Below some notes I made. Any thoughts or comments very welcome, I want the next one to be of a standard it could actually be installed and used!
Although I think I’ll make a couple of planes, then have a go at a box sash before doing another casement.
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Measuring up.
Look closely at existing windows everywhere - talks measurements, photos, do practice drawings. There are endless design variations. Measure, take notes. Make no assumptions or guesses. Very little is made "by the book"
Best of all is to do a few post mortems on dead windows if you can find them. Maybe ask your local plastic window man for stuff taken out?
Timber
US redwood is favourite but there are others often used
Rod
You need a tape measure, combi adjustable square, an ordinary set square nothing fancy, rubber, pencil sharpener.
No pens - it needs to be erasable. 2H pencil best
There's a pencil technique for accuracy and keeping a nice conical point on it - you spin it slightly as you draw a line so that wear is even all round
Draw boring
not needed anywhere
Franked
is not traditional, is weaker and more difficult
Mortices and tenons
ideally match the chisel available and use same mortice gauge set to mark both
Wedges
Chop wedge room straight after the mortices. one swipe with a chisel no great accuracy involved. Usually use an offcut of the tenons to make wedges as it is exactly the same width (or should be)
PS Mortice gauge has to be a pin gauge and is essential. Wheel gauges no good.