hrj: (doll)
[personal profile] hrj
It is part of the constant SCA balancing act that Authentic Stuff often tends to be large, heavy, and bulky, or requires multiple servants to transport and set up. (Not always, but often.) As someone who loves serious cooking at events -- whether modern cooking of medieval foods or full all-out medieval cooking in little footed pipkins -- I’ve spent the last quarter century penduluming back and forth between practicality and authenticity (whether only in appearance or in underlying structure).

Through long trial and error, my compromise point has settled on the following conveniences necessary for my sanity:

* camp kitchen furniture must be able to be packed in a reasonably-sized vehicle
* camp kitchen furniture must be able to be set up and taken down in a reasonable amount of time
* ideally, camp kitchen supplies must be able to be packed and stored in the same structures in which they are used at events
* camp kitchen supplies and equipment must be stored and transported modularly so that different needs can be accommodated without totally repacking everything and without taking All The Things to every event
* my kitchen at events must be organized in a way that makes cooking easy and safe

To this we add the following goals on the historic side:

* modern elements in the kitchen should be relatively hidden from view from outside my camp
* the larger physical structures used to organize my kitchen should at least be not obviously modern (e.g., wood surfaces if possible where visible) and should bear some conceptual similarity to historic equipment whenever practical

I confess that I’ve more often settled for “not obviously modern” and “natural surfaces” than the further goals. I settled for purchasing a round firebox rather than making or commissioning the reproduction of the Roman cooking brazier I long for. I’ve been a only gradually inching closer to having reasonably authentic trestle tables for prep and dining. But I’ve long had my dreams. And one of my dreams is for my camp kitchen to include something like this:

MWCal1999Dec

This is the project diary of that quest. It is not a quest that involves making authentic medieval furniture, it’s a quest that involves hacking modern kit furniture into something that combines practicality and functionality with a medieval look-and-feel. But first we must begin in the modern era.

Several years ago, I found a useful practical compromise for modularity, packability, and at-event functionality in IKEA’s “Trofast” storage system. These combine some stunningly modern plastic lidded tubs …

trofast_2bin
trofast_lid

… with a storage cabinet available in a natural pine …

trofast_1x6

The storage bins come in 3 sizes: with heights of 1, 2, or 3 units, and this particular cabinet has space for 6 units, which provides for a nice flexibility in modules. I started out by getting 2 of the storage towers and an assortment of bins. To this I added a board lying across the top of the two towers to serve as a working surface.

rev_1a

Functional, but it only passes the visual test when tucked back in the shadows inside the pavilion.

rev_1b

I improved the visuals somewhat by adding back panels and improved the functionality by swapping in a piece of solid-wood shelving for the original particleboard mock-up.

rev_2a

This makes it slightly less ugly when used in public.

rev_2b


But we’re still a long way from a medieval dresser. And I’d become addicted to the utility of the storage bins, but it was looking a little daunting to build a storage unit to hold them that could look like this …
Paris_BN_f_22_547_f1_det

(to be continued)

Date: 2013-04-23 09:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jpgsawyer.livejournal.com
You have seen the details of the flat pack cupboard that Master Paul de Gory and I made, haven't you? http://jpgsawyer.weebly.com/

Its a really nice period way or organising stuff and keeping vermin out of things.

Flat pack trestle tables are actually not that hard. A lump of 4x2 with three holes drilled an angle for the legs, two at one end and one a the other with dowel for the legs make great trestles and then three planks on the top makes a very stable table. You can see one in this picture http://www.flickr.com/photos/jpgsawyer/3860164208/

I hope to make another one of these soon so I will post more pictures then.

Right now I am making Glastonbury Chairs al la Terafan Greydragon. http://www.greydragon.org/furniture/glastonbury/glastonburychair3.html

Date: 2013-04-24 04:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hrj.livejournal.com
Your flat-pack cupboard is nice, but it fails my requirements on the "must pack as used" item. I suspect one key difference here is the relative number of events we haul stuff to. I'll typically average at least one medieval camping event per month, so I'm always looking for places to reduce packing and set-up time because that can end up being the deciding point in whether to go to a particular event. On the other hand, the Arthur Cupboard is one of the places I'm looking for inspiration for decoration. (I'm planning to do trompe l'oeil painting of wood-carving designs.)

I've posted photos of my trestle tables on facebook. We have a slightly different approach but I suspect they pack similarly. I'd be hesitant to do a multiple-plank top because I don't necessarily trust my dinner guests to respect the engineering differences from the sort of tables they're used to. I haven't yet had a dinner dumped to the ground because someone interacted with a table in disastrous fashion, but I've had some close calls.

I'll be blogging the dresser concept further. (I have a solid notion of what I'm going to do, and have all the supplies, but I haven't actually done the construction yet.)

Date: 2013-04-24 01:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jpgsawyer.livejournal.com
Ahh yes I guess we don't keep anything in the cupboard so having it flat pack to go in the vehicles is much more important for us.

As for the multiple-plank on for the table top. I have found with the one I have that it is remarkably stable and given its generally used as a work surface remarkably resistant to hard use without dismantling itself. I would have a sold plank for the top but it would be expensive and really hard to transport.

Date: 2013-04-26 01:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anotheranon.livejournal.com
To my untutored mind, I think it looks great.

It's also interesting for me to read your thought processes re: SCA camping, and how you came to your authenticity/convenience balance. From the outside it's always looked so daunting.

Profile

hrj: (Default)
hrj

June 2025

S M T W T F S
1 234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930     

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 3rd, 2025 03:10 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios
OSZAR »