07-23-2016, 09:59 AM
I started on this project in 2004 and worked on it through two house moves. The last work was done in 2007 and it has been hogging up the bench ever since. Now it is a shop mascot.
I used 5/4 rough sawn walnut as the main wood and gave it some sizzle with bookmatched birdseye maple door panels. Stock was prepped with a #40 and a #7. For the back, I split furring strips on the bandsaw and then shiplapped them using a #140 and turned the rough side out.
Beveling the door panels was challenging. I started with an old #46 and switched to a woodie skew rabbet door plane. The birdseye was gnarly and I finally finished with a LN #62. The rail and stile grooves were done with a #48 and then deepened with a Rumbold using a special blade I made.
My grandmother had a walnut corner cupboard that was made into a North Carolina house sometime before the Civil War. It was later converted into a free standing cupboard that was over seven feet tall. I studied it as a kid. The wood was 5/4 walnut and was hastily prepared. There was tearout visible on the door rails and stiles. This piece was inspired by that grand cupboard. I left plane marks and even some tear out. Here is a picture of the back of one of the doors.
Top notch brasses. Not permanently mounted. Here is a bag with the rest of the hardware, along with a mock up pattern of a door detail. I thought I might add a dust moulding to the door.
But now it sits on the end of the bench. Times have changed. There is nowhere to put it in my current house. My passion for large projects has waned. The remaining 5/4 walnut sits silently in the wood rack.
Looks like I will have a permanent shop mascot. Maybe I can use it for tool storage. Sometimes woodworking can leave you with a half finished project. Some of those are hope for the future, the "I will get around to it", projects. Some, however, may be destined to be dead ends. Those that started with hope and then just ran out of steam. If I were working for money, I would feel bad. But I am working for fun and fun was had. The project was enjoyable, especially the planning. I smile when I walk into the shop and see it. Even in its unfinished state, it has a presence and sits like it has a grand future. Ever the optimist...
I used 5/4 rough sawn walnut as the main wood and gave it some sizzle with bookmatched birdseye maple door panels. Stock was prepped with a #40 and a #7. For the back, I split furring strips on the bandsaw and then shiplapped them using a #140 and turned the rough side out.
Beveling the door panels was challenging. I started with an old #46 and switched to a woodie skew rabbet door plane. The birdseye was gnarly and I finally finished with a LN #62. The rail and stile grooves were done with a #48 and then deepened with a Rumbold using a special blade I made.
My grandmother had a walnut corner cupboard that was made into a North Carolina house sometime before the Civil War. It was later converted into a free standing cupboard that was over seven feet tall. I studied it as a kid. The wood was 5/4 walnut and was hastily prepared. There was tearout visible on the door rails and stiles. This piece was inspired by that grand cupboard. I left plane marks and even some tear out. Here is a picture of the back of one of the doors.
Top notch brasses. Not permanently mounted. Here is a bag with the rest of the hardware, along with a mock up pattern of a door detail. I thought I might add a dust moulding to the door.
But now it sits on the end of the bench. Times have changed. There is nowhere to put it in my current house. My passion for large projects has waned. The remaining 5/4 walnut sits silently in the wood rack.
Looks like I will have a permanent shop mascot. Maybe I can use it for tool storage. Sometimes woodworking can leave you with a half finished project. Some of those are hope for the future, the "I will get around to it", projects. Some, however, may be destined to be dead ends. Those that started with hope and then just ran out of steam. If I were working for money, I would feel bad. But I am working for fun and fun was had. The project was enjoyable, especially the planning. I smile when I walk into the shop and see it. Even in its unfinished state, it has a presence and sits like it has a grand future. Ever the optimist...
===---===---===---===---===---===---===---===---
Please visit my website
splintermaking.com
Please visit my website
splintermaking.com