coffee table build?

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sunnybob

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I have a surplus glass oval table top.
I want to build a base for it along these lines
https://www.wayfair.com/furniture/sb0/o ... 67488.html

but have no idea how to draw a cutting list for it.
I also have no experience whatsoever in this kind of joinery so basic tips would be appreciated.
I am not going to try for an award, I will be happy if I actually finish it, so dont get too technical on me.
I have a plank of Bubinga that I think might be enough wood, but just dont know how to plan the sizes.
The table top is 1.5m x 0.9m
 
I make boxes, nothing joinery wise is simple to me :shock: :roll:

I fancy trying something different, with no great outlay loss if (when) I screw it up, I'm just uncertain how to put my toe in the water. (hammer) .
I shall have to try drawing everything onto the plank to see if I can get it all on.
 
A full size drawing of the joints is always s a good idea certainly. I did that first time I made a dining chair. Still have one left after 45 years. Wasn't a robust design but the one the Missus wanted anyhow.

Best of Luck

John
 
always a good idea to draw out your plan first with all the dimensions, from there you should be able to make the cutting list. A table shouldn't be too complex, usually it's just 4 legs, 4 aprons mortice and tenons,

(edit) just seen that the top is glass lol
 
Hi Bob
Can't see your link :x
This is a glass topped table That I made
glass is 600 x 400 mm
Total of 122 pieces of 18 mm x 18 mm Walnut
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Doesn't look chunky in real life :)
Grass is artificial :D
Got the table idea from Link
It was abandoned for a while, (parts shoved out of sight) :eek: I had trouble working things out
Then a cousin came round to try a lathe that I had; she saw the bits and pieces and talked me into having another try :lol:
 
Ah! Re the grass. I thought so, and I would love to know more! I am sick of paying £30.00 a time for mowing.

I have some Utile and Cherry, either of which would make a nice copy of the table. Cherry I think as it's English Cherry. I want something to go by my recliner for all the remotes I am collecting in my old age. :mrgreen:

John (hammer)
 
I chased it online and it's a reasonable cost. Problem is the substrate I would need would cost a bomb in concrete.

I have to make my garden accessible to me as I am walking with a frame at the moment (Not for long!) But I will still need a level surface afterwards, or I won't be able to enjoy my blessed plot at all!

John (hammer)
 
The small front garden was originally tiled, but they got beat up with the weather

The tiles hade line indents
So I skimmed the tiles with grout -- a mixture of sand and cement
When grout was set I laid the A/G on top
About ten years it's been down now, I think the quality and looks of A/G has improved in that time

Bob; sorry we've gone off topic :wink:
 
Did you notice the price of the Coffee Table that I copied
Link

£1402.00
:roll:
 
Benchwayze":2ron7lpg said:
Ah! Re the grass. I thought so, and I would love to know more! I am sick of paying £30.00 a time for mowing.

I have some Utile and Cherry, either of which would make a nice copy of the table. Cherry I think as it's English Cherry. I want something to go by my recliner for all the remotes I am collecting in my old age. :mrgreen:

John (hammer)

My mother was struggling with grass cutting (she's over 80), so the family invested in one of those fancy automatic robot mowers. It completely changed her life, as she can now concentrate on the fun gardening, such as planting and suchlike.

It's a big outlay, but the results are truly superb, and it happens even when you are not looking. I don't know how many times a year you have the grass cut, but €30 a pop would start to mount up pretty quickly.
 
Now thats what I call a thread hijack :shock:
from coffee table to artificial grass and robot lawn mowers owned by an octogenarian, in less than one page (hammer) (hammer) (hammer) (hammer)
I need you old farts to focus for a few seconds here.....

That link seems to go to a generic page of options, so I need to explain a little bit.
The glass is 1.5 metres x 0.9 metres oval, so the square dangly frame idea wont help me (nice as it is).
I'm thinking 4 legs, one at each of the longest areas, with a cross over about half way up the legs. That way gives me minimum wood requirements.
Slight angle inwards from the floor to the glass.
Square legs because I have no lathe or even a spokeshave (I can do roundovers though).
If my bubinga plank isnt enough, whats the opinion of half bubinga and half walnut?
 
With respect Bob, if you have only made bandsaw boxes in the past it may be best to make a simple coffee table with a wood top first.

John
 
John,
I dont give up easy 8) 8)

My point is this is a training mission. I'm not after design craftsman of the year. :roll:
The glass table top was rescued from the binman.
The wood isnt going to cost me more than 50 quid over and above what I already have.
If I screw it up (HIGHLY possible) theres nothing lost because I will have had 50 quids worth of hobby time out of it and the glass can go back outside where I found it.
If I get it half decent, I can sell it on and recoup the wood costs. =D> =D> =D>
 
sunnybob":3ajtlo58 said:
John,
I dont give up easy 8) 8)

My point is this is a training mission. I'm not after design craftsman of the year. :roll:
The glass table top was rescued from the binman.
The wood isnt going to cost me more than 50 quid over and above what I already have.
If I screw it up (HIGHLY possible) theres nothing lost because I will have had 50 quids worth of hobby time out of it and the glass can go back outside where I found it.
If I get it half decent, I can sell it on and recoup the wood costs. =D> =D> =D>

That's fair enough Bob. As you say, you've very little to lose, the experience will be good and it may turn out pretty decent after all.
All the best

John
 

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