The next thing to think about is the back. (Can you tell that I'm putting off the harder jobs of making drawers that fit and a smooth top? :wink: )
I've got suitable wood put by for several options, each of which would fit in that 3/8" deep rebate. I could use some old pine tongue and groove boards. I could make some new T&G from some other oak. But I've done T&G before, so I fancy the idea of a framed back. It will test me a bit, as I will make the frame out of the same thin 3/8" oak as the drawer supports, so the mortices and tenons will only be 1/8" thick.
There are still options though. I could fill the panel with plywood, and I have a suitable sized bit of ash veneered ply which would be fine, but again, I've done ply panels before. I fancy a solid wood panel. I thought I had a quick and easy option with some old thin softwood which had indeed been the back of a cupboard but my one remaining piece was too short. Time to find some more thin wood.
This will do:
It's an old drawer front and I think it will yield enough, after some more sawing and planing.
So I was sawing the board in two, when I heard a knock and suddenly the saw didn't want to move. I'd found a remnant of an old screw from one of the handles. Fortunately it was a brass screw so did not damage the saw. All you need to get it out easily is a shell bit and a brace:
The semi-cylindrical shell bit will drill a hole round the old screw, digging down so you can get it out with pliers.
and then it's a bit more rip sawing which produced two thinner boards in need of a lot of planing
which makes enough to cut two boards to edge joint for a panel. Here they are, trimmed a bit to remove the gap where the lock was
and showing a bit where my sawing went adrift, which I should be able to work around
I don't know what this wood is. It's soft but doesn't have distinct summer/winter hard and soft growth. The sawdust was quite a vivid yellow. One side has a bit of a greenish tinge. The good thing is that it's got the growth rings at 90° to the surface so it should be stable.
Having spent quite some time planing these two boards thinnish and flattish, it was time to cut off two smaller bits and glue them together. To do this I used a really cheap old technique from back when I couldn't afford sash cramps: battens and sliding wedges.
Made from scrap, but they work really well.
More soon, when the glue has dried!
I've got suitable wood put by for several options, each of which would fit in that 3/8" deep rebate. I could use some old pine tongue and groove boards. I could make some new T&G from some other oak. But I've done T&G before, so I fancy the idea of a framed back. It will test me a bit, as I will make the frame out of the same thin 3/8" oak as the drawer supports, so the mortices and tenons will only be 1/8" thick.
There are still options though. I could fill the panel with plywood, and I have a suitable sized bit of ash veneered ply which would be fine, but again, I've done ply panels before. I fancy a solid wood panel. I thought I had a quick and easy option with some old thin softwood which had indeed been the back of a cupboard but my one remaining piece was too short. Time to find some more thin wood.
This will do:
It's an old drawer front and I think it will yield enough, after some more sawing and planing.
So I was sawing the board in two, when I heard a knock and suddenly the saw didn't want to move. I'd found a remnant of an old screw from one of the handles. Fortunately it was a brass screw so did not damage the saw. All you need to get it out easily is a shell bit and a brace:
The semi-cylindrical shell bit will drill a hole round the old screw, digging down so you can get it out with pliers.
and then it's a bit more rip sawing which produced two thinner boards in need of a lot of planing
which makes enough to cut two boards to edge joint for a panel. Here they are, trimmed a bit to remove the gap where the lock was
and showing a bit where my sawing went adrift, which I should be able to work around
I don't know what this wood is. It's soft but doesn't have distinct summer/winter hard and soft growth. The sawdust was quite a vivid yellow. One side has a bit of a greenish tinge. The good thing is that it's got the growth rings at 90° to the surface so it should be stable.
Having spent quite some time planing these two boards thinnish and flattish, it was time to cut off two smaller bits and glue them together. To do this I used a really cheap old technique from back when I couldn't afford sash cramps: battens and sliding wedges.
Made from scrap, but they work really well.
More soon, when the glue has dried!