Her Indoors wants me to build a coffee table and her only stipulation is that she wants it black walnut and with crossed-stretchers. The image below is not the exact table I am building but this is the kind of leg-stretcher layout I need to make.
I am looking for advice on build order and how to joint the stretchers and solve the problem of angle assuming the table is rectangular and not square.
I have never made crossed leg stretchers before and it's got me scratching my head since the legs themselves will be square. Here's what I cant get my head around - my thoughts are running around it...
1. Do I simply mortise in the whole of the stretcher to the legs (the stretcher will be narrow - maybe 20 to 30mm square) or try and create a tenon?
2. Since the legs of the coffee table will be low and quite thick (60mm square) stretchers are prob not structurally necessary so could I get away with just cutting a 90 degree birdmouth and domino them in? Trouble is, how do I get a domino, dowel or loose tenon into a 90 degree corner?
3. If I set the whole stretcher into the leg at the corner by cutting 2 kerfs and then chiselling the waste out how do I transfer the exact dimension of the stretcher over a 90 degree corner?
4. Finally, where the legs cross, I was planning on a crossed lap-joint - but how do I calculate the exact angle that they will cross - I thought maybe of making the leg stretcher assembly as 2 pairs of diagonal legs joined with a stretcher and then bringing both leg pairs together (placing one on top of the other), scribing and cutting for the lap joint. Trouble is, the table will also have aprons and drawers so if I dont have the legs perfectly square to each other I will run into problems there.
If anybody knows of a project online where they build a table with crossed stretchers like this that would help enormously - I am not a "fine hand tool woodworker" who needs to cut every joint by hand, I am more of the table saw and domino-where-I-can type so simpler the better
I am looking for advice on build order and how to joint the stretchers and solve the problem of angle assuming the table is rectangular and not square.
I have never made crossed leg stretchers before and it's got me scratching my head since the legs themselves will be square. Here's what I cant get my head around - my thoughts are running around it...
1. Do I simply mortise in the whole of the stretcher to the legs (the stretcher will be narrow - maybe 20 to 30mm square) or try and create a tenon?
2. Since the legs of the coffee table will be low and quite thick (60mm square) stretchers are prob not structurally necessary so could I get away with just cutting a 90 degree birdmouth and domino them in? Trouble is, how do I get a domino, dowel or loose tenon into a 90 degree corner?
3. If I set the whole stretcher into the leg at the corner by cutting 2 kerfs and then chiselling the waste out how do I transfer the exact dimension of the stretcher over a 90 degree corner?
4. Finally, where the legs cross, I was planning on a crossed lap-joint - but how do I calculate the exact angle that they will cross - I thought maybe of making the leg stretcher assembly as 2 pairs of diagonal legs joined with a stretcher and then bringing both leg pairs together (placing one on top of the other), scribing and cutting for the lap joint. Trouble is, the table will also have aprons and drawers so if I dont have the legs perfectly square to each other I will run into problems there.
If anybody knows of a project online where they build a table with crossed stretchers like this that would help enormously - I am not a "fine hand tool woodworker" who needs to cut every joint by hand, I am more of the table saw and domino-where-I-can type so simpler the better