gasman
Established Member
Dear all
After asking (and receiving) great advice a few weeks ago I have made good progress on my coffee table. I have some photos but did not take them at every stage so apologies for that. The design changed (obv) so that the main section is now a veneered panel measuring 600x1400 consisting of 4 matching pieces of burr walnut each measuring 310x1100 which were cut down to size.
Here are the veneers which I got from the Wood Veneer Hub https://www.thewoodveneerhub.co.uk.
They are outstanding and the guys there could not be more helpful - even sent me a damaged extra one free.
Heres the substrate - 18mm MDF cut oversize slightly
And this is the base. It looks complex but actually quite simple. 4 legs tapered in maple and with areas on 2 of the sides routed out to 0.5mm, then a piece of veneer glued in place and then 2.5mm ebony stringing cut in with a Proxxon mini router and then planed flat. The rails are done similarly and then the whole thing dominoed together. I wanted the dentil moulding that Linley uses on his tables (the whole thing does look just a teeny bit like a Linley design. Sorry about that )
After lots of humming and harring.. I bought a Bagpress mini pump and it was an outstanding purchase
I made a platen scored with 1mm cuts on the table saw and placed it all in the large bag (1800 x 800) they provided me with
I spent a long time getting the four pieces of veneer square and fitting each other and then taped it all up
I veneered the back with american black walnut and I did that first to test out the system. I used the D3 PVA glue that Bagpress recommended and I had read a huge amount online about the whole process. The veneer and substrate was face down on top of the platen
Then the 'moment cruciale' - the pump is fired up with and it all looks OK
I'm sorry I don't have a photo of the veneer burr walnut when it first came out of the bag - but it all worked out fine. In fact where the saw cut lines on the platen were there were a couple of rippled 'lines' in the burr because it had been 'sucked into' the void but I cut these carefully and reglued and all fine. I had to fill a few small defects which I did with CA glue and walnut dust
Then I planed it very carefully with a very sharp blade and sanded / scraped it flat. I trimmed the whole panel down to size and then glued on the 50mm maple edges
Ebony stringing was put in around the panel and the whole thing planed and smoothed.
I decided I wanted a glassy finish so used Rustins Plastic coating which I had last used 4 years ago but which was fine. I tested it first to see it was OK
After 3 coats with rubbing down after the first 2 we are here
Thanks for looking
Cheers Mark
After asking (and receiving) great advice a few weeks ago I have made good progress on my coffee table. I have some photos but did not take them at every stage so apologies for that. The design changed (obv) so that the main section is now a veneered panel measuring 600x1400 consisting of 4 matching pieces of burr walnut each measuring 310x1100 which were cut down to size.
Here are the veneers which I got from the Wood Veneer Hub https://www.thewoodveneerhub.co.uk.
They are outstanding and the guys there could not be more helpful - even sent me a damaged extra one free.
Heres the substrate - 18mm MDF cut oversize slightly
And this is the base. It looks complex but actually quite simple. 4 legs tapered in maple and with areas on 2 of the sides routed out to 0.5mm, then a piece of veneer glued in place and then 2.5mm ebony stringing cut in with a Proxxon mini router and then planed flat. The rails are done similarly and then the whole thing dominoed together. I wanted the dentil moulding that Linley uses on his tables (the whole thing does look just a teeny bit like a Linley design. Sorry about that )
After lots of humming and harring.. I bought a Bagpress mini pump and it was an outstanding purchase
I made a platen scored with 1mm cuts on the table saw and placed it all in the large bag (1800 x 800) they provided me with
I spent a long time getting the four pieces of veneer square and fitting each other and then taped it all up
I veneered the back with american black walnut and I did that first to test out the system. I used the D3 PVA glue that Bagpress recommended and I had read a huge amount online about the whole process. The veneer and substrate was face down on top of the platen
Then the 'moment cruciale' - the pump is fired up with and it all looks OK
I'm sorry I don't have a photo of the veneer burr walnut when it first came out of the bag - but it all worked out fine. In fact where the saw cut lines on the platen were there were a couple of rippled 'lines' in the burr because it had been 'sucked into' the void but I cut these carefully and reglued and all fine. I had to fill a few small defects which I did with CA glue and walnut dust
Then I planed it very carefully with a very sharp blade and sanded / scraped it flat. I trimmed the whole panel down to size and then glued on the 50mm maple edges
Ebony stringing was put in around the panel and the whole thing planed and smoothed.
I decided I wanted a glassy finish so used Rustins Plastic coating which I had last used 4 years ago but which was fine. I tested it first to see it was OK
After 3 coats with rubbing down after the first 2 we are here
Thanks for looking
Cheers Mark