You really want to make it difficult!
Those little DT tails would snap off if there was any movement in the top and how would you get them into the top in the first place.
I think you need to look at some joinery rather than trying to reinvent the wheel. All "elegant joint solutions" to all problems have already been established and developed over thousands of years.
You are only making some ordinary looking shelves with a heavy board on top, not exactly a radical innovation!
Or is it a side table with shelves under? Maybe that's the problem, which is it?
Design skills are key. That's where you start, after starting to learn how things are made, then on to the drawing board. Literally in the case of woodwork as drawing-board and bench skills overlap.
CAD can lead you astray; it's easy to design all manner of things and then be stuck over how to actually make them.
That's the way to do it! Followed by Aunty Joyce:
Over-thinking is no substitute for sensible research!
View attachment 180796
https://www.abebooks.co.uk/servlet/...Z7tLgq74oNduqb4IX72Go_jid13oYLGkaAhL-EALw_wcB
Firstly, great book recommendation. Thanks for that.
Unfortunately, I felt the tone of your comments quite discouraging though.
In “Aunty Joyce’s” book he does illustrate a “slot-screwed joint” on page 177, top right (see attached). This is the type of concept I was thinking of. He obviously illustrates it more clearly than I did and describes it with the use of a screw rather than a dovetail. Perhaps I’ll try that. Good recomendation.
As far as you suggesting I’m “trying to reinvent the wheel” and saying “You are only making some ordinary looking shelves with a heavy board on top, not exactly a radical innovation! Or is it a side table with shelves under? Maybe that's the problem, which is it?’
- pretty negative! I’m obviously not trying to reinvent the wheel, I’d already stated I just wanted to make a shoe rack and that in expanding my knowledge, I was looking for invisible joint methods and suggestions of.
And as far as your comments on CAD, I have to disagree with you on those. One of my earlier projects didn’t look as balanced from the end as it did from the side. So, I try to model things first now so that I can view them from all angles and then I can also print out templates if required. I do find using it helpful. It seems HOJ agrees with the idea too…
Normally the methods of joinery will have been worked out before machining timber to size, for instance setting of the tenon sizes, based on the rule of thirds, and what chisel sizes you have relative to that dimension for morticing, the reliance on using routers and jigs may well restrict your choices.
For example this is a exploded detail drawing for a small cupboard, on my to do list:
View attachment 180770
All the joinery detailing has been worked in, and my cutting list made relative to the dimensions I need for making the joints, rather than the other way round.
And as to how to fix the top, as
@johnnyb said, Id make the 2 end frames with another stretcher at the top and either just screw up though a couple of elongated holes, and/or pop a locating dowel in the top of each leg, into a slightly larger hole in the top.
View attachment 180771
Nice bit of cad work.
FYI though: My mortises will be cut with an 8mm router bit into pieces coming out at 22.2-22.4mm (measured more accurately with callipers)… so within 1mm for the rule of thirds.
It’s the wood I have so rather than waste it, I’ve decided to use it on this project that will be useful for us and will definitely get used. To be honest, I had actually designed the unit before milling but designed it parametrically… so just adjusted the dimensions to exact figures once I’d milled up the oak lengths and measured them.
I think I’m still going to go ahead with my idea but can always fall back on your later suggestion of following jonnyb’s method of having extra side stretchers at the tops of the ends.
I would ditch the youtube school of mis direction, buy a good book on joinery principles, and learn the basics, maybe start with something like this:
View attachment 180792
Another good book suggestion. Thank you. I found it available in an online library (as I did Jacob’s book suggestion too): If anyone else is interested, they’re in the “Internet Archive” at …
https://archive.org/
I have to disagree with your YouTube comment though. I’ve found YouTube really inspiring. My industry (live events) was decimated by COVID and further challenged by Brexit so I found watching videos during the COVID years helped me build on my passion for woodworking. Some of the guys I like are New Yorkshire Workshop, also referenced in other threads on this forum, along with Peter Sefton of Woodworkers Workshop, who also posts here regularly and then there are great woodworkers like Paul Sellers and older videos of Jim Kingshott (I’ve just recently found). And obviously younger guys like Ollie Bradshaw of Bradshaw Joinery who’s doing some great work. And then many Americans as well (obviously); a couple I really like the work of are Tom McLaughlin at Epic Woodworking and Mike Farrington too. I find them all really encouraging… and they’ve definitely inspired me!