Sellers Home Bed: Episode 5
With almost no straight lines to the head and footboard posts, we use many techniques to get perfect results.
With almost no straight lines to the head and footboard posts, we use many techniques to get perfect results.
Chopping mortises that do not run parallel to the long axis of the wood requires additional techniques to ensure the walls are cut by severing the fibres as you chop to gain depth. Additionally, because the posts are curved, we cannot use the usual mortise guide to guarantee parallelity.
Cutting the joints for the bed frames, head and footboard, requires some shifts in perspective because they do not always parallel the long edge corners but follow curves as well. In this episode, Paul uses a couple of tools you may not have seen him use for joinery before.
To ensure the accuracy we need, it is often best to create a template to work with. That way, the template enables the markings and shapes to be transferable and retains a record and pattern for future use. In this episode, the steps are laid out to ensure complete success.
Paul may be criticised for playing in this episode, but once he created this mock-up, took it into the house from the garage, and set it up as a placeholder in the bedroom, Paul saw just exactly what he wanted to see; he needed to know exactly how it would fit into the limits of the bedroom.
This is the landing page for the Bed which Paul is making for Sellers Home. We will update with a proper introduction to the project shortly!
The final stages of any project are always interesting, like the final pieces to a three-dimensional jigsaw puzzle, only you made all the pieces and perfected the design yourself.
Hingeing the doors and hanging them to the main body of the cabinet necessitates precision so that the doors open and close well and also align in parallelity with the cabinet. The procedure guaranteeing our success has not changed in 300 years.
In this episode, we create the panels for the doors, fit them and then glue up the doors ready for fitting. We also move ahead with creating the divider rail to separate the drawer from the doors.
With both dovetailed ends of the drawer cut, fitted, and completed, it’s time to cut the three grooves to the front and sides of the drawer. This quick and simple process prepares us for laying out and cutting the housing dadoes to receive the drawer back.