Woody Alan
Established Member
I thought some might like to see this little table I knocked up out of a pallet of oak.
First you need a willing assistant to get it to the workshop
Having put all the stock through the planer /thicknesser the top is ready to biscuit
Clamping up the top with the new Besseys handy to force the overtight biscuits in
Sizing the top on the sliding table
Bevelling the ends by a secret method having tested it first.
Marking the mortices one edge only
Cutting remembering to move the chisel after first small cut to avoid burn
and "staircase" my way across and then back
Knocked up a quick jig to cut the tapers on all the inside leg faces
All legs ready
Rails all cut to equal length and left overnight and the tenon fairies came
and cut the shoulders and cheeks not sure how they did it, but they were
still on the tablesaw when I got back in the morning
Hand dressed the bottoms of the legs with a dodgy old brassed plane I had laying about
Slots for the buttons cut
Frame now glued up, done in two stages
Lots of buttons cut from leg offcuts
Awkward bit hand scraped, didn't bother to sharpen scraper
hence more dust than shavings but still cleaned it up
Just showing that I left the rails deliberately proud by half a mm to allow for rail shrinkage
Applying a matt waterbased varnish
All the buttons now fitted
Here it is finished
And here it is in almost it's final resting place with it's lamp.
Phew Alan
First you need a willing assistant to get it to the workshop
Having put all the stock through the planer /thicknesser the top is ready to biscuit
Clamping up the top with the new Besseys handy to force the overtight biscuits in
Sizing the top on the sliding table
Bevelling the ends by a secret method having tested it first.
Marking the mortices one edge only
Cutting remembering to move the chisel after first small cut to avoid burn
and "staircase" my way across and then back
Knocked up a quick jig to cut the tapers on all the inside leg faces
All legs ready
Rails all cut to equal length and left overnight and the tenon fairies came
and cut the shoulders and cheeks not sure how they did it, but they were
still on the tablesaw when I got back in the morning
Hand dressed the bottoms of the legs with a dodgy old brassed plane I had laying about
Slots for the buttons cut
Frame now glued up, done in two stages
Lots of buttons cut from leg offcuts
Awkward bit hand scraped, didn't bother to sharpen scraper
hence more dust than shavings but still cleaned it up
Just showing that I left the rails deliberately proud by half a mm to allow for rail shrinkage
Applying a matt waterbased varnish
All the buttons now fitted
Here it is finished
And here it is in almost it's final resting place with it's lamp.
Phew Alan