Hmmmm, your thread title enticed me in expecting something different
Made: yes.Has anyone ever made or used the three way corner mitre?
I did have doubts about the strength of the joint but having made a test piece I think it would be OK once glued. It was interesting to make but time-consuming. I'll probably never use it on a real project.From what I can glean it's what I call a youtube joint. Just for clicks
That does look better than my test piece. Maybe my hand work was not as tight a fit as it should have been. That wouldn't be the first time!The finished joint seems hugely strong without glue!
I can understand where you're coming from thinking of that type of joint as a YouTube joint, but an alternative, and much older name is Showcase Joint. Decades ago I was tasked by my employer with repairing an old Victorian showcase, a museum's I think, that included damage to one of the corner showcase joints. So, I've never made one but the one I fixed I'm fairly certain had pretty much the layout illustrated at 2 to 6 below, the image having been lifted from Ernest Joyce's The Technique of Furniture Making. Slainte.From what I can glean it's what I call a youtube joint. Just for clicks(with those tenons) but it is a superb three way interaction and I used machines to make in a few
Now I was thinking Japanese, but I’m not an expert and they probably both used it and also other joints that hold themselves together without glue.I believe there first use was in the ming dynasty but the ideas it works with are basically the same albeit with a few alternate methods to joint it. It's use in Chinese furniture is universal and still common now. The reason being its possible to round all the surfaces within the depth of the pointy wall on all three faces whilst still bringing it together with perfect mitres. We're the victorian showcases curved in that way? Or was it just a neat corner.
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