I'm new to marquetry and am looking for some advice on a project i'm planning, and hoping people here might be able to help.
I am planning to recreate a board game in marquetry. The board is 600mm x 600mm (24" x 24" in old money), and comes in 4 parts. The cardboard board folds-up like many board games but recreating it in wood will make this difficult.
I was planning on using four 300mm x 300mm (12" x 12") pieces of 24mm (1") plywood as the main substrate of the board and joining them together using bullet-shaped, 8mm brass alignment dowels.
This just leaves me with how to apply the finished marquetry to the surface of the board. I can think of several ways of doing it but they all have drawbacks...
1) Apply the finished marquetry to a 600mm x 600mm piece of plywood and saw it into quarters. The drawback being the lost material in the kerf of the saw cut and that, in veneering the cut sides, you can't have the picture overlap the side-veneer.
2) Create 4 separate marquetry segments and glue them to the 4 pieces of plywood. The drawback here being that the pieces might not align well.
3) Create one large marquetry piece and cut the finished work into 4 quarters before gluing it to the 4 separate base boards. The risk here is in misaligning the separate pieces slightly.
4) Create one large marquetry piece and glue it to the 4 separate base boards (taped together for a solid join), then cut (with a knife or very fine saw) the veneer along the base board seams. This seems like the best aproach as it avoids misalignment of the finished piece, a solid underpinning for cutting and (if a knife is used) no loss from the kerf of a saw blade), and allows me to apply the veneer to the sides of the base board and have the main picture face overlap it (or, the sides but up against the underside of the top veneer). The risk I see is that if the knife doesn't exactly follow the seam, then all is ruined.
How would you tackle this?
Thanks in advance.
I am planning to recreate a board game in marquetry. The board is 600mm x 600mm (24" x 24" in old money), and comes in 4 parts. The cardboard board folds-up like many board games but recreating it in wood will make this difficult.
I was planning on using four 300mm x 300mm (12" x 12") pieces of 24mm (1") plywood as the main substrate of the board and joining them together using bullet-shaped, 8mm brass alignment dowels.
This just leaves me with how to apply the finished marquetry to the surface of the board. I can think of several ways of doing it but they all have drawbacks...
1) Apply the finished marquetry to a 600mm x 600mm piece of plywood and saw it into quarters. The drawback being the lost material in the kerf of the saw cut and that, in veneering the cut sides, you can't have the picture overlap the side-veneer.
2) Create 4 separate marquetry segments and glue them to the 4 pieces of plywood. The drawback here being that the pieces might not align well.
3) Create one large marquetry piece and cut the finished work into 4 quarters before gluing it to the 4 separate base boards. The risk here is in misaligning the separate pieces slightly.
4) Create one large marquetry piece and glue it to the 4 separate base boards (taped together for a solid join), then cut (with a knife or very fine saw) the veneer along the base board seams. This seems like the best aproach as it avoids misalignment of the finished piece, a solid underpinning for cutting and (if a knife is used) no loss from the kerf of a saw blade), and allows me to apply the veneer to the sides of the base board and have the main picture face overlap it (or, the sides but up against the underside of the top veneer). The risk I see is that if the knife doesn't exactly follow the seam, then all is ruined.
How would you tackle this?
Thanks in advance.