Adventures with Kumiko - Cutting grid work joints
For the smaller, square grid panels I have cut the joints by hand following the advice of Des King. His videos are very detailed and were great in giving me the confidence to attempt these by hand. (I have also bought the first three of his books which go into great detail of the basics and many of the different patterns and which I really do recommend).
A good introductory project is a Kumiko Coaster as demonstrated in Des King’s video,
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The thickness of the strips can be to your choice but I first worked with 3mm x 12mm kumiko strips. I made my version of the Kumiko cutting jig out of 18mm and 6mm MRMDF ( I have a lot of offcuts from various projects).
The jig comprises five components. The Main Bed is a length of 19mm MRMDF with two dog holes to anchor it on my MFT workbench. This is very convenient as you need to flip the jig around quite regularly in use and it is much easier to relocate over a couple of bench dogs that release and reclamp, but clamping would work as well.
To the Main Bed I screwed a strip of 18mm MRMDF ripped to a width of 24mm to act as the Back Stop. Once screwed flush with the bottom face of the Main Bed the Back Stop would be at 6mm higher than the top face of the Main Bed. This is only screwed so that I can replace it when it is excessively marred by the saw marks.
In addition there are two Side Stops screwed onto the Main Bed that are at 90⁰ to the Back Stop. I also cut a small relief rabbet on the bottom inside edge to avoid the build up of sawdust against the stops.
The final component is the Clamping Strip made from 6mm MRMDF which is screwed to the Main Bed to hold the Kumiko strips against the Back Stop. The 6mm Clamping Strip and the 6mm projection of the Back Stop serve as depth indicators when cutting the half lap joints to a tad over 6mm (thus my choice of a 12mm thickness for the Kuniko strips).
Recently, I was lucky enough to buy a second Japanese cross-cut Gyokucho dozuki saw from a forum member and I have attached a depth stop using double sided carpet tape so I’m not as reliant on the visual depth guide of the jig.
I also use a David Barron 90⁰ Guide (
David Barron 90° Guide) to keep my saw cuts vertical – you probably won’t find this necessary.
To ‘pop out’ the waste from the joints I ground an old screw driver to a width of just under 3mm and put a chisel edge on it. This is why I choose a thickness of 3mm when cutting the joints by hand. Popping the waste is possibly the most satisfying part of the entire process
Before removing the Kumiko strips from the Cutting Jig, I like to check the fit. If I’ve messed up and the half lap cuts are two narrow I use a narrow sanding block to ease the fit. If the joint is too big, I start again and set the bad strips aside for use as infill pieces.
Where the gridwork was either larger or to be used for the diamond shaped gridwork I created a cross cut sled to work with the 4mm FTG blade on the table saw based on a video from Johnny Tromboukis
My version is for use with my 4mm FTG blade and looks like this but the construction and operation are mostly as described in Johnny’s video above.
Once I have set the pitch of the grid i.e. the distance between the half laps, the Auxiliary 60⁰ fence is lined up with the main fixed 60⁰ fence to provide support for the Kumiko strip at the point where I set the half lap over the key. When I push the sled through the blade I hold the Kumiko strip tight against the fixed fence with the Clamping Block and I support the strip against the Auxiliary fence with the rubber end of a pencil. I am comfortable that my digits are far enough away from the blade.