06-14-2016, 01:29 PM
I designed and built this vanity for one of our members using veneer he cut from some beautiful mahogany stock he's been hoarding.
It's built of Baltic birch plywood and the doors and drawer fronts were veneered using Weldwood Plastic Resin Glue in my vacuum bag. The finish is Lockwood's Brown Mahogany water soluble dye, mixed in 2 pints water. I sprayed a light coat and then wiped it with a paper towel to make sure it was as uniform as possible. Prior to that I sanded to 325 grit, raised the grain, and cut the whiskers with 600 grit. I had minimal grain raising from the dye.
The rest of the finish was one light, sprayed coat of Sealcoat shellac followed by 3 sprayed coats of GF's incredibly expensive EnduroVar Satin. The drawers and inside of the right cabinet were done the same minus the dye. The inside of the left cabinet has a coat of shellac, only.
The drawers are 1/2" BB ply joined with 1/2" finger joints and riding on Blum Tandem BluMotion slides.
The handles are from Lee Valley.
The drawer front below the sink tips out on some very clever soft close pivot hinges from RevaShelf. For $12 a pair they are a bargain. The little plastic trays were about $4 each.
[/image]
The two doors open with Blum BluMotion hinges and there is a pull out shelf mounted on a Blum bottom mount BluMotion slide specifically designed for this application.
The cabinets sit on a separate base made from 2 layers of 3/4" plywood, a simple ladder type construction. A mahogany toe kick, not shown, will trim out below the cabinets. There are scribe strips on both sides of the cabinet, too, also not shown, that attach to the cabinets with biscuits and a couple of screws from inside the cabinets.
Thanks for looking.
John
It's built of Baltic birch plywood and the doors and drawer fronts were veneered using Weldwood Plastic Resin Glue in my vacuum bag. The finish is Lockwood's Brown Mahogany water soluble dye, mixed in 2 pints water. I sprayed a light coat and then wiped it with a paper towel to make sure it was as uniform as possible. Prior to that I sanded to 325 grit, raised the grain, and cut the whiskers with 600 grit. I had minimal grain raising from the dye.
The rest of the finish was one light, sprayed coat of Sealcoat shellac followed by 3 sprayed coats of GF's incredibly expensive EnduroVar Satin. The drawers and inside of the right cabinet were done the same minus the dye. The inside of the left cabinet has a coat of shellac, only.
The drawers are 1/2" BB ply joined with 1/2" finger joints and riding on Blum Tandem BluMotion slides.
The handles are from Lee Valley.
The drawer front below the sink tips out on some very clever soft close pivot hinges from RevaShelf. For $12 a pair they are a bargain. The little plastic trays were about $4 each.
[/image]
The two doors open with Blum BluMotion hinges and there is a pull out shelf mounted on a Blum bottom mount BluMotion slide specifically designed for this application.
The cabinets sit on a separate base made from 2 layers of 3/4" plywood, a simple ladder type construction. A mahogany toe kick, not shown, will trim out below the cabinets. There are scribe strips on both sides of the cabinet, too, also not shown, that attach to the cabinets with biscuits and a couple of screws from inside the cabinets.
Thanks for looking.
John