I have eight strips of wood that need "channels" cutting into the faces. These are functional (to give fingertips a place to grip when lifting what the strips surround) but they are in full view so there's a design and decoration aspect too. They need to be neat and tidy and nicely finished like the rest of the item (French polish, mirror-finish).
I have no idea what to call them, so here's a pic of what I mean (quicker to snap a sketch than remember how to use a CAD package I haven't touched for years). It's not to scale. I expect the channel to be 15 mm wide and 5 mm deep, or thereabouts.
Thing is, I don't own a router and don't want one as this would be the only job I have for it. I tried searching for a "by hand" method, but can't stop Google (or the duck) returning router-based solutions amongst all the other irrelevant stuff and ads. Searching ain't what it used to be !!
Anyway, how did they do this in pre-power-tool days? Suggestions, pointers or links appreciated. I'm happy to buy any hand tools needed, perhaps a gouge is part of the solution, but not power tools.
Thanks in advance for your help.
Cheers
I have no idea what to call them, so here's a pic of what I mean (quicker to snap a sketch than remember how to use a CAD package I haven't touched for years). It's not to scale. I expect the channel to be 15 mm wide and 5 mm deep, or thereabouts.
Thing is, I don't own a router and don't want one as this would be the only job I have for it. I tried searching for a "by hand" method, but can't stop Google (or the duck) returning router-based solutions amongst all the other irrelevant stuff and ads. Searching ain't what it used to be !!
Anyway, how did they do this in pre-power-tool days? Suggestions, pointers or links appreciated. I'm happy to buy any hand tools needed, perhaps a gouge is part of the solution, but not power tools.
Thanks in advance for your help.
Cheers