Frank Pellow
Member
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2007
- Messages
- 2,743
December 9th 2012:
This week, I started making my daughter Kristel’s Christmas present. I am working without any plans and designing “on the fly”. When I started all I knew was that the gift was going to be a surround and a mantel for this fireplace in her basement recreation room:
[attachthumb=#1]
and that it was going to be made from this cherry that has been acclimatizing in my woodworking shed for a couple of weeks. I did take measurements of the fireplace the last time that I visited Ottawa.
My first decision was that the surround would consist of matching shelves on each side extending higher than fireplace itself, that the mantel would be a board resting on the shelves and extending out a little bit both on the front and sides. The brass strips and some of the black metal at the top will be hidden.
All that decided, it was time to prepare the cherry.
[attachthumb=#2]
The boards are of inferior quality [unsure] which means that there is a lot of waste that goes into my woodstove. I acquired about 300 bf of it four years ago and it has been in storage in my garage since then. The wood didn’t cost me a lot but I wish I had not purchased it. [embarassed] I have used some of the cherry on other items and after this project will have about 100 bf left. I’ve learned to avoid such bargains.
The first step in preparing each boards is to roughly joint a straight edge using a Festool track saw:
[attachthumb=#3]
I then face planed each board using the jointer/planer mode of my new Hammer combo machine for the first time:
[attachthumb=#4]
I thank Rod Sheridan [thumbs up] for coming over Monday evening and helping me set everything up accurately. The combo machine is great but the user manual is the normal brief European type which is sadly lacking in usability. I had previously struggled with the manual for about three hours trying to figure just how to convert from a “thicknesseser” to a “jointer-planer” without disturbing any important factory settings. Rod got everything humming along in about an hour. Now I can switch modes in about a minute.
Here is a photo of the cherry jointed, planed, and marked for thickness:
[attachthumb=#5]
I next built the two sets of shelves. With all that is going on in my shed at the moment, I had to utilize the top o f my table saw to sand the pieces prior to assembly. The surfaces that will be on the self interiors was sanded up to 220 grit:
[attachthumb=#6]
Simple dado and rabbet joints with glue only were used when assembling the shelves. After assembly I inserted two Miller dowels into both the top and bottom horizontal pieces:
[attachthumb=#7]
Now I can get a better idea of how all this will fit together and what other parts need to be made (or purchased):
[attachthumb=#8] [attachthumb=#9]
Here, some narrow boards are being re-sawn for use in thin panels on the backs of the shelves:
[attachthumb=#10]
This week, I started making my daughter Kristel’s Christmas present. I am working without any plans and designing “on the fly”. When I started all I knew was that the gift was going to be a surround and a mantel for this fireplace in her basement recreation room:
[attachthumb=#1]
and that it was going to be made from this cherry that has been acclimatizing in my woodworking shed for a couple of weeks. I did take measurements of the fireplace the last time that I visited Ottawa.
My first decision was that the surround would consist of matching shelves on each side extending higher than fireplace itself, that the mantel would be a board resting on the shelves and extending out a little bit both on the front and sides. The brass strips and some of the black metal at the top will be hidden.
All that decided, it was time to prepare the cherry.
[attachthumb=#2]
The boards are of inferior quality [unsure] which means that there is a lot of waste that goes into my woodstove. I acquired about 300 bf of it four years ago and it has been in storage in my garage since then. The wood didn’t cost me a lot but I wish I had not purchased it. [embarassed] I have used some of the cherry on other items and after this project will have about 100 bf left. I’ve learned to avoid such bargains.
The first step in preparing each boards is to roughly joint a straight edge using a Festool track saw:
[attachthumb=#3]
I then face planed each board using the jointer/planer mode of my new Hammer combo machine for the first time:
[attachthumb=#4]
I thank Rod Sheridan [thumbs up] for coming over Monday evening and helping me set everything up accurately. The combo machine is great but the user manual is the normal brief European type which is sadly lacking in usability. I had previously struggled with the manual for about three hours trying to figure just how to convert from a “thicknesseser” to a “jointer-planer” without disturbing any important factory settings. Rod got everything humming along in about an hour. Now I can switch modes in about a minute.
Here is a photo of the cherry jointed, planed, and marked for thickness:
[attachthumb=#5]
I next built the two sets of shelves. With all that is going on in my shed at the moment, I had to utilize the top o f my table saw to sand the pieces prior to assembly. The surfaces that will be on the self interiors was sanded up to 220 grit:
[attachthumb=#6]
Simple dado and rabbet joints with glue only were used when assembling the shelves. After assembly I inserted two Miller dowels into both the top and bottom horizontal pieces:
[attachthumb=#7]
Now I can get a better idea of how all this will fit together and what other parts need to be made (or purchased):
[attachthumb=#8] [attachthumb=#9]
Here, some narrow boards are being re-sawn for use in thin panels on the backs of the shelves:
[attachthumb=#10]