a masterpiece with beadboard doors I just finished

honeydoman

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just finished this, had been working on it for awhile, and had to have specially made radius crown to go around ends... when I booked this job and was working on it the customer added the end cabinets with rounds on top.
so I ordered rubber crown from flex mold.. however it did not work.  so I found a guy who is a radius specialist when made the pieces for me so they would work.

so I went back today and installed the crown and with my expertise and caulking the crown fit on beautiful.  here are the finished pictures along with couple of pics of the crown piece.

he had already fixed it up so it really really made for an awesome pictures and I think this is my best one yet ! 

enjoy
 
Impressive work, love the radiused cabinets on the ends. Never built any thing like that but I do run crown like that now and then. Thought you might like to see one of the cutters that makes it. Use a template and rub collar, It gets pretty scary feeding stock through that beast... lots of passes it best


IMAG0853 by TheEvillOnes, on Flickr
 
Kreg, I have been worried about you.
NO beadboard since your move.
I'm glad to see you are well.  [poke]

Oh!!! BTW, Great job.
Tinker
 
Kreg if not your best at least one of your most complex builds ever. Awesome job as always

Sal
 
Ok Kreg, I'm going to change the tone !  Yes, the uppers look great but the straight angled door on the bottom lets it down.  It really has to replicate the cure on top.  Sorry, it's the first thing that caught my eye !
 
woodguy7 said:
Ok Kreg, I'm going to change the tone !  Yes, the uppers look great but the straight angled door on the bottom lets it down.  It really has to replicate the cure on top.  Sorry, it's the first thing that caught my eye !

Woodguy, If you allowed your eye to become uncaught, you wood notice the doors match up with the wainscoating along the wall at either side.
Tinker
 
The end cabs look great!  That's a really big piece so that room must be huge.  FYI,  Festool is now offering humble pie in a systainer 2 if you're interested ;).
 
Tinker, the doors could still match up & be curved at the same time.  I do like the cabinet, i just think it would have been better with curved doors.  The curved glass shelves overhang the angled shelf below.  That's the bit i don't like about it.
rnt80, why would i want humble pie ?  Its my opinion.  I thought we were all free to express an opinion ? 
 
woodguy7 said:
Yes, the uppers look great but the straight angled door on the bottom lets it down.  It really has to replicate the cure on top.  Sorry, it's the first thing that caught my eye !

Ditto. Curved doors on the bottom would look better but I am sure they would have taken more time (money).
Tim
 
Tinker said:
Woodguy, If you allowed your eye to become uncaught, you wood notice the doors match up with the wainscoating along the wall at either side.

Tinker;
With all due respect, I don't agree. Yes this is purely subjective but my eye went directly to that (straight doors) when I first saw this cabinet.
I am not saying Kregs' project is not good, just that curved doors would give the eye a clear indication of where the wainscoting stops and the cabinet starts.

The cabinet is very dramatic in a good way. It does make a statement architecturally.

There definitely is a lot going on in that corner because the cap/chair rail of the wainscoting bisects the frame/side of the upper cabinet and the shadow from the frame/panel in the wainscoting is quite heavy, the top of the frame is on the same line as the top of the bottom cabinet which stops your eye from moving up and across the cabinet and brings it back down into the wainscoting.
I think a curved door and top would have smoothed the transition between the wainscoting and the cap more and led the eye vertically up and down the cabinet rather than horizontally across the wainscoting and into the cabinet.
Again, purely subjective and not a critique of Kregs' work but rather an explanation of my opinion for what it's worth.

Kreg, thanks again for taking the time to post so much of your work so we can see your stuff.
Your time and effort are much appreciated!
Tim
 
Nice unit

I will just have to wait a very long time before I am comfortable referring to my own work as a masterpiece, and my own skills as expertise

I clearly suffer from the Brit understatement syndrome [wink]
 
woodguy7 said:
Ok Kreg, I'm going to change the tone !  Yes, the uppers look great but the straight angled door on the bottom lets it down.  It really has to replicate the cure on top.  Sorry, it's the first thing that caught my eye !
I have to agree also.Looks a little weird ;)
 
i agree with the bottom should be round but at first he added the corner cabinets after the fact and we had a misunderstanding as to how he wanted the corners.. I had already made the angled cabinet and was going to angle the top with round shelves... he wanted the top rounded

other reason never made a round cabinet, I could do it.. but did not have time and he did not want to spend anymore money on this
and I appreciate all feedback thats how we learn.

someday I will do a round cabinet,

and thanks for all the compliments, I appreciate it. 

and on the other hand I agree though that even though the bottom is angled it still fits in nicely with the cabinet and the wainscot trim squares on the wall
 
I agree with Woodguy and Mattfc

Wonder we're Dean is....

We Brits hey..... lol

Saying that it is a nice looking unit!
 
Tinker said:
woodguy7 said:
Ok Kreg, I'm going to change the tone !  Yes, the uppers look great but the straight angled door on the bottom lets it down.  It really has to replicate the cure on top.  Sorry, it's the first thing that caught my eye !

Woodguy, If you allowed your eye to become uncaught, you wood notice the doors match up with the wainscoating along the wall at either side.
Tinker

Oops! I had gone back to look at the pics before i made my statement.  I was thinking that woodguy was looking/referring to the squared trim on the doors should have been arched.  My foopah.  [dead horse]
Tinker
 
honeydokreg said:
i agree with the bottom should be round but at first he added the corner cabinets after the fact and we had a misunderstanding as to how he wanted the corners.. I had already made the angled cabinet and was going to angle the top with round shelves... he wanted the top rounded

other reason never made a round cabinet, I could do it.. but did not have time and he did not want to spend anymore money on this
and I appreciate all feedback thats how we learn.

someday I will do a round cabinet,

and thanks for all the compliments, I appreciate it. 

and on the other hand I agree though that even though the bottom is angled it still fits in nicely with the cabinet and the wainscot trim squares on the wall

I agree that the flat bottom does work in nicely.  Wood have been better, design wise if it was curved, but I can understand about the expense.  That can often dictate a finalized design.

I don't have the skills to do rounded frames and cabinets in wood; but I did do a few rounded walls and stairways in masonry.  One of the most difficult was an exposed staircase i did in an entrance foyer.  The reinforced concrete pad had already been poured and the staircase into the cellar below had alraedy been constructed.  The stairway into the cellar was staight down with a single 90 landing for the first step at the top.  The foyer stairway was to be of brick with cut flagstones for treads.  As i was starting to layout for the brickwork, the architect and the builder stopped by to see how I was doing.  As we discussed, i happened to mention how much better the stairs would look if the entire stairs could be done with a sweeping curve that would really catch the eye of anybody entering the building. 

The immediate reaction was that it was impossible.  We kicked it around for a while and finally, the architect, who i had worked with before agreed to let me give him a drawing.  I think he knew I was not much of an artist with paper, but I knew i could lay it out.  I was given til the next morning to give him something to go by.  All i had were the two walls involved, the concrete deck base, the rectangle opening in the base, the already constructed lower stairs and the top floor landing to go by.  I started scratching marks on the concrete and the walls, and by late afternoon, I had my marks all in place and figured I had code based headroom for all of the rounded steps going up matching the squared steps going down into the cellar. 

The architect and builder were there by 9:00am the next day and I showed them all of my scratches on base and wall.  They could not figure out what i was representing but told me i could go ahead.  The only thing was that if it would not meet building code for structure and to have headroom for the cellar steps, i would have to tear it all down.  I also had to stay within budget.  The whole thing worked out and i was even able to put a couple of curved (brick) planters, one on the lower wall at entrance level and one along the upper curve.  The winding treads were cut at my stone supplier and the only worry i had was that they would all fit when delivered.

My mil guy was dead on, or else he knew how much I would be off  [scared] with each tread.  I watched as the architect measured the head room underneath.  He was very surprised when it all stayed well beyond code specs.  I ended up doing many more jobs with the same builder/designer pair.  I wood never tackle something like that in wood. Too many mistooks can be made.
Tinker
 
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