PaxWorks
Established Member
My 2 year old son is about to be evicted from his cot to make room for a new tenant later this year and is in need of a new bed. I'm now in the classic position where the better half has found a picture of what she wants online, and I've volunteered to build it for twice the price and to a timescale that I definitely won't meet.
I've tried to reverse engineer a design for the bed in the picture below, but as I have no further detail than the picture itself and being fairly new to woodworking, I was hoping for some advice on materials and design.
Materials
For materials, I guessed the pictured piece was likely made from oak, but to keep costs down I was planning to build it from European steamed beech. It's readily available from my local hardwood merchant (Surrey Timbers) but I've never actually worked with it and wasn't sure if that would be a suitable choice? I don't have the machinery to mill rough sawn timber yet, so I would be looking at using 32mm PAR for the frame and 20mm dowel rod from a separate supplier for the bars.
Is there any reason not to used Beech? Is there a better alternative that would still be cost effective?
Design
I've thrown together a design in SketchUp to help get an idea of dimensions (largely dictated by standard mattress sizes) and create a cut-list.
The only real change I've made is the feet as I thought it would be easier to extend and add a taper to the stile (if that's even the right term?) rather than make separate pieces for the feet.
I would be planning on using mortice and tenon joinery throughout (which will need some serious practice ahead of time) and I think I have a solution for aligning the dowel rods between the upper and lower rails.
My main questions here are:
1. Would there be any concern about the long rails sagging across that distance and do I need to add any support in the middle?
2. Do I need to add an additional 900mm rail across the width in the middle or will the slats (to be made from plywood) give it enough strength?
Any advice / suggestions on design, materials, or joinery methods would be much appreciated. This will be the biggest furniture project I've done to date that wasn't made entirely from sheet goods and certainly more hand cut joinery than I will have done before, so want to make sure I give myself a decent chance of success from the start.
I've tried to reverse engineer a design for the bed in the picture below, but as I have no further detail than the picture itself and being fairly new to woodworking, I was hoping for some advice on materials and design.
Materials
For materials, I guessed the pictured piece was likely made from oak, but to keep costs down I was planning to build it from European steamed beech. It's readily available from my local hardwood merchant (Surrey Timbers) but I've never actually worked with it and wasn't sure if that would be a suitable choice? I don't have the machinery to mill rough sawn timber yet, so I would be looking at using 32mm PAR for the frame and 20mm dowel rod from a separate supplier for the bars.
Is there any reason not to used Beech? Is there a better alternative that would still be cost effective?
Design
I've thrown together a design in SketchUp to help get an idea of dimensions (largely dictated by standard mattress sizes) and create a cut-list.
The only real change I've made is the feet as I thought it would be easier to extend and add a taper to the stile (if that's even the right term?) rather than make separate pieces for the feet.
I would be planning on using mortice and tenon joinery throughout (which will need some serious practice ahead of time) and I think I have a solution for aligning the dowel rods between the upper and lower rails.
My main questions here are:
1. Would there be any concern about the long rails sagging across that distance and do I need to add any support in the middle?
2. Do I need to add an additional 900mm rail across the width in the middle or will the slats (to be made from plywood) give it enough strength?
Any advice / suggestions on design, materials, or joinery methods would be much appreciated. This will be the biggest furniture project I've done to date that wasn't made entirely from sheet goods and certainly more hand cut joinery than I will have done before, so want to make sure I give myself a decent chance of success from the start.
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