I made three of these to contain some small family heirlooms for gift-giving. The wood is mahogany with quarter-sawn sycamore as the contrasting species, and used only hand tools except for the long rip cuts. General Finish's Tried and True is the wipe-on finish.
One thing is for certain though. Whichever method you use, you can be absolutely certain that you are most assuredly doing it wrong. Axehandle, 2/24/2016 Do not get in to much of a hurry buddy... Arlin, 5/18/2022 Apology excepted. TT. 2/25/20223
(12-26-2022, 02:39 PM)Mike Brady Wrote: I made three of these to contain some small family heirlooms for gift-giving. The wood is mahogany with quarter-sawn sycamore as the contrasting species, and used only hand tools except for the long rip cuts. General Finish's Tried and True is the wipe-on finish.
Nice tight work Mike. I know the quarter sawn sycamore can be challenging to work with as it can be a bit brittle, but nothing looks quite like it.
Ron
"which plane should I use for this task?......the sharp one"
Thanks for the comments, guys. Regarding the appearance of the sliding top, my phone camera really exagerated the perspective. It looked fine in real life.
Quarter-sawn sycamore: I was in a Frank Lloyd Wright home in the south suburbs of Chicago where the master bedroom wardrobe area was entirely in this wood. With that much age, the color had really carmelized to a rich medium brown. All of the drawers and cabinetry are built-ins of this species. Magnificent!
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