AndyBoyd
Established Member
My next project is looming ( a tall cupboard in the kitchen to cover a door that is blocked on the other side by the new piano)
My wife and I were very much impressed y the work of Duncan Gowdy and we'd like to build a cupboard in that style:
http://www.taunton.com/finewoodworking/SkillsAndTechniques/SkillsAndTechniquesArticle.aspx?id=31597
http://duncangowdy.com/artwork/312047.html
So I will make a tall cupboard (2100mm high by 780mm wide) with 3 drawers at the bottom and a long pair of cupboard doors at the top (1600mm high by ~390mm wide)
On this I will mimic the carving of the tree outlines covering both drawers and cupboard doors. (using a PC projector to let me trace the image from photos of trees in winter)
As this is to be carved I need to use solid wood and hence why I'm posting here - as cutting through veneer into plywood is not the visual effect we want
Duncan Gowdy places on his smaller doors a pair of battens across the back (which I presume is to minimise movement)
My question is I'd prefer to make these doors from a single piece of wood (25mm thick) bookmatched - will this due to the size of the doors give me horrendous wood moving problems? (luckily my local wood merchant can cut dry and plane wood for you to these sizes at a very small charge- as my machines will not handle such sizes)
I will put 3 battens horizontally across the back of each door and use 3 euro style cup hinges on each door (even might put knife hinges in but if the door moves they give me no adjustment).
I will use Blum Tandem (equiv) hidden slides on hand cut dovetailed drawers as these will be high use kitchen drawers
The choice of wood is probably be dutch sycamore (esdoorn) or Ash (as Gowdy does) the cabinet frame will be the same wood as the doors.
Anything else I can do to minimise wood movement?
Any guidance on this would be as ever much appreciated
and finally a happy new year everyone
My wife and I were very much impressed y the work of Duncan Gowdy and we'd like to build a cupboard in that style:
http://www.taunton.com/finewoodworking/SkillsAndTechniques/SkillsAndTechniquesArticle.aspx?id=31597
http://duncangowdy.com/artwork/312047.html
So I will make a tall cupboard (2100mm high by 780mm wide) with 3 drawers at the bottom and a long pair of cupboard doors at the top (1600mm high by ~390mm wide)
On this I will mimic the carving of the tree outlines covering both drawers and cupboard doors. (using a PC projector to let me trace the image from photos of trees in winter)
As this is to be carved I need to use solid wood and hence why I'm posting here - as cutting through veneer into plywood is not the visual effect we want
Duncan Gowdy places on his smaller doors a pair of battens across the back (which I presume is to minimise movement)
My question is I'd prefer to make these doors from a single piece of wood (25mm thick) bookmatched - will this due to the size of the doors give me horrendous wood moving problems? (luckily my local wood merchant can cut dry and plane wood for you to these sizes at a very small charge- as my machines will not handle such sizes)
I will put 3 battens horizontally across the back of each door and use 3 euro style cup hinges on each door (even might put knife hinges in but if the door moves they give me no adjustment).
I will use Blum Tandem (equiv) hidden slides on hand cut dovetailed drawers as these will be high use kitchen drawers
The choice of wood is probably be dutch sycamore (esdoorn) or Ash (as Gowdy does) the cabinet frame will be the same wood as the doors.
Anything else I can do to minimise wood movement?
Any guidance on this would be as ever much appreciated
and finally a happy new year everyone