I'm building another hallway table for a lady I made a similar one for last year. This one is wider and shorter to fit a spot not far from the other. The drawing of it looks like this.
The legs are tapered on both inside faces, from 1-1/2" down to 3/4" at the floor. I'm using white oak, except I didn't have any heavy enough stock for the legs, but I do have
Burr Oak, a member of the white oak family with a slightly greener look, but since it will be stained an almost opaque gray I think it will be OK.
I got the leg stock planed to just over 1-1/2" and then made a sled to cut the tapers. There are many ways to make a sled, some incredibly simple. This one is not too far above that. It's just a piece of 3/4" plywood with a stop at the back, and some fences screwed to it so the foot ends up just over 3/4" with the right taper up to 6-5/8" below the top of the leg. You just butt the leg against the stop and fence, adjust the fence until it just kisses the edge of the plywood, and run it through.
It all went w/o issue - until I put the four legs together in the orientation they needed to be. Rut ro Rover:
I started with stock that had only been planed to thickness and not ripped into 1-1/2" squares. That shortcut caused me to have to index all four pieces of stock on the sled with the same orientation, instead of two with the grain at 90 degrees. I would have seen the problem had I tried to put this diagram on the ends before I cut them. OK, what to do. I had enough stock to make two new ones, but I didn't like the face grain on the one exposed face. This could be avoided by using rift sawn stock, but I didn't have any that thick, and didn't feel like making any from thinner stock. So I decided to sand down the face grain face by 1/16" and then glue on a piece of quarter/rift sawn veneer.
I needed to make another sled to accommodate the tapered face of the legs so that the face I needed to sand was parallel with the base. One of the tapered cutoffs was the perfect solution. I slid it under a leg until it was at a constant height above the base, and then glued it to the sled with hot melt.
Off to the drum sander to remove 1/16". When that was done on all 4 legs, I cut some veneer and ran it through the drum sander to get my 1/16" veneer. I traced the shape of the leg onto the veneer, rough cut it on the bandsaw, and then glued it to the leg.
When the glue was dry I used a palm router with a flush trim bit to trim the veneer.
I prefer to use a handheld router over the router table because I can safely run a climb cut, something I'd not want to attempt on the router table. A climb cut all but eliminates the risk of tearout, a real risk with this oak and with the way the grain was running. After the veneer was trimmed and a little sanding, I had this:
The seam is almost impossible to see and will be if I run a small chamfer on the edges. So now the legs have quarter/rift sawn grain on 3 faces. The plain sawn on the last face is oriented so it is least likely to be seen where the table will be located. Of course, I could have added a piece of veneer to the fourth face, too, but didn't feel it was necessary.
And that's it for today. Thanks.
John
The legs are tapered on both inside faces, from 1-1/2" down to 3/4" at the floor. I'm using white oak, except I didn't have any heavy enough stock for the legs, but I do have
Burr Oak, a member of the white oak family with a slightly greener look, but since it will be stained an almost opaque gray I think it will be OK.
I got the leg stock planed to just over 1-1/2" and then made a sled to cut the tapers. There are many ways to make a sled, some incredibly simple. This one is not too far above that. It's just a piece of 3/4" plywood with a stop at the back, and some fences screwed to it so the foot ends up just over 3/4" with the right taper up to 6-5/8" below the top of the leg. You just butt the leg against the stop and fence, adjust the fence until it just kisses the edge of the plywood, and run it through.
It all went w/o issue - until I put the four legs together in the orientation they needed to be. Rut ro Rover:
I started with stock that had only been planed to thickness and not ripped into 1-1/2" squares. That shortcut caused me to have to index all four pieces of stock on the sled with the same orientation, instead of two with the grain at 90 degrees. I would have seen the problem had I tried to put this diagram on the ends before I cut them. OK, what to do. I had enough stock to make two new ones, but I didn't like the face grain on the one exposed face. This could be avoided by using rift sawn stock, but I didn't have any that thick, and didn't feel like making any from thinner stock. So I decided to sand down the face grain face by 1/16" and then glue on a piece of quarter/rift sawn veneer.
I needed to make another sled to accommodate the tapered face of the legs so that the face I needed to sand was parallel with the base. One of the tapered cutoffs was the perfect solution. I slid it under a leg until it was at a constant height above the base, and then glued it to the sled with hot melt.
Off to the drum sander to remove 1/16". When that was done on all 4 legs, I cut some veneer and ran it through the drum sander to get my 1/16" veneer. I traced the shape of the leg onto the veneer, rough cut it on the bandsaw, and then glued it to the leg.
When the glue was dry I used a palm router with a flush trim bit to trim the veneer.
I prefer to use a handheld router over the router table because I can safely run a climb cut, something I'd not want to attempt on the router table. A climb cut all but eliminates the risk of tearout, a real risk with this oak and with the way the grain was running. After the veneer was trimmed and a little sanding, I had this:
The seam is almost impossible to see and will be if I run a small chamfer on the edges. So now the legs have quarter/rift sawn grain on 3 faces. The plain sawn on the last face is oriented so it is least likely to be seen where the table will be located. Of course, I could have added a piece of veneer to the fourth face, too, but didn't feel it was necessary.
And that's it for today. Thanks.
John