Got fairly comfortable and reasonably competent cutting dovetails by hand early in the piece; lucky, to have a cabinet maker to show the way. But, the path was not easy, rough plank to start with, #4.5 Stanley, square and a steel rule ‘ “square that up first” was the gruff instruction. Four square was a challenge, but eventually, with some quiet words, I learned to manage the plane and produce a ‘result’ – bit slimmer than the original – but, square. Next three dovetail templates were demanded, 1:6; 1:7, 1:8, seems there’s a ‘professional’ code, task related which must be considered. “Why?” I asked, “must I make a template”. “Dovetails come off the saw” says he, “make the template first, then you shall understand”. I looked carefully at the one provided, measured it up, cut a billet and began – every single flaw in my saw work was revealed (and reviled). There were a dozen total botches in the bin, four nearly right, and eventually one considered ‘adequate – for practice. But before ‘practice on my square board – layout and measuring up; then setting the gauge and marking. Many hours were spent with a scraper and eraser before my first 4 tails were deemed ‘acceptable’. Quick, flawless cutting demo; and, I was on my own. I quickly cut the first 4 off the board before they were spotted; they were followed by a half dozen more; my two foot board reduced now a shadow of it’s former self. Eventually – four acceptable tails were visible – a long day. Pins the next round, same performance and getting the shoulders ‘to the line’, square and fair (saw again), another two foot of rough sawn made square down the pipes. Saw blunt, chisels in need of attention, a fresh gouge in the bench top and a little blood tails and pins merged. “That fits” says I “Aye, so it does, like a gumboot in a corridor” was the response.
My point is that I had a guide – priceless, the best there is. I did not learn to ‘make’ a dovetail joint; I learned the skills which are required to craft wood into the thing required. Once you can ‘saw’ and understand ‘what’ you must do to make a ‘job of it’ the confidence to make that first, all important, relaxed cut flows to your arm; and, you ‘know’ from sound and feel that the cut is ‘right’; then you can make any joint. Even if the first 100 may be of the gumboot class, 101 will make you smile. The next challenge is making four sides of a box – getting it square – and the same depth – the first 10 – ordinary; the experience – sublime. Long ramble and my apologies for it; but, for the price of a couple of rough sawn planks a little time, a lot of effort and some ‘frank’ appraisal – a dovetail is simply another clever joint which is routinely - ‘do-able’. Toast, conversely is strictly ‘automatic’ machine made, I insist.