Fromey
Established Member
I'm making a set of shelves for my wife. Basic design is, two upright planks with horizontal dados that will house a series of shelves. It's effectively a very deep bookcase. I've cut the shelves (5 of them, each 18 mm thick) to width and depth. Now I want to make sure all the shelves are exactly the same width so they all fit into the uprights in the same way.
I only have hand tools available.
What I'm thinking of doing is ganging the shelves together on a flat surface with one end grain edge as the reference. I'll clamp them together with some jorgensen clamps and then plane the upright end grain all together until they are flat and square to both front and sides and with no twist (I'm hoping there will be minimum planing needed as they should be cut very close to identical already).
Dumb question: Is this a typical way of doing it? Is this the most effective way to ensure all the shelves are exactly the same width or is there some other "old-timer" technique that's better.
Thanks in advance.
I only have hand tools available.
What I'm thinking of doing is ganging the shelves together on a flat surface with one end grain edge as the reference. I'll clamp them together with some jorgensen clamps and then plane the upright end grain all together until they are flat and square to both front and sides and with no twist (I'm hoping there will be minimum planing needed as they should be cut very close to identical already).
Dumb question: Is this a typical way of doing it? Is this the most effective way to ensure all the shelves are exactly the same width or is there some other "old-timer" technique that's better.
Thanks in advance.