Monday, January 30, 2012

Chests

This article is an excerpt from Glen Huey's Illustrated Guide to Building Period Furniture .

The Best Woodworking Plans Are Found Here


Then simply follow the steps below to create this heirloom project.


Block-front pieces may be the most sought-after American furniture style today, and the chest is the quintessential design. This sculpted gem from the Chippendale period is a superb example of what American craftsmen could deliver when challenged to move away from the more austere, flat fronts of the Queen Anne tradition.


Most major furniture centers built a version of the block-front chest, but this design was standard in the New England area, around Boston, Massachusetts. Specific features set this piece squarely in that region. The large dovetail that joins the two pieces of the bottom and the blocks that originate in the feet and terminate in the top are but two of these features.


Considered a round-blocked chest of drawers, this Boston beauty is a challenge to build and a triumph when finished. A materials list and PDF illustration can be downloaded HERE .



Step 1 This project begins by making the plywood template for the Drawer Dividers The radius for the Round portion of the piece is set at 15-3/4” The radius for the inside portion is 3/4”. Set up and layout one half of the template.



Step 2 Reset the same radius and draw the second half. Carefully cut and final shape the template.



Step 3 Mill the material for the Drawer Dividers, then use the template to mark the profile. Cut the close to the profile at the band saw, leaving a small amount to trim, position the pieces as shown, and trim to the final shape with a bottom mount bearing pattern bit and your router.



Step 4 Next, use a 1/2 rabbeting bit set for an 1/8 rabbet and place that cut directly into the middle of the Divider.



Step 5 This is an 1/8” corner beading bit to which I have changed the bearing (Increase the bearing size one step!) so that it will cut leaving an eighth inch of material. Set the bit to profile each edge of the Dividers.



Step 6 With the Dividers made we can begin the work on the Case. Lay out and create the pins on the Case Bottom after you have milled it to size



Step 7 After the pins are created, trim an 1/8” off of the pin area as shown. This will allow us to cove the dovetails with a 3/4” molding.



Step 8 Place the Bottom onto the Case Sides, aligning the back edges of the two pieces, and transfer the layout onto the Sides. Remove the waste area creating the tails and fit to joint making any necessary adjustments.



Step 9 Mill the Bottom Front to size and make the large dovetail that is XX” long x 1-1/2” wide, all centered in the piece. Cut the dovetail at the band saw and true up the edges. Next, position this piece to th...


The Best Woodworking Plans Are Found Here

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