Back to that drawer!
This was the kit of parts, ready to glue up. I do like to be reasonably tidy and organised for this bit. It's all on a handy bit of properly flat 18mm ply, which helps.
I find a plastic setsquare is good for checking internal corners
but a trad trysquare is good too
Once the glue had dried, I spent quite a lot of time making this:
as I removed the spare thickness from the sides, with the drawer held on a bit of board on the bench like this
During the fitting I found that I had not perfectly flattened the inside of the carcass side, so needed to remove a little bump in the wood with some careful cross-grain planing - something not mentioned in the books! A heavy shoulder plane is useful for this.
Eventually, after most of the morning had gone by, I got to this stage:
which was a relief.
I could then turn my attention to the slips and bottom again.
The sides of the slips need a bead, to mask the transition from slip to drawer. Having tried using a beading plane and a Stanley 66, neither of which was good on the wayward grain in this oak, I used a simple scratchstock to do this.
The front ends of the slips need to have a little 1/8" tenon on them, to fit into the groove at the back of the drawer front:
so with that cut, and the other ends trimmed to length, I was ready to glue the slips on. The idea is that the drawer bottom should be the right width to slide into the groove from the outside, until its front edge fits into the groove on the front, which is above the groove in the slips
I also re-cut the bottom to the right width, away from my earlier practice cut, and re-did its cross-grain rebate on the edge, just using a square, a knife, a cutting gauge and a chisel
finishing off with a shoulder plane. For the long grain rebate at the front I clamped a batten to guide a rebate plane:
and again, cleaned it up with a small shoulder plane.
At this point I realised that I had blundered when cutting the dovetails at the back of the drawer: I had cut the bottom corners off!
I should have spotted this weeks ago when I first cut the dovetails, but never mind. I could glue a pair of little blocks on but I think I will just leave it as a lesson to myself.
The slips locate nicely in the groove and up against the bottom edge of the back, so just need clamps to hold them in place.
Robert Wearing suggests homemade lightweight clamps made from scraps for this, and having made some, it seemed a good time to use them. I also added some plastic spring clamps someone gave me; they don't look very nice but seem ok for this.
So, when the glue had set on the slips, it was time for some more planing
and at last I could slide the drawer bottom in! After some more planing, it fitted reasonably snugly - I haven't glued it yet but it might be difficult to slide out to get some glue on.
So there it is so far. I now need to start repeating things, four times over, though some of it seems so long ago I shall have to look over my notes here to find what to do.
I've said before I have respect for pre-industrial woodworkers doing this sort of work at a commercial pace; that's even more true now I have a hands-on appreciation of just how fiddly some of this stuff is. I have also learned that accuracy matters more on something like this that on anything I have done before; I'm confident this will be ok, but I can see how much better it could be.
But wait!!
There's more - looking closely at the last picture of the drawer, I have just realised that I made a second mistake when I set out the dovetails at the back! I not only cut the bottom corner off wrong, I cut the top corner off as well!
This is how it looked, weeks ago:
The top edge should run all the way through, just covering the top edge of the back, which should be curved. It should then have a small chamfer - but I've got nothing to cut the chamfer in.
Oh well, nobody else will know, unless you all come round and point it out! :lol: :lol: