Above: Nice-looking but does any real work take place on that anorexic model?
Those meager designs won't cut it.
Answer: I am going to have to design my own desk. It doesn't need to be fancy but it does need to be functional and, in this realm, size matters.
Hmm: I just remembered a friend - a city engineer - who passed away a few years ago. He had a marvelous desk. It looked like a wooden replica of the Pacific Ocean.
I might use that as a prototype. Report to follow.
Once at a client site, I sat at a desk I liked. It was a Steelcase or some such, and was sparse and utilitarian. So I measured it, made it bigger to fit the space I had, and did a first pass in plywood. The plywood version survives to this day. It's just basically an L-shaped desk where you sit at the inside corner. I extended the short end to match the other end and called it good. As I recall, I just split a 4x8' sheet and threw it together. I guess in some things I'm simply a barbarian.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of tools, here is the Cornell Note Taking System. I saw this at American Digest; some URLs:
http://americandigest.org/mt-archives/tools/free_cornell_no.php
http://www.gearfire.net/cornell-note-templates/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornell_Notes
Template generators (faint attribution at bottom of page)
http://incompetech.com/graphpaper/cornelllined/
http://incompetech.com/graphpaper/cornellgraph/
Jim
Oops, I didn't quite split the 4x8' plywood. Strange, I thought that considering I'm sitting at the desk now. I cut the first sheet into an L-shape, and then split another sheet, leaving a spare half-sheet. I wanted to move the seam away from the center.
ReplyDeleteJim
Jim,
ReplyDeleteThose are two very helpful sets of comments.
I like the plywood idea for my home office and am toying with the idea of a modified u-shape.
Many thanks and thanks also for the Cornell Note Taking System info.
Michael
Thank you, Michael. My office has the L-shaped desk on two walls, a floor to ceiling bookcase on the 3rd wall, and a spare desk on the 4th wall. I considered a U-shaped desk, but couldn't decide how much space to leave in the middle. Once I decided on the bookcase, it no longer mattered due mostly to where the door was. I wanted as many linear feet for the bookcase as possible, and that's just the way it fit.
ReplyDeleteJim
Jim,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the additional information. It is helpful.
I may have to abandon the u-shaped desk but may be able to pull it off by placing a smaller filing cabinet under one or both sides. It may turn out to be more of a rigid than a rounded U-shape but with the file storage needs addressed I will have more room for bookcases.
Michael