01-07-2015, 09:19 AM
As I mentioned in my new year's post building a bed has been on my to-do list for quite a while and I finally started to make some progress. I've put pictures and a full write up on the progress to date on my blog here but will post a few details here as well for those of you that are too lazy to click the link
The design is a close copy of a shaker design I found on Google images from Vermont Wood Studios. The first step was to draw up a sketchup model to figure outo the details and dimensions for a queen size mattress.
I then started selecting lumber and rough milling for the corner posts and headboard and footboard. I have been luck to pick up nice stash of walnut from various craigslist posts over the past few years and have a few really thick 12/4 and up timbers for the legs as well as some really nice air dried 16" wide boards for the head and foot. Here you can see my Roubo being stretched to hold one of the wide planks while I jointed the edge.
For the headboard and footboard I flattened one face with a jack plane before feeding the planer a mouthful.
I built a shooting board (this was the first time I ever came across a need for one) and shot the ends true after crosscutting them by hand.
I then shifted over to the corner posts to layout and chop the mortises. The full depth mortises were hogged out with the hollow chisel mortiser but the shallow groove between them was done by hand with chisels and the router plane.
I then roughed in the tenons with a dado stack, divided them with my new Bad Axe sash saw (man that is a nice saw), and removed the waste between them with a coping saw.
After some tweaking and trimming with a chisel, shoulder plane, and block plane both joints fit nice and tight and I could dry fit the footboard.
At this point I am in the middle of the cutting the same joinery on the headboard but progress will likely stall for awhile since my shop is unheated and based on the current forecast for the next week or so we will be lucky to break 10 degrees.
More updates to come...
The design is a close copy of a shaker design I found on Google images from Vermont Wood Studios. The first step was to draw up a sketchup model to figure outo the details and dimensions for a queen size mattress.
I then started selecting lumber and rough milling for the corner posts and headboard and footboard. I have been luck to pick up nice stash of walnut from various craigslist posts over the past few years and have a few really thick 12/4 and up timbers for the legs as well as some really nice air dried 16" wide boards for the head and foot. Here you can see my Roubo being stretched to hold one of the wide planks while I jointed the edge.
For the headboard and footboard I flattened one face with a jack plane before feeding the planer a mouthful.
I built a shooting board (this was the first time I ever came across a need for one) and shot the ends true after crosscutting them by hand.
I then shifted over to the corner posts to layout and chop the mortises. The full depth mortises were hogged out with the hollow chisel mortiser but the shallow groove between them was done by hand with chisels and the router plane.
I then roughed in the tenons with a dado stack, divided them with my new Bad Axe sash saw (man that is a nice saw), and removed the waste between them with a coping saw.
After some tweaking and trimming with a chisel, shoulder plane, and block plane both joints fit nice and tight and I could dry fit the footboard.
At this point I am in the middle of the cutting the same joinery on the headboard but progress will likely stall for awhile since my shop is unheated and based on the current forecast for the next week or so we will be lucky to break 10 degrees.
More updates to come...