Had a request from the wife for a new side table for the lounge, and so started looking for inspiration. After flicking through google image search i had a preference for tapered and splayed legs as a way of stopping it looking like a plank on legs.
I hadn't made something with splayed and tapered legs before and so thought knocking up a quick prototype out of some pine offcuts would give me a chance to get my head around the angles and what amount of splay would look right.
Once i'd settled on the splay of the legs i set an adjustable square and the rails were cut and attached to the legs with mortice and tenons
With all the pieces cut i roughly tapered the legs with the bandsaw, stopping the taper short of where the rails met the legs. with all the pieces cut, i borrowed the dining table for glue up as the garage was pretty cold
clamping everything up was a little fraught, in retrospect i'd have done it in stages rather than big banging it all together
Once dried, i planed the paint off an old shelf that a neighbour was throwing out and put it on top so i could get offer it up for judgement
Happily it passed muster, so far everything was going well....
I'd picked out a nice piece of elm for the final piece and was putting together the cut list, when the wife came to see. After a pause she decided that the elm might be too dark and she was thinking it would be a lighter wood. We already had an Ash table in the lounge and i had another piece, but only big enough for the top or the frame but not both.
Rather than mix and match the wood, the solution was to use the ash for the top and then reuse the prototype frame, but painted to cover that it's just cheapo pine.
The ash planed up relatively nicely (or so i thought) but when it came to edge jointing it i should have taken a bit more time.... When i took it out of the clamps and planed it flush the glue line was way too obvious. Seemed like moving it from the garage to the house also caused it to move a bit.
Looked ok in the garage...
Not being happy it got run through the table saw, and the edges replaned, taking the time with a no.7 to get both edges true and square. Then back in the clamps, everything seemed to go to plan.
Skimming over the underside with the plane to clean it up
second time's a charm, happier with this glue line
I hadn't made something with splayed and tapered legs before and so thought knocking up a quick prototype out of some pine offcuts would give me a chance to get my head around the angles and what amount of splay would look right.
Once i'd settled on the splay of the legs i set an adjustable square and the rails were cut and attached to the legs with mortice and tenons
With all the pieces cut i roughly tapered the legs with the bandsaw, stopping the taper short of where the rails met the legs. with all the pieces cut, i borrowed the dining table for glue up as the garage was pretty cold
clamping everything up was a little fraught, in retrospect i'd have done it in stages rather than big banging it all together
Once dried, i planed the paint off an old shelf that a neighbour was throwing out and put it on top so i could get offer it up for judgement
Happily it passed muster, so far everything was going well....
I'd picked out a nice piece of elm for the final piece and was putting together the cut list, when the wife came to see. After a pause she decided that the elm might be too dark and she was thinking it would be a lighter wood. We already had an Ash table in the lounge and i had another piece, but only big enough for the top or the frame but not both.
Rather than mix and match the wood, the solution was to use the ash for the top and then reuse the prototype frame, but painted to cover that it's just cheapo pine.
The ash planed up relatively nicely (or so i thought) but when it came to edge jointing it i should have taken a bit more time.... When i took it out of the clamps and planed it flush the glue line was way too obvious. Seemed like moving it from the garage to the house also caused it to move a bit.
Looked ok in the garage...
Not being happy it got run through the table saw, and the edges replaned, taking the time with a no.7 to get both edges true and square. Then back in the clamps, everything seemed to go to plan.
Skimming over the underside with the plane to clean it up
second time's a charm, happier with this glue line