mouppe
Member
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2010
- Messages
- 3,036
I'm building this wall cabinet using some new techniques. If it turns out well, it will go in the office or the house, if not, welcome to the workshop my walnut friend! It has a dovetailed carcass and a chamfered face frame which I learnt from Garrett Hack in Fine Woodworking. Essentially, you leave a small vertical rabbet and chamfer it away leaving a seamless joint. I may also add a small moulding down the side to accomplish the same thing and to lighten the heaviness of the walnut. The frame extends past the drawer sides removing the need for stopped dadoes. Not everything is cut to finished length yet.
It is made from walnut with birdseye maple door panels. I used the same plank for all the stiles to give the piece grain continuity. You can see this most easily by looking at the two door stiles in the centre of the cabinet. Walnut and maple is a great colour combination.
I also modified the dimensions as I was building it. I have never done this before, but as I was laying out the pieces it seemed as if the stiles were too thick for the cabinet so I narrowed them down. Also I thickened the rails to make the panels less long. I was trying to get closer to the golden ratio. The finished cabinet will have a cove moulding on the top. This will reduce the boxy look it is too easy to get with these types of cabinets.
TS55, OF1400, RO125 but no Domino this time. What, no Domino? No, unnecessary this time. I really went to town with the hand plane and the block plane. On a piece of furniture this small, it is so much "faster, easier and smarter" to mill the lumber close to final dimension with the power tools, and then get a precise fit for the last couple of millimetres with the hand tools. Because the piece is so small, the fit of the joints has to be that much more exact to stand up to scrutiny.
I actually found the much-maligned Parallel guide (491469) to be very useful when cutting the thin stiles and rails. Because the guide rail was not clamped to the wood that was being cut but another piece of the same thickness behind it, the parallel guide kept the wood from wandering away from the guide rail.
I also have to give a special mention to my 36" Veritas straight edge and my new Woodpeckers precision square. The square is one of the best tools I have ever bought. It is accurate, solid, easy to read, and a pleasure to use. $80 very well spent.
I thought it would be a little different to show some in-progress photos for a change. I should have the finished piece ready in a few more days. Maybe I will present it to my wife for her impending 40th birthday to show her where all my time and money is being spent!
It is made from walnut with birdseye maple door panels. I used the same plank for all the stiles to give the piece grain continuity. You can see this most easily by looking at the two door stiles in the centre of the cabinet. Walnut and maple is a great colour combination.
I also modified the dimensions as I was building it. I have never done this before, but as I was laying out the pieces it seemed as if the stiles were too thick for the cabinet so I narrowed them down. Also I thickened the rails to make the panels less long. I was trying to get closer to the golden ratio. The finished cabinet will have a cove moulding on the top. This will reduce the boxy look it is too easy to get with these types of cabinets.
TS55, OF1400, RO125 but no Domino this time. What, no Domino? No, unnecessary this time. I really went to town with the hand plane and the block plane. On a piece of furniture this small, it is so much "faster, easier and smarter" to mill the lumber close to final dimension with the power tools, and then get a precise fit for the last couple of millimetres with the hand tools. Because the piece is so small, the fit of the joints has to be that much more exact to stand up to scrutiny.
I actually found the much-maligned Parallel guide (491469) to be very useful when cutting the thin stiles and rails. Because the guide rail was not clamped to the wood that was being cut but another piece of the same thickness behind it, the parallel guide kept the wood from wandering away from the guide rail.
I also have to give a special mention to my 36" Veritas straight edge and my new Woodpeckers precision square. The square is one of the best tools I have ever bought. It is accurate, solid, easy to read, and a pleasure to use. $80 very well spent.
I thought it would be a little different to show some in-progress photos for a change. I should have the finished piece ready in a few more days. Maybe I will present it to my wife for her impending 40th birthday to show her where all my time and money is being spent!