05-05-2020, 09:54 AM
I made this cabinet to fill the corner where our couch and love seat meet in the living room from a walnut tree I helped take down last year.
Quite a few challenges but with lots of time on my hands with the virus lock down it gave me something else to focus on. The larger panels are shop sawn veneer on Baltic birch plywood. For the curious, all the bent laminations were done on a single form. Here's a shot of the form as I was gluing up the laminations for the drawer front.
A RAS is a lifesaver at times. I used it to cut the door widths to final dimension. Not sure how else I would have done it, but I'm sure it would have been harder.
The sides are somewhat visible so I used frame and panel construction for them.
I rarely use butt hinges on cabinet doors, but they seemed like the appropriate choice for this cabinet.
The drawer slides on a single, center undermount slide. I used some ambrosia maple I milled last year for the drawer sides.
The finish was Transtint Dark Walnut dye in DNA applied by hand with a stain sponge. Best method yet for doing it by hand. Those applicators are terry cloth over a foam core and it holds plenty of dye solution without dripping so you can do larger areas quickly. The finish is Arm-R-Seal satin, 4 or 5 coats applied with a blue shop towel.
John
Quite a few challenges but with lots of time on my hands with the virus lock down it gave me something else to focus on. The larger panels are shop sawn veneer on Baltic birch plywood. For the curious, all the bent laminations were done on a single form. Here's a shot of the form as I was gluing up the laminations for the drawer front.
A RAS is a lifesaver at times. I used it to cut the door widths to final dimension. Not sure how else I would have done it, but I'm sure it would have been harder.
The sides are somewhat visible so I used frame and panel construction for them.
I rarely use butt hinges on cabinet doors, but they seemed like the appropriate choice for this cabinet.
The drawer slides on a single, center undermount slide. I used some ambrosia maple I milled last year for the drawer sides.
The finish was Transtint Dark Walnut dye in DNA applied by hand with a stain sponge. Best method yet for doing it by hand. Those applicators are terry cloth over a foam core and it holds plenty of dye solution without dripping so you can do larger areas quickly. The finish is Arm-R-Seal satin, 4 or 5 coats applied with a blue shop towel.
John