Advice on cutting tiny trim pieces - Printable Version +- Woodnet Forums (https://forums.woodnet.net) +-- Thread: Advice on cutting tiny trim pieces (/showthread.php?tid=7337968) Pages:
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Advice on cutting tiny trim pieces - MattP - 03-06-2018 Hello, all. Hope this finds you all well. I am mid-restoration/repair of a really nice olf mahogany table a friend of mine inherited. It was a wreck, but I have it mainly under control. I'm just looking for advice on how to cut these small pieces of trim. All told, I will need about a foot of it to replace where it is broken or missing. All I have figured out so far is to go ahead and carve it into a big mahogany block and then saw it off at the appropriate dimensions for width and thickness. What I actually have no idea how to do is to carve such a tiny profile. As the second picture shows, it is a quarter round about 1/4" tall. It's upside down in the picture, so, working from top to bottom in the picture, it is a convex round, then a tiny groove, then a tiny cove, so that the whole has a gentle S profile, more or less. I have carving gouges. They all seem a bit too big to do this profile. I could probably manage, but I am just wondering what is the "correct" way to cut this trim? Thanks. [attachment=8899] [attachment=8900] RE: Advice on cutting tiny trim pieces - MarkSingleton - 03-06-2018 Make a profile of what you need and then a scratch stock from that. [attachment=8905] RE: Advice on cutting tiny trim pieces - MattP - 03-06-2018 (03-06-2018, 08:29 PM)MarkSingleton Wrote: Make a profile of what you need and then a scratch stock from that. heh, now I feel like an person (begins with an i and ends with a t). Of course that is the correct way to do it. Thanks, Mark. RE: Advice on cutting tiny trim pieces - MarkSingleton - 03-06-2018 Hey, I'm the guy who spent twenty minutes in his shop today looking for something that was right in front of me!! RE: Advice on cutting tiny trim pieces - JimReed@Tallahassee - 03-06-2018 If I were doing it, I would use H&R planes to make about a foot of trim and then cut it to fit. Another way is to glue a block of wood into place and just carve it by hand. But there is a temporary way. You can use tinfoil to make a mold for a piece of paraffin wax trim. Then you can paint the wax and glue it into place as a temporary fix. I fixed a picture frame that way and the temporary fix worked for years. RE: Advice on cutting tiny trim pieces - Stwood_ - 03-06-2018 (03-06-2018, 08:29 PM)MarkSingleton Wrote: Make a profile of what you need and then a scratch stock from that. +1 RE: Advice on cutting tiny trim pieces - handi - 03-07-2018 Check out the “Skill Building” section of my website, I have three videos on making and using scratch stocks, and on making your own blades. Making a Scratch Stock The scratch stock is the perfect tool for this. RE: Advice on cutting tiny trim pieces - MattP - 03-25-2018 I started in on making my scratch stock almost immediately after Mark gave me the head slap I needed. But real life got in the way, and I was temporarily overwhelmed with paying refinishing jobs, so I had to set aside this project (which is an unpaid favor for a friend). Able to catch my breath today, and I finished up the project. The fence is a mahogany block. I didn't notice until I had it selected and roughed to size that it had a split in it. So I took some scrap tulipwood and glued it on the bottom where the split is. Then I realized that very hard tulipwood made a much better bearing surface for the thumbscrew that holds the arm in the fence than the walnut I had picked out to be the arm, so I glued a second scrap on there, too. So it is mahogany and tulipwood on the fence and walnut and tulipwood on the arm. The cutter is a piece of a Crown card scraper I never use. Just finished it with some BLO. It has a bunch of serious mistakes, but it is functional, and I'm actually pretty happy with how it came out. [attachment=9470] [attachment=9471] RE: Advice on cutting tiny trim pieces - blackhat - 03-25-2018 That's a pretty flash scratch stock. Nicely done. RE: Advice on cutting tiny trim pieces - Rob Young - 03-26-2018 (03-25-2018, 05:50 PM)MattP Wrote: I started in on making my scratch stock almost immediately after Mark gave me the head slap I needed. But real life got in the way, and I was temporarily overwhelmed with paying refinishing jobs, so I had to set aside this project (which is an unpaid favor for a friend). Able to catch my breath today, and I finished up the project. Looks good. Pull that profile stock up in close to the beam so it doesn't have quite so much flex when "scratching" and you should get a better surface. It may start to chatter of you work with it hanging out so far. Good luck fabricating the replacement parts. |