gasman
Established Member
First up I had to cut up my two amazing sheets of Spanish walnut. These measured 1350x700 and had to be cut down to 1000x520
I actually cut them both together and ended up with 2 pieces that were so beautiful. Half of this Spanish walnut had an amazing ripple effect so I cut it appropriately to maximise the ripple in these pieces
I had a sheet of 0.5mm thick plastic sheeting which I cut into 10mm strips which were going to go between adjacent strips during the glue up
My original intention was to do the veneering in the vacuum bag - which was stressing me a little as time is short when getting stuff ready to go in the bag and there is always the possibility for slight movement as one puts the items in the bag before the vacuum takes effect. There obviously cannot be any mistakes here as the veneer pattern on strips has to be completely continuous.
I decided to glue up the first slat on each sheet by hand to give me a solid reference face
These two will be the rearmost slats - ie the pieces which will meet together at the rear of the cabinet when the tambour is opened
Actually once I had done here two I decided it would be easier to glue up the slats 15 at a time under direct pressure on the benchtop. The metal container is full of cut-up lead sheet and weighs about 50kg so I used that to put pressure on the rear of the slats and then clamped the front to the bench
So after 4 glue ups I had done one side - 64 slats in total - marked in order in readiness for them being separated - and with the final slat (ie the ones which will meet at the front) not done yet as I need to think about the handles. I might make these front two slats solid walnut with a shaped handle rather like the ones that Richard Jones / Sgian Dubh has on his Torpedore cabinet but need to give some thought to that.
More after the weekend - any questions comments welcome
Regards Mark
I actually cut them both together and ended up with 2 pieces that were so beautiful. Half of this Spanish walnut had an amazing ripple effect so I cut it appropriately to maximise the ripple in these pieces
I had a sheet of 0.5mm thick plastic sheeting which I cut into 10mm strips which were going to go between adjacent strips during the glue up
My original intention was to do the veneering in the vacuum bag - which was stressing me a little as time is short when getting stuff ready to go in the bag and there is always the possibility for slight movement as one puts the items in the bag before the vacuum takes effect. There obviously cannot be any mistakes here as the veneer pattern on strips has to be completely continuous.
I decided to glue up the first slat on each sheet by hand to give me a solid reference face
These two will be the rearmost slats - ie the pieces which will meet together at the rear of the cabinet when the tambour is opened
Actually once I had done here two I decided it would be easier to glue up the slats 15 at a time under direct pressure on the benchtop. The metal container is full of cut-up lead sheet and weighs about 50kg so I used that to put pressure on the rear of the slats and then clamped the front to the bench
So after 4 glue ups I had done one side - 64 slats in total - marked in order in readiness for them being separated - and with the final slat (ie the ones which will meet at the front) not done yet as I need to think about the handles. I might make these front two slats solid walnut with a shaped handle rather like the ones that Richard Jones / Sgian Dubh has on his Torpedore cabinet but need to give some thought to that.
More after the weekend - any questions comments welcome
Regards Mark