This is a table (base) that I designed and built for my own use in 2021. I have a 36" round glass tabletop on it. It is constructed in rough sawn cedar. It may look pretty straightforward, but I must confess, it was a MAJOR head scratcher!
I designed this to match the exposed beam ceiling in our home. Even though it didn't require any finishing and polishing, building it was JUST PLAIN DIFFICULT! It required cutting 56 "cross lap" and "half lap" joints. I had to turn the parts every which way in order to cut them properly. Left/right? up/down? over/under?
It was like designing a puzzle. First, I laid out the joints and cut them. Then, just HOPING that I had cut them all correctly, I had to to figure out how to assemble it. I built a scale model of it first, in order to look at the design and see if the puzzle could actually be assembled at all. Then I built the big one. It took quite a while, but finally I managed to work my puzzle! Otherwise, I'd still have a pile of sticks on the floor. Did I cut them wrong? Did I choke on the assembly? I would never know.
If someone wanted one like this, but in a finer material and a nice lacquer finish, we can do that. It could have a solid top on it, but, to my thinking, that would hide all of the interesting joinery. I would definitely suggest glass.