08-24-2016, 09:18 PM
Stupid simple project - or is it? Thanks to a fellow woodnetter I have an ample supply of curly maple from which I intend to make bookshelves/cabinets that will reside above the kitchen style base cabs that I bought for my office. I know how to make a bookshelf from solid wood and I know how to make one from plywood. What I'm not sure of is how to mix the two. Consider that I've got appx. 24 lineal feet in 2 runs of 10' of shelving to make with two dead corners. I've got 8 visible ends (there's a window in there) that should be good wood but the rest could be made of maple ply. My thought has been to make the show faces from the curly maple and the rest from maple ply (edged with curly). Assuming that stretching the curly supply with ply is a good idea, how does one best mate the two?
The tops, being 8' in the air and topped with crown need not be primo wood, while the bottoms being more or less visible probably should be good stuff. At least one shelf will carry my xtra heavy LP collection (thinking of you Walt) and the rest will be books, so they need to be well built. How would you go about it?
Can't cross grain glue/screw/constrain solid to ply but you can solid to solid and ply to ply. What is your advice for the best mix of ply and solid?
The tops, being 8' in the air and topped with crown need not be primo wood, while the bottoms being more or less visible probably should be good stuff. At least one shelf will carry my xtra heavy LP collection (thinking of you Walt) and the rest will be books, so they need to be well built. How would you go about it?
Can't cross grain glue/screw/constrain solid to ply but you can solid to solid and ply to ply. What is your advice for the best mix of ply and solid?
Thanks, Curt
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"Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards."
-- Soren Kierkegaard
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"Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards."
-- Soren Kierkegaard