I'm making a small staked chair for one of my girls, and to extend my skills I'd quite like to steam bend the crest rail rather than carving it out of a large blank. Since this is my first attempt at a chair I'm using up some maple which has been sitting on a shelf for several years since I decided against the project I planned to use it for.
The cross section of the rail will be 2½" x ¾" which I very much doubt I could bend. However, I thought it might be possible to resaw/plane down to ¼" and then steam and laminate a stack of three.
Firstly is there any reason this approach would be doomed to failure (before I commit to prepping the stock)? And secondly any recommendation for best glue for this operation? I've got titebond 1, titebond3, some titebond liquid hide (out of date) or resintite (cascamite?) on the shelf, have already discounted gorilla PU as inappropriate. Oh, there's some West epoxy up there too.
Cheers
G
The cross section of the rail will be 2½" x ¾" which I very much doubt I could bend. However, I thought it might be possible to resaw/plane down to ¼" and then steam and laminate a stack of three.
Firstly is there any reason this approach would be doomed to failure (before I commit to prepping the stock)? And secondly any recommendation for best glue for this operation? I've got titebond 1, titebond3, some titebond liquid hide (out of date) or resintite (cascamite?) on the shelf, have already discounted gorilla PU as inappropriate. Oh, there's some West epoxy up there too.
Cheers
G