you don't split anything putting the nails back.
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>>2973316
to be clear you do this on the part of the table that you can't see it.
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>>2973316
How do I reassemble the table so that it's perfectly leveled?
I can't even imagine how professionals would do it.
I'm pretty sure that if I do it, I'm just gonna put the table back together only to realize not all the corners are 90 degrees and it looks like shit.
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>>2973303
>>2973304
is that fretwork
>>
OP here again. What do you think the finish is?

I wiped it down with a damp cloth and the cloth is now dark brown.
I think I wiped off the finish whatever it was.
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>>2973395
Welcome to linseed oil. Now try to figure out why so many guys think it's the best finish ever.
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Are you sure the nails are original, and not just a common aftermarket way to reinforce the wobbly structure?
I get the feeling that the original artist would've at least hammered the nails in from the inside, not the outside.
Unless it's some Chinese traditional thing
>>
Stop messin with it anon. This stand was never meant to do more than display a tea set or some bone-cut fuck-all, stop thinking you can use it as an end table and start praying that you didn't completely ruin the finish.
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>>2973578
>This stand was never meant to do more than display a tea set

This would make sense because it is literally a tea table.
Is that why it was put together with nails and glue rather than actual joints?

I'm OP and I bought this thing to be my laptop table and I'm so bummed out it will never be able to handle actual modern use.
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The wooden parts might be too slim / narrow for proper joints or drilling any holes in them, which is why nails were used.
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>>2974101
use the parts as stencil, cut out them from better wood and assemble the new table copy to be rigid and sturdy
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>>2973395
no you dofus, you wiped off dirt and grime
no traditional finish is water soluble
>is that why it was put together with nails and glue rather than actual joints?
no that was done for $$$$. But hey, its not like this is a chair
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OP here.

I was bored so I started taking the table apart. I can't fucking believe I managed to do it without breaking anything, with no prior experience or know-how.

No idea what to do next. What I'm looking at right now is a tea table kit.

Yeah, I realized that the carved parts are way too thin and brittle for actual joints. They felt like a cookie when I was taking them out. I get that the maker saved money by using nails and glue, but I don't see what else you could do.
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File: impossibur.jpg (992 KB, 1723x566)
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These nails are impossible to take out.

I started banging them out from the sharp end, but the wood at the other end started cracking so I had to stop immediately. You also cant pull them out.
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keep the nails in, reglue with hide glue.



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