Tip of the hat to Clark Kellogg in a Fine Woodworking article for the inspiration on this.
I had a piece of tiger maple that needed to become something.
I see this site has picture rotation data problems. I tried a few things to make it port over correctly but . . . still sideways
. I tend to use SketchUp for design work. This is my take after seeing some of his beautiful pieces in this style.
I used knife hinges and a bunch-o-dominos for the vertical to horizontal joinery as Clark did.
The little walnut drawer units use splines for joinery. This seemed to work well for items of this scale. You can see here how some of the dividers and fixture parts are wedge-shaped. This follows the concave shape of the piece and helps visually.
I use little snips of wire or brazing rod (depending on scale) and epoxy to mount the ebony pulls. The wires acts like little dowels.
You can see the frame and panel back follows the form of the drawer unit here. This was a fun feature (also borrowed from Clark Kellogg) to add interest to the cabinet.
Here it is with a little more shellac work. The ebony pulls and the surrounding area get a bit of varnish to resist wear and ease cleaning. . I topped it off with paste wax.
I'm currently between shops but, wanted to post something so, this is from a year or so ago. I've done some other stuff since but, not as much fun as this one.
I had a piece of tiger maple that needed to become something.
I see this site has picture rotation data problems. I tried a few things to make it port over correctly but . . . still sideways
. I tend to use SketchUp for design work. This is my take after seeing some of his beautiful pieces in this style.
I used knife hinges and a bunch-o-dominos for the vertical to horizontal joinery as Clark did.
The little walnut drawer units use splines for joinery. This seemed to work well for items of this scale. You can see here how some of the dividers and fixture parts are wedge-shaped. This follows the concave shape of the piece and helps visually.
I use little snips of wire or brazing rod (depending on scale) and epoxy to mount the ebony pulls. The wires acts like little dowels.
You can see the frame and panel back follows the form of the drawer unit here. This was a fun feature (also borrowed from Clark Kellogg) to add interest to the cabinet.
Here it is with a little more shellac work. The ebony pulls and the surrounding area get a bit of varnish to resist wear and ease cleaning. . I topped it off with paste wax.
I'm currently between shops but, wanted to post something so, this is from a year or so ago. I've done some other stuff since but, not as much fun as this one.
When I was young I sought the wisdom of the ages. Now it seems I've found the wiz-dumb of the age-ed.