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369 Posts
Absolutely gorgeous. Masterfully done.
Thanks for sharing.
jon
 

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7 Posts
Very beautiful chair, congratsulation, nice choice of wood, well done BRAVO !!!
 

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201 Posts
Beautiful work! Love the fact you included the lumbar support.

Claude
 

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6,567 Posts
All good choices about which piece of wood where, It all comes together very nicely.

Take a bow.
 

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122 Posts
Very impressive…every detail!
 

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502 Posts
Excellent!

I'm sure that Hal is proud of the work you've done.
 

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396 Posts
Very nice. You are one talented fellow.
 

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Beautiful work of art. I can't imagine how many hours went into that !!
 

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wow,as a member of the maloof style rocker club I bow to your talents,beautifully done my friend-congrats!
 

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55 Posts
I do not want to offend the master, But it seems to me that he is not comfortable …....
 

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I do not want to offend the master, But it seems to me that he is not comfortable …....

- Sasha
sasha maloof rockers are very comfortable,they are sculpted to fit your body.
 

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502 Posts
Hal Taylor re-invented the 'Maloof Rocker' with subtle design elements - as well as a few significant changes - that add to both the beauty and comfort of his style. Simply, your body molds into the chair… with its free-moving back braces, cupped arm pads, the more generous seat well - the way that seemingly sharp edges are relieved. The back leg is sculpted to clear your elbow, as you sit. - All small things that the eye doesn't see.

What the eye does see is the symmetrical, mirrored grain patterns; and a 'flow' that keeps your eye moving in the transitions from one element to the next.

This is a beautiful execution of a beautiful design.
 

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Strongly agree with MJCD and all the other commenters … that's a beautiful rocking chair. I started a similar project several months back. It's still "in process" so I have some understanding of how much time you invested.
 

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502 Posts
Hal teaches that woodworking is, and Rocking Chairs especially are, a journey. Building one of these averages about 100 to 110 hours of learning a Process, and executing it with precision. I've built 8 of these (not quite as good looking as the one above); and use the skills accumulated on everything else I build.
 
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