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No real problem with that wood movement wise. All the pieces have grain running in the same direction, and will move together. Of course it's only a screwed butt joint, so only as strong as the screws you use. but that wasn't the question.
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(01-04-2023, 11:38 AM)jteneyck Wrote: There must be some cleats running front to back, otherwise you'd have a bunch of separate frames with nothing holding them together. How those cleats are attached will influence whether the thing stays together over the long haul, but the boards are narrow enough that it probably doesn't matter.
John
That's what I thought, too. But I couldn't see any cleats holding the one visible interior surface, and the albums in the pic don't seem to have clearance for a cleat.
I wonder if the boards in the pictures item have been jointed and edge glued to make the tops and sides of each box a single unit. This might preclude the use of cleats.
Ray
(formerly "WxMan")
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Given that's cheap construction lumber, it almost has to be glued. The joints on the ends look pretty tight, and even "kiln-dried" construction lumber has a lot more moisture than equilibrium in most places. So if there were a cleat or something mechanical I would expect some shrinkage between boards. Glue, not so much.
I guess it's also possible that the wood was properly equalized in a shop before working. And I guess it's also possible that it was made by an actual skilled craftsman but made to look rustic and inexpensive because that's what the customer wanted.