I'm making poplar models for my next piece. I have these legs with rounded profiles, where the upper part is smaller than the lower part. They are rounded, might be hard to tell in the picture. Cutting the ledge, and rounding the top and bottom, are not terribly difficult.
But I wanted an angled bevel at the transition, not a ledge. How to mark a parallel line to define the bottom of the bevel? The world's simplest marking gauge. Scrap wood, a few seconds at the router table, and an Xacto blade with a little epoxy on it. Works perfectly. See scribed line (darkened with pencil) above.
Now the question. Looking at the top pic, pretend I have rounded the top, but the bottom is still square. I need to mark on the ledge, evenly, 1/8" (or thereabouts, but must be consistent all the way around) away from the rounded top part. That defines the bottom profile I will plane down to.
If I had a 1/8" thick flexible.... thing... that I could wrap around and trace with a pencil, boom. Done. Probably some ordinary household object, but I'm out of ideas. Thoughts?
Thanks in advance.
But I wanted an angled bevel at the transition, not a ledge. How to mark a parallel line to define the bottom of the bevel? The world's simplest marking gauge. Scrap wood, a few seconds at the router table, and an Xacto blade with a little epoxy on it. Works perfectly. See scribed line (darkened with pencil) above.
Now the question. Looking at the top pic, pretend I have rounded the top, but the bottom is still square. I need to mark on the ledge, evenly, 1/8" (or thereabouts, but must be consistent all the way around) away from the rounded top part. That defines the bottom profile I will plane down to.
If I had a 1/8" thick flexible.... thing... that I could wrap around and trace with a pencil, boom. Done. Probably some ordinary household object, but I'm out of ideas. Thoughts?
Thanks in advance.
Best,
Aram, always learning
"Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.” Antoine de Saint-Exupery
Web: My woodworking photo site
Aram, always learning
"Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.” Antoine de Saint-Exupery
Web: My woodworking photo site