Enjoy!
YouTube link to video is here.
Monday, December 31, 2012
Friday, December 21, 2012
Big News From PopWood
Please join me in a warm round of applause for Megan Fitzpatrick: the new Editor at Popular Woodworking Magazine!
I had the good fortune to work (remotely) with Megan for two years and witnessed her hard-working, attention-to-detail, nose-to-the-grindstone, and grace-under-pressure demeanor.
She will make an excellent Editor and I'm looking forward to her vision for the publication.
Congratulations, Megan!
I had the good fortune to work (remotely) with Megan for two years and witnessed her hard-working, attention-to-detail, nose-to-the-grindstone, and grace-under-pressure demeanor.
She will make an excellent Editor and I'm looking forward to her vision for the publication.
Congratulations, Megan!
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Sliding Lid Box
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If you research boxes from prior centuries, you'll find ones that are mitered, rabbeted, dovetailed, and butt-joined.
Then there's the question of how to attach the bottom.
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Pennsylvania Germans normally nailed or pegged the bottom board onto boxes and drawers, but if you prefer the look of a concealed bottom, you'll need to cut grooves.
If you cut the groove with an electric router, you can make stopped cuts, which means the groove will be completely hidden.
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However, if you want to use a plough plane, you'll need to think about the inevitable holes that will result from cutting the full length of the side pieces.
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So, I chose to use a butt joint instead, which left two square holes right in front of the box.
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Shape the pegs to fit with an inverted plane. You'll want to be careful with that exposed blade. |
The box above was made for a friend who loves chip carving and PA German pieces, and who wrote a nice article about me in a local paper (below).
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So, I edited the attached—thank you, Photoshop—and my revisions are in red. The text that's been covered with a red bar toward the end of the article is a statement that a good friend made that was way way way too generous. Thanks just the same, Alan.
The dovetailed box in the last image was one that I made at a demonstration, so it's not perfect, but certainly good enough to house scratch stock in my shop.
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I can't think of an easy way to cut a rabbet joint at the front of the box because of the groove for the lid, so I'd love to hear your ideas.
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