Tweedy
Established Member
Hello gang.
I'm doing some reconstruction work on a modern Gypsy Caravan, this involves a rebuild of the back walls, some improvements to water dispersal and some new windows and seating.
The attached picture is the new frame for the lower back wall. This also supports the bed and will barely be seen.
In spite of that, I put a bead on each of the visible faces to soften the edge. Any excuse to pull out a beading plane if I'm honest.
However where the vertical beads meet the horizontal beads looks... wrong.
I could plane down the verticals and set them back.
If i had left more length, i could have put in a notched overlap.
I could notch out a chamfer.
Is there a better way to do such a meeting in future?
I'm doing some reconstruction work on a modern Gypsy Caravan, this involves a rebuild of the back walls, some improvements to water dispersal and some new windows and seating.
The attached picture is the new frame for the lower back wall. This also supports the bed and will barely be seen.
In spite of that, I put a bead on each of the visible faces to soften the edge. Any excuse to pull out a beading plane if I'm honest.
However where the vertical beads meet the horizontal beads looks... wrong.
I could plane down the verticals and set them back.
If i had left more length, i could have put in a notched overlap.
I could notch out a chamfer.
Is there a better way to do such a meeting in future?