Furniture Components Thicknesses

UKworkshop.co.uk

Help Support UKworkshop.co.uk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

BucksDad

Established Member
UKW Supporter
Joined
11 Apr 2021
Messages
519
Reaction score
419
Location
Chilterns
In Collins Complete Woodworkers manual, it has a lot of nice diagrams for how different pieces of furniture should be constructed, joints etc. and also a quick run down of the dimensions of furniture based on the human body etc.

What it doesn't have anywhere I can find, is a go-to table of what the thicknesses of furniture components should be - e.g. thickness of drawer sides, cabinet sides, cabinet top, shelves etc.

Now I know this can be very much be a "it depends" based on the design of the piece, but does anyone know of some good resources (web or book is fine) which has typical recommended thicknesses of furniture components for someone starting out. Ideally both solid & sheet goods

Thanks
 
Afraid “it depends” is the correct answer. You can usually make things much thinner than they often are and they will be strong enough, but then it looks bad, which is a major factor
 
In Collins Complete Woodworkers manual, it has a lot of nice diagrams for how different pieces of furniture should be constructed, joints etc. and also a quick run down of the dimensions of furniture based on the human body etc.

What it doesn't have anywhere I can find, is a go-to table of what the thicknesses of furniture components should be - e.g. thickness of drawer sides, cabinet sides, cabinet top, shelves etc.

Now I know this can be very much be a "it depends" based on the design of the piece, but does anyone know of some good resources (web or book is fine) which has typical recommended thicknesses of furniture components for someone starting out. Ideally both solid & sheet goods

Thanks
Best place to look is at other furniture. Take a tape and a vernier caliper everywhere you go. It's amazing how often one's guesses are wide of the mark.
Start with whatever is in front of you, or underneath you if you are sitting down!
 
Best place to look is at other furniture. Take a tape and a vernier caliper everywhere you go. It's amazing how often one's guesses are wide of the mark.
Start with whatever is in front of you, or underneath you if you are sitting down!

Does it work when I'm currently sat in a room with everything from IKEA? :)
 
I always forget a tape measure but the finger and photo has been used many times.

This was the coffee table that the wife liked in JL.

BD25A3D4-73C9-4E1B-8464-70F8E621460D.jpeg
 
Back
Top