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January 10, 2010

Shaker Tables Part 3

So the final days of building the Shaker tables are here. After building the legs and mortising the sides, I focused my attention to the tops. Made from Curly Cherry the tops will be the focal point of the tables. I glued the tops up to 16" wide x 18" long and smoothed them with a smoothing plane. I used story stick to gauge my progress to make sure the tops were perfectly flat.

 

Story sticks are nothing more than two pieces of wood with contrasting wood on top. You sight down the piece you're planing to see if the two stick are nonparallel. If they are parallel then you know your piece is flat. It's a trick that woodworkers have been using for centuries. I wanted to plane the tops instead of using sandpaper so that when you rub your hand over top of it, you can feel the slight variations that the plane blade has made letting you know that the tables were hand made. It's the little details like this that sets my furniture apart from big furniture manufacturers.

 

When I finished planing the tops, I flipped them over and routed a 45 degree chamfer to the underside. This will give the table a lighter look.

 

After the tables were built, I started to mill out the lumber for the drawers. I used 1/2" thick soft maple for the sides and routed a 1/4" groove a 1/2" up from the bottom on all of the pieces. Then I laid out half blind dovetails and hand cut them with a dovetail saw and a set of chisels. Hand cut dovetails don't look as perfect as ones that are cut with router and dovetail jig but that's the point. I want the drawers to look like were down by hand and the slightest imperfections in size will catch the human eye.

 

Once the joinery was cut on all four drawers I dry fit them to make sure they are square. It's a lot easier to spend time now making drawers square than to try to custom fit a rhombus shaped drawer into a square drawer opening.

   

The final process in building the tables were to install drawer runners and cleats to hold down the top. Now it's off to the finishing room where I applied five coats of an oil - polyurethane and finalized the top with paraffin oil and 600 grit sandpaper. The inside of the drawers were coated with two coats of shellac so that the drawer won't have an odor when you open it.

 

Four completed shaker tables. The hand cut dovetails and the branding of my logo on the side adds a touch of class.

 

 

 

 

 

 

January 04, 2010

Shaker End Tables Part 2

After I got all my parts milled out I needed to cut the tapers on the legs. I whipped up a tapering jig from a scrap piece of plywood. Making the jig was a cinch. All I had to do is figure out where I wanted the taper to start on the leg (6" from the top) and where it would end (3/4" thick foot). Then I nailed strips of thin plywood around the leg to hold it in place.

 

I slid the jig over on the table saw so that the blade barely touches the pencil line to start the cut. Then I ripped the piece off and flipped the leg 90 degrees to taper the other side. Once all the legs were tapered, I gathered them all up in sets of fours and taped them together. That way  I wouldn't be confused which direction they go.

 

After I got down with the tapering, I planed them smooth and beaded the straight edge on each leg with my Stanley No 66 beading plane. The bead also helped me identified which side of the leg gets the mortise. It got really confusing sometimes but once I marked the proper location of each leg it became a lot simpler.

 

I used loose mortise and tenon joinery and cut my mortises with a Beadlock joinery jig. I'm not going to waste your time about how I actually cut the mortises because I found the jig to be a piece of shit. It was difficult to align the mortises with each other and I was constantly fiddling around with the jig to make the joint work. Next time I make these tables I'll find another way to make the mortise and tenons.

 

 

Once all the joints were cut, I dry fitted the three sides together and laid out where the top and bottom front rails would go for the drawer.

  

The top of the front rail is cut with a simple dovetail joint while the bottom is a small mortise and tenon. Both were cut using hand tools and they are very simple joints to make. I drilled out the pin part of the dovetail and the mortise using a 5/8" Forster bit. each joint took about five minutes to complete.

 

After everything was dry fitted, I glued and clamped each table together. I let them sit in clamps over night to make sure the glue sets. I'll work on the tops next.