Showing posts with label Cupboard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cupboard. Show all posts

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Shaker Wall Cupboard

A classic form from the New Lebanon Shaker community is easy to build in a few hours.
By Christopher Schwarz
Page: 48-49


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If you don’t like nails, then perhaps you should turn the page. This small wall cupboard from the New Lebanon Shaker community bristles with them.


The carcase and stiles are nailed together with cut brads. The back is attached with clout nails. And the door is held flat with battens that are secured by clenched nails. I think the nails add to the piece, and, because there are so many different kinds, this project is an excellent introduction to 19th-century cut nails.


Quick Joinery – Quick Results
I’ve built quite a few of these cabinets in the last couple years because they are an excellent way to teach someone traditional joinery and they can be made quickly (my father received one last year that I banged out in a day).


Begin with the carcase. The carcase sides are the only pieces that have real joinery. Cut 3/8"-wide by

Get your bottom on. The thin exterior bottom piece is glued on. Clamp the assembly to your benchtop to help distribute the clamping forces.


3/16"-deep rabbets in the bottom edges of the sides. These receive the interior bottom piece. Cut 3/8"-wide by 3/16"-deep dados for the shelf.
Glue and nail the sides, bottom and shelf together. I used 2d cut headless brads that I set 1/32" below the surface.


True up all the edges of the assembled carcase then fit the two stiles on the front. They hold the carcase square. Glue and nail these in place with 2d cut headless brads and set those.


The thin top and bottom pieces are each attached in an unusual way. First round over the front edge and ends of each piece. The thin bottom is merely glued on to the carcase. Note that the bottom extends 1/4" beyond the back of the carcase, which creates a rabbet for the back. The top is glued and nailed to the stiles and carcase sides (don’t worry – it’s the back of the cupboard that handles all the weight).

Connect the dots. Drill a 1/4" hole for the top of the slot and a 3/8" hole at the bottom. Connect the holes with a coping saw.


Now deal with the back. Cut the ogee shapes on the top of the back piece. Then cut the slot that allows you to hang this cupboard on a peg or nail. Here’s how. Drill a 1/4" hole at the top of the slot. Drill a 3/8" hole at the bottom. Connect the two slots using a coping saw. Attach the back to the carcase using 2d clout nails (no glue).


Keep Your Door Flat
The door is a flat panel of wood. If you don’t apply some cross-grain battens to the back, it will warp in short order.


So fit the door in its opening and cut the mortises for your hinges. With the door moving freely, remove it from the cupboard and drill pilot holes through the door and battens for nails.


You will clench these nails, which means you’ll bend them over on the inside of the door. I used 2d cut headless brads. Drive them through the front of the door and through each batten.

Clenching is a cinch. Drive the tips of your headless brads back into the battens while the door rests on a metal surface.


When all the nails are driven in, turn the assembled door over onto a metal surface and hammer the tips of the nails. This will bend them over into the wood, securing them. Then cut the hinge gains, hang the door and make a turn to hold the door closed. The original also had a little knob, which is best turned on a lathe.


While the finished cabinet will have too much metal to pass through airport security, I guarantee the nails will help your piece last as long as the original. PWM


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Sunday, April 1, 2012

Reclaimed Redwood Table and Cupboard

Date



The young couple who purchased this table came to me with a very New York City situation. They had just moved into a beautiful one-bedroom apartment, and they were looking for a way to make the kitchen/livingroom feel a bit more like two rooms without sacrificing too much of the valuable space. The female in the couple is also a very good cook, and she was looking for a bit more storage for her kitchen. The male in the relationship is a writer, often works from home and was in need of a nice table for these long hours infront of a computer. We worked together and came up with the design for this table and cupboard combo. The table provides a place for both of them to work. It's narrow design breaks up the room, offers a desklike environment for him and great counterspace for her to create and then serve wonderful meals. The breadboard endings on the table provide visual reprieve for the table and cupboard's 9' length.


The wood for these pieces is also very special. This wood is was salvaged from an old pickle barrel that was 10' tall and 16' in diameter while it was being used, beginning in the 1940s. Working with this wood was a real pleasure, and its salt deposits glittered while I was working on the wood. Here is how the wood appeared when it came to me.



You can see the salt deposits on the side that was once the inside of the salt barrels. I left a bit of the salt deposits on the side of the cupboard.



The colors are brilliant in this wood and I'm looking forward to the next pieces made of this wood.


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