Mr T
Established Member
For some time I have thought about offering a different sort of a chair making course. Most chair making courses are for turned chairs and not everyone likes turning (I know some people find this hard to believe!). So I was thinking of a course making a jointed chair. About a year ago a student showed me a picture of this chair which is occasionally made by students at the Krenov style colleges in the US. It’s a copy of a chair made by a friend of Krenov’s, Vidar Malmsten. I liked the mix of Chippendale with Scandinavian minimalism. So I thought if they can make it in California why not in Ilkley!
I am indebted to Craig Johnson at Studio Tupla in Minnesota, his blog on making the chair was very helpful. Woodbrains of this forum also helped in trying to track down some drawings, unfortunately this was unsuccessful.
In the absence of drawings I drew up my own workshop drawings using photographs from the internet. I then made a full size mock up in poplar. This was not fully jointed, only held together with screws, it was made just so I could check out the ergonomics. The design of the back is critical, I wanted the chair to be very comfortable so the angle of the back and the curvature of the splat were considered closely. I decided that back the was swept back too far making the sitter a bit too reclined, the seat was also a tad too deep. To adjust the back I just packed the crest rail forward to find the new angle.
Once I was happy with the comfort I drew the workshop drawing in detail. The drawing was very important in the making, being used as a reference throughout the project. In most projects time spent on the workshop drawing is well spent.
I thought about using dominos for the jointing but decided not to for three reasons:
1.The compound angles and curves would have made using the domino difficult, I thought mortice and tenons would be easier in this situation. Especially the way I had decided to do them.
2.The chair was a prototype for a course and I know that most students don’t have a domino, so using a domino would not have been appropriate
3.St James would have spun in his grave if he had known I was making the chair with dominos!
After drawing up a cutting list and preparing the parts I started by marking out the mortice positions on the legs.
Morticing the back legs was going to be tricky! I wanted to use a router as this is the most likely piece of kit for my students. I decided that this was best done before ny shaping of the legs. So when cutting out the back leg blanks I made sure there was a straight reference edge on the front that could be aligned on a vertical reference on the workshop drawing, this vertical reference was used as the datum for marking all the mortice positions on the back legs. I would then route mortices through the waste into the eventual positions of the legs within the blank. Marking and morticing the front legs was easier as they were not going to be curved, just tapered.
Morticing was done with an 8mm pocket hole bit from Wealden.
The long reach of the pocket hole enabled me to rout through the waste between the front reference edge of the back legs to the eventual leg position within the blank.
To cut the mortices for the cross rails in the back legs the fence ran against angled packing, the angle being picked from the workshop drawing.
A back leg blank with mortices cut.
After the mortices were cut the leg was trimmed to length on the table saw, the angle of the top cut being picked from the drawing.
A 10mm dowel hole was drilled at 90 degrees to the top end cut, this would eventually be for fitting the crest rail.
With all the jointing work done on the back legs they could be shaped. They were cut approximately to shape on the band saw, leaving about 2mm spare, then finally trimmed on the router table using a 50mm Easitip replaceable blade bearing guided cutter from Wealden. The template for this had previously been cut using a router and trammel.
The next job was to form the tenons using the table saw. More on this later.......