A drawing table is also sometimes called a mechanical desk because, for several centuries, most mechanical desks were drawing tables. Unlike the gadgety mechanical desks of the second part of the 18th century, however, the mechanical parts of drawing tables were usually limited to notches, ratchets, and perhaps a few simple gears, or levers or cogs to elevate and incline the working surface.
Very often a drawing table could look like a writing table or even a pedestal desk when the working surface was set at the horizontal and the height adjusted to 29 inches, in order to use it as a "normal" desk. The only give-away was usually a lip on one of the sides of the desktop. This lip or edge stopped paper or books from sliding when the surface was given an angle. It was also sometimes used to hold writing implements. When the working surface was extended at its full height, a drawing table could be used as a standing desk.
Pro Drafting TablesNew Products For July - Pro Drafting Tables |
Your IP Address is: 38.107.191.104
Copyright © 2010 Easel Connection. Powered by Zen Cart
![Powered by Zen Cart :: The Art of E-Commerce [home link] Powered by Zen Cart :: The Art of E-Commerce [home link]](includes/templates/classic/images/logo.gif)









