First up - sorry for dragging this out but boy this is nothing to how long it took to make them - I may once have had dreams of being a cabinetmaker - I now know I am way too slow to make any money
anyway so far I've ripped off a design, made some carcasses (carcassi?) and fiddled about with bits of oak when I should have been working. And to be honest it's cos I'm scared of making the drawers not having done it before and doing a design with four different sized drawers on two units so eight drawers to do - blimey the enormity of it is starting to kick in
so wood all cut to size and thicknessed time to get out my trusty dovetail kit
I may have mentioned this before but I love my little saw - it's not a 'pedder special' but it's mine and I love it so there
with some help from this forum I went from bashing out ripped up rotten tooth looking tails like this
to smooth as baby's bum pared bottoms like this - thanks guys
sharpen your chisel take it slow and don't use a mallet if you were wondering - so tails sorted onto the pins - marked out as per Cosman - well maybe not quite but 'in the style of' and sawn down with my saw - I then got out all the waste like this
Does this still count as hand cut? I reckon it does its free hand routing after all - looks like this when it's done
be carefull though as you can get this - minor breakout!!
luckily it was on a bit i was going to remove later so no harm done - but a bit rubbish all the same - clean up the edges with a chisel and your dovetails are done
no pics of the glue up - next bit is to make space for my oak inserts so a whizz across the TS200 on my crosscut sled - several times
clean with chisel
finish off with (excuse for a) router table I found if i went straight to router it got a bit heavy - it was less stressful this way as the router had less to do and so behaved better - probably a technique issue.
to leave space for the insert
which when glued in all look like this (needing cleaning up and stuff)
Yes he said a little too smugly I do believe they are bookmatched
so a pile of offcuts soon to be slips - great way to use offcuts
run them over the router (6mm straight bit) note I label my push sticks - stops me throwing them away - I wouldn't want to lose a piece of equipment of that quality after all
I think I might have pushed them through the wrong way? I really cant wrap my head around router climbing cuts and stuff it will click one day.
whiz them along the table saw to size and plane off a corner and you have set of slips
glue them on - six spring clamps per slip - and you get
ready for the bases to slide in (no pics of that i'm afraid) I then applied my 'drawer fettling kit' to make them a piston fit (yeah right) guess which bit i used the most - yes the belt sander - next time it'll be the record 5.5 promise
and I ended up with drawers that looked about like this - which I am pretty pleased with for a first attempt - ok they're not all that good - and I had been practising dovetails for a while before I did it - but even so i'm a little bit proud
so nearly there - all that's left is the fiddling about, tidying up, finishing, fixing the **** ups etc etc which is the next instalment
must say thanks to Steve M (and others) for his advice on the slips in an earlier post I really was a bit stuck - couldn't visualise them at all so cheers
sorry for all the photo's - i've left out loads!!
Pete
anyway so far I've ripped off a design, made some carcasses (carcassi?) and fiddled about with bits of oak when I should have been working. And to be honest it's cos I'm scared of making the drawers not having done it before and doing a design with four different sized drawers on two units so eight drawers to do - blimey the enormity of it is starting to kick in
so wood all cut to size and thicknessed time to get out my trusty dovetail kit
I may have mentioned this before but I love my little saw - it's not a 'pedder special' but it's mine and I love it so there
with some help from this forum I went from bashing out ripped up rotten tooth looking tails like this
to smooth as baby's bum pared bottoms like this - thanks guys
sharpen your chisel take it slow and don't use a mallet if you were wondering - so tails sorted onto the pins - marked out as per Cosman - well maybe not quite but 'in the style of' and sawn down with my saw - I then got out all the waste like this
Does this still count as hand cut? I reckon it does its free hand routing after all - looks like this when it's done
be carefull though as you can get this - minor breakout!!
luckily it was on a bit i was going to remove later so no harm done - but a bit rubbish all the same - clean up the edges with a chisel and your dovetails are done
no pics of the glue up - next bit is to make space for my oak inserts so a whizz across the TS200 on my crosscut sled - several times
clean with chisel
finish off with (excuse for a) router table I found if i went straight to router it got a bit heavy - it was less stressful this way as the router had less to do and so behaved better - probably a technique issue.
to leave space for the insert
which when glued in all look like this (needing cleaning up and stuff)
Yes he said a little too smugly I do believe they are bookmatched
so a pile of offcuts soon to be slips - great way to use offcuts
run them over the router (6mm straight bit) note I label my push sticks - stops me throwing them away - I wouldn't want to lose a piece of equipment of that quality after all
I think I might have pushed them through the wrong way? I really cant wrap my head around router climbing cuts and stuff it will click one day.
whiz them along the table saw to size and plane off a corner and you have set of slips
glue them on - six spring clamps per slip - and you get
ready for the bases to slide in (no pics of that i'm afraid) I then applied my 'drawer fettling kit' to make them a piston fit (yeah right) guess which bit i used the most - yes the belt sander - next time it'll be the record 5.5 promise
and I ended up with drawers that looked about like this - which I am pretty pleased with for a first attempt - ok they're not all that good - and I had been practising dovetails for a while before I did it - but even so i'm a little bit proud
so nearly there - all that's left is the fiddling about, tidying up, finishing, fixing the **** ups etc etc which is the next instalment
must say thanks to Steve M (and others) for his advice on the slips in an earlier post I really was a bit stuck - couldn't visualise them at all so cheers
sorry for all the photo's - i've left out loads!!
Pete