11-02-2017, 08:11 PM
I got a call last week from a lady who bought a house in Niagara Falls with good bones. That's a nice way of saying a real fixer upper. Built in 1920, tudor style. She and her husband are rehabbing it themselves with the intention of selling it and moving back to FL. I'm not sure how much hubby is doing but this girl was all in. She had the ceiling in the kitchen torn out doing duct work and plumbing to the bathroom above, drywall work in other rooms, had put in a new floor in another room, had restored and remounted the mantle above the fireplace that she found in the attic, and had stripped a lot of the original red oak molding downstairs. Oh, and she works 2 jobs, too, and has a kid.
She had widened the doorway between the kitchen and dining room, and had reused the moldings on the sides but needed new pieces of matching molding to fit over the top. She got to me from another person I had done work for in NF.
The cap molding was easily made on the tablesaw and router table. The main piece, however, had a profile that I did not have a router bit for, and for which may not exist, nor did i have a molding knife that matched, so I decided to make a scratch stick to cut it. Here's what the original molding looked like (this one's pine, but the one she needed is oak):
I used a piece of metal from a joist hanger to fashion a scratch stick to match that profile on the left edge. I used my chainsaw chain sharpener, a bench grinder, and files to shape it.
Then I made a little cradle to hold the scratch stick so it couldn't slip left/right and to limit the depth of cut.
I defined the deep part of the molding with a cut on the TS, and cut a rabbet to define the tongue on the left edge, then tilted the blade and cut off some of the waste to reduce the amount the scratch stick had to remove.
I took about 15 minutes of work for the scratch stick to do the 8' long piece. I had a pretty good head of steam worked up when it was done.
And here are the two pieces of new molding.
I think she'll be pleased. And I think she may be calling me again in the near future with more work.
Hope you enjoyed that.
John
She had widened the doorway between the kitchen and dining room, and had reused the moldings on the sides but needed new pieces of matching molding to fit over the top. She got to me from another person I had done work for in NF.
The cap molding was easily made on the tablesaw and router table. The main piece, however, had a profile that I did not have a router bit for, and for which may not exist, nor did i have a molding knife that matched, so I decided to make a scratch stick to cut it. Here's what the original molding looked like (this one's pine, but the one she needed is oak):
I used a piece of metal from a joist hanger to fashion a scratch stick to match that profile on the left edge. I used my chainsaw chain sharpener, a bench grinder, and files to shape it.
Then I made a little cradle to hold the scratch stick so it couldn't slip left/right and to limit the depth of cut.
I defined the deep part of the molding with a cut on the TS, and cut a rabbet to define the tongue on the left edge, then tilted the blade and cut off some of the waste to reduce the amount the scratch stick had to remove.
I took about 15 minutes of work for the scratch stick to do the 8' long piece. I had a pretty good head of steam worked up when it was done.
And here are the two pieces of new molding.
I think she'll be pleased. And I think she may be calling me again in the near future with more work.
Hope you enjoyed that.
John