frugal
Established Member
I have been gradually working my way through Andrew Crawford's The book of boxes. I am currently trying to make the last of the boxes which is a veneered jewelery box. I want to try to make this as detailed as I can and point out why I have done the things that I have done, but I do not want to make it a pattern to follow. After all Andrew has spent a lot of time and effort writing a really great book, so if you want to know exactly how to make this box, have a look at the book.
The first thing was to make up the sides of the box base from MDF with a small piece of hardwood (sycamore in this case) for the sharp bottom edge.
Then while the glue was drying I made up the templates that will be used as the shape of the sides and the top of the box. Each template has a positive and negative version so that I can create the sides and the formers that will be used during veneering as I do not have a vacuum press.
The next thing to do was to make up the former for the lid. This will be used inside the lid frame to support the top when it is glued into shape. This was done with a No. 4 plane and a hollow plane I bought a couple of years ago and have only just found a use for
I then realised that the veneer I was planning to use needed to be flattened, so I made up a mixture based on Richard Jones recipe and liberally applied it to the veneer. I should say at this time that I am making two boxes at the same time, so I have two different sets of veneer, some burr Myrtle and some burr walnut. The walnut is flat, but the myrtle needs some flattening. When I applied the mixture it really brought out the figure in the wood. (The veneer was really wet when I took the photo).
The veneer was then put into my hi-tech veneer press between pieces of plastic mesh sacks that were originally used to hold metal tubing when it was shipped and layers of newspaper to soak up the moisture. The whole lot is gently pressed together. I was really skeptical of the process when I first tried it, but it does seem to just work and it really makes the veneer flexible.
I will need to take the stack to pieces every day for a few days to change the newspaper until the veneer dries.
I am hoping that I will be able to use the same simple press to form and veneer the lid.
In the mean time I spent some time with a hollow plane shaping the sides of the box to roughly the right shape
I have never really logged how much time I spend on a project, so I am going to put at the bottom of each post how much time I have spent on each activity as a record.
Time taken so far:
- Templates, patterns and formers: 2 hours
- cutting gluing and shaping the pieces: 2 hours
- Sorting and preparing the veneer: 1 hour
Total so far 5 hours.
The first thing was to make up the sides of the box base from MDF with a small piece of hardwood (sycamore in this case) for the sharp bottom edge.
Then while the glue was drying I made up the templates that will be used as the shape of the sides and the top of the box. Each template has a positive and negative version so that I can create the sides and the formers that will be used during veneering as I do not have a vacuum press.
The next thing to do was to make up the former for the lid. This will be used inside the lid frame to support the top when it is glued into shape. This was done with a No. 4 plane and a hollow plane I bought a couple of years ago and have only just found a use for
I then realised that the veneer I was planning to use needed to be flattened, so I made up a mixture based on Richard Jones recipe and liberally applied it to the veneer. I should say at this time that I am making two boxes at the same time, so I have two different sets of veneer, some burr Myrtle and some burr walnut. The walnut is flat, but the myrtle needs some flattening. When I applied the mixture it really brought out the figure in the wood. (The veneer was really wet when I took the photo).
The veneer was then put into my hi-tech veneer press between pieces of plastic mesh sacks that were originally used to hold metal tubing when it was shipped and layers of newspaper to soak up the moisture. The whole lot is gently pressed together. I was really skeptical of the process when I first tried it, but it does seem to just work and it really makes the veneer flexible.
I will need to take the stack to pieces every day for a few days to change the newspaper until the veneer dries.
I am hoping that I will be able to use the same simple press to form and veneer the lid.
In the mean time I spent some time with a hollow plane shaping the sides of the box to roughly the right shape
I have never really logged how much time I spend on a project, so I am going to put at the bottom of each post how much time I have spent on each activity as a record.
Time taken so far:
- Templates, patterns and formers: 2 hours
- cutting gluing and shaping the pieces: 2 hours
- Sorting and preparing the veneer: 1 hour
Total so far 5 hours.