MikeG.
Established Member
We just couldn't find what we were looking for, so my wife suggested I build it instead. So, I toddled off into the workshop, raided my off-cuts bin for some oak, and this is what I came up with:
Unless there is a good reason not to, I always do shoulders all around when doing M&Ts. Here, with these tiny mortises, the shoulders hide the damage done by levering the waste out of the joint. I was just about to scribe the shoulders for a really nice tight fit when a thought occurred to me. After a quick sketch on the back of a piece of scrap, I carried on:
I was just making this stuff up as I went along. I really enjoy doing that, but it doesn't always end well. We'll see:
I made this composite moulding because I don't have a spindle moulder, and my friend who does wasn't available. So, I had to come up with something I could do on my router table. Ideally I would have had a simple cove instead. Ho hum....
.....and a French cleat to hold the bottom in:
After a quick trip to the glaziers (who had three goes at cutting it!!), and £10 later:
Unless there is a good reason not to, I always do shoulders all around when doing M&Ts. Here, with these tiny mortises, the shoulders hide the damage done by levering the waste out of the joint. I was just about to scribe the shoulders for a really nice tight fit when a thought occurred to me. After a quick sketch on the back of a piece of scrap, I carried on:
I was just making this stuff up as I went along. I really enjoy doing that, but it doesn't always end well. We'll see:
I made this composite moulding because I don't have a spindle moulder, and my friend who does wasn't available. So, I had to come up with something I could do on my router table. Ideally I would have had a simple cove instead. Ho hum....
.....and a French cleat to hold the bottom in:
After a quick trip to the glaziers (who had three goes at cutting it!!), and £10 later: