Honesty and integrity of construction are essential tenets of Arts and Crafts furniture. The tried-and-tested traditional joinery that makes it strong and long-lasting is also a visible element that adds to the intrinsic beauty of the furniture.
Most Stickley door joints are tenoned, glued, and pinned with wooden pins. The pins lock the joint, supplying additional strength. This joint would hold together even without the use of glue. Some styles are pinned from the front and are visible, others from the back. Watch a video to learn more!
The splining of the mitered corners of many mirrors provides the strongest possible corner. The chance of a joint ever breaking is minimal.
Cross rails on cases are dovetailed into the ends to strengthen the case from side to side. On Mission designs, the dovetail is hidden from view. This joint is self-locking even without glue, and separation of the end panels is impossible unless the wood is split apart. Dowel joints rely on glue, and glue can fail over time. A dovetail joint cannot fail. Watch a video to learn more!
Solid wood varies greatly in grain and color. Proper matching of individual boards gives the appearance of one solid piece and eliminates the need to bleach or sap-stain the lumber. The tongue and groove ensure a stronger glue joint that does not crack or split and allows for greater finished thickness on all tops.
All Stickley Windsor and rush-seat chairs are pinned with wooden dowels. These pins ensure that even after long, hard use the joints will not pull apart. The wedging of arm and back posts into the bottom of the seats is another assurance of a lasting joint.
Stickley bookcases are available with ship-lap planking in the back. Individual boards are machined, sanded, finished, and applied one at a time. Together they add character and beauty to a piece.
All bracket feet are splined, corner-blocked and braced. In addition to the usual corner block, a corner brace is rabbeted into the side of the leg pieces. This leg is joined to the case by four screws, providing a solid foundation.
This technique allows the beauty of ray flake to appear on all four sides of a post, rather than on just the normal two. To achieve this, four quartersawn boards are mitered together around a solid core, increasing the strength and beauty of the post. Watch a video to learn more!
Glass panels are secured with oak or cherry quarter rounds, mitered to fit perfectly and affixed with barely visible pins. We believe the inside of each door should be as handsome as the outside.
The center guide keeps drawers from skewing sideways. Side suspension keeps drawers level when heavily loaded. No plastic parts to break. No metal to rust and scratch. Just honest-to-goodness hand craftsmanship. The drawer never scrapes the bottom and opens and closes with ease—forever. Watch a video to learn more!
Key to Arts and Crafts furniture quality and durability are mortise-and-tenon joints. A single Stickley chair can have more than 30 such joints. A blind tenon is concealed within the mortise, while in a through-tenon the end of the tenon is visible and is part of the form of the piece. Tenons, whether blind, through, pinned, or keyed, are the very best way to join furniture together.
In this distinctive form of tenon found in Arts and Crafts furniture, a wedge-shaped “key”is inserted into a tenon that passes through the side of a board to secure it in place. This traditional and highly effective mechanical joint gives exceptional strength and rigidity to the furniture.
Resawing is a process of splitting thick lumber into thinner boards. The split halves are then opened like a book, revealing identical grain. This painstaking process creates beautifully grained panels on all Stickley pieces where it’s used. Making panels this way is more costly and more labor intensive, but the result is much more attractive than randomly matched boards.
Oak that is sawn parallel to the medullary rays is known as quartersawn. This type of cut produces boards of exceptional strength and reveals the prized ray flake patterning that makes each piece of oak furniture unique. Quartersawn white oak is much less likely to crack, check, or warp than oak that is flat sawn. This method is used in Mission style construction exclusively. Watch a video to learn more!
The side rails of some Stickley beds are locked into special casting. The end rails are mortised and tenoned into the posts and secured with wooden pins. We use top-quality 5/4″ solid oak, cherry, and maple for bed rails. Two panhead screws are positioned at the ends of each rail to fit into an iron casting with a tongued slot. As a result, our beds won’t wobble or rock. Watch a video to learn more!
We are focused on building furniture that is passed down from generation to generation—furniture for life. More than 90 percent of Stickley’s products are still made by our own craftspeople in our Upstate New York and North Carolina workshops.
Since 1900, the Stickley philosophy has been “living in harmony with nature.” Our focus on durability, quality, efficiency, and long-term results permeates our management and manufacturing process. We comply with strict federal, state, and local environmental regulations and are a proud member of the Sustainable Furnishings Council.