niall Y
Established Member
Hi All,
The idea of using a solid un-joined MDF to cut out an L- shaped window board is OK. in theory. The problem, as I see it would the bull-nose moulding to the front of the board, unless, you omit this detail and keep the front square.
The description of the OP's joint as " Mason;s Mitre".is not quite right. With a true Mason's Mitre, both the boards would remain the same width throughout. The boards would then be butted together, and a bull-nose routed along their front face. Where the cutter leaves a radius at the junction of the boards would then be carved with a sharp chisel to square it off to give the appearance of a mitre - so not really a mitre at all. Niall
The idea of using a solid un-joined MDF to cut out an L- shaped window board is OK. in theory. The problem, as I see it would the bull-nose moulding to the front of the board, unless, you omit this detail and keep the front square.
The description of the OP's joint as " Mason;s Mitre".is not quite right. With a true Mason's Mitre, both the boards would remain the same width throughout. The boards would then be butted together, and a bull-nose routed along their front face. Where the cutter leaves a radius at the junction of the boards would then be carved with a sharp chisel to square it off to give the appearance of a mitre - so not really a mitre at all. Niall