Ash bedside cabinet

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bobscarle

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Bedside cabinet made in ash. Sorry :oops: , I did not take any pictures of the work in progress. As usual I only thought of it afterwards. I promiser to take some of my next project.

The cabinet is fairly simple in construction, 2 sides, 2 shelves and a top all glued up from smaller boards. First mistake, I did not prepare enough ash so the shelf under the drawer is tulipwood. This does not really matter as it will not be seen, but still annoying.

The sides are joined to the shelves with sliding dovetails. This is the first time I have made this joint, lots of fiddling to get it to fit but once fitted it is very strong. Cut the housing in the sides with a router and a straight edge clamp. I cut the ends of the shelves using a simple jig. Nothing more than a piece of scrap screwed to the top edge of a piece of 18mm ply. This is put into the Workmate and shelf clamped to it, making sure the top edge lines up. This gives plenty of support for the router. A fence controls the depth of cut. I hope that makes sense.

The top should have been fitted to the sides the same way but I got it wrong, second mistake. For some reason the board did no glue up square, no problem as it has to be cut down to fit anyway. The problem comes when you mark the housings and cut them square from the back but trim the width by placing the front against the rip fence. The result is 2 perfectly cut dovetail housings at some obscure angle (not 90).Enough said about that. The top is now attached with buttons set in a dado in the sides.

The face frame is joined to the body with biscuits although the top rail is connected to the stiles with mortice and tenon joints as there is no shelf to support it. The 2 other rails are just biscuited on.

The body of the drawer is tulipwood made with through dovetails at each corner. This is the first time I have used this joint in anger and the results are quite pleasing. At this point I must say a big thank you to all the people on the forum who gave me help and advice when I asked about cutting dovetails. Your help, and the Rob Cosman DVD, gave me the confidence to have a go.

The knobs on the drawer and door are beech. Unfortunately this was all I could get from B & Q. I would have liked to turn my own but I do not have a lathe so it is not possible. They match reasonably well, I think.

The finish is 2 coats of danish oil followed by plenty of wax.

So there it is, in all its glory. I am pleased with the result, it works well, looks good (the grain pattern, especially on the top is lovely) and the family like it.

Hope you like it.

cabinet1.jpg


cabinet2.jpg


cabinet3.jpg


Bob
 
Bob,

Nicely done, and if you hadn't told us about the 'mistakes' we would never have known. Well done on the hand cut dove tails, I have not had the nerve to try it yet. =D> =D>
 
Lovely work Bob, the ash looks great.

The sides are joined to the shelves with sliding dovetails. This is the first time I have made this joint, lots of fiddling to get it to fit but once fitted it is very strong.

I have just made my first sliding dovetails too, luckily mine went like a breeze. It is a moving part tho, so the slightly loose fit is a bonus :lol:

Matt.
 
Bob

That looks really great but as others have said, it's crying out for a twin brother! Just think, the second one would be much quicker because you've sorted all the glitches on the first one......

Regards.
 
Looks nice, but I would be a bit worried about the door cupping. Have you braced it at the back? If not, I'd do it now.

When you make it's partner, remember to hinge the door on the opposite side!

Cheers
Brad
 
Thank you for all the kind words you have said about my project. There will be no twin brother for the cabinet as it lives in a room with only a single bed against a wall. In actual fact I made its brother (maybe I should say sister as it was for my daughter) a little while back.

She chose not to have a door. As you can see she has done quite a job filling it. The drawer has no dovetails, simply rebated construction. Also the face frame is slightly different.

cabinet4.jpg


Bob
 
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