Classic Arts and Crafts Furniture 14 Timeless Designs-2

(Bozica Vekic) #1

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measurements and check the fi t by placing a corner in the mortise.


When the corner can be placed in the mortise I stop. The tenon


will be too tight at this point, but it will be close to fi tting. The last


little bit of thickness will be removed with a fl oat in the next step.


The tenons can be cut at the table saw, but that introduces


some risk, and it can be awkward to hold the work on end against


a miter gauge or crosscut sled. Cutting the tenons by hand is as


fast and accurate. After double-checking the layout and mark-


ing with a knife, I cut the long edges of the tenons, and the two


outside edges by hand.


The waste in between the two tenons is another story. I cut


most of it away with a jigsaw, then clamped a straightedge along


the shoulder. With the straightedge in place, I cut a clean edge at


the shoulder line with a fl ush-trim bit in the router.


Before testing the fi t, I cut a slight chamfer around the inside


edge of the mortise, and around the outermost end of the tenon.


This helps to get the tenons started for fi tting, and keeps the


tenon from chipping out the grain on the outside of the mortise.


Fitting these joints is a bit like detective work. In theory, they


should fi t at this point, but in reality there will be a bit of wood


somewhere that keeps the joint from going home. When the joint


sticks, these points need to be found and removed. If you guess


and remove material in the wrong place, the result will be a gap in


the fi nished joint.


Fit Without a Conniption Fit


I push the tenons in as far as I can, then tap on the end of the


board a couple times with a dead-blow mallet. When I was


younger and my eyes were better, I could see the shiny spots


on the tenon where the joint is too tight. These days, I pull out


a pencil and draw cross-hatched lines on the tenon and try the


fi t again. The graphite smears where the joint rubs, showing the


high spots. These can be removed with a shoulder plane, but


16"


11 ⁄ 4 " 11 ⁄ 4 "


11 ⁄ 4 "


21 ⁄ 4 "


23 ⁄ 8 "


23 ⁄ 8 "


6"


(^1) ⁄ 2 "
(^1) ⁄ 2 "
(^3) ⁄ 4 "
41 ⁄ 2 "
2"1" 2"
1"
You need more clamps. The mitered lap joints in the center of the assembly will tend to pop up
as clamp pressure is applied to the ends. Battens across the faces hold things together.
Payday. Flush the surfaces of the completed joints with
a sharp block plane, and take a moment to feel proud.
Then get back to work; there are a bunch of these.
Build, don’t cut. Assemble small pieces around the layout lines, then use a
router with a fl ush-trim bit to make the mortising template.
TEMPLATE
And swing it. Keep the back of the chisel pressed against the routed edge of
the mortise and carefully rotate the edge into the corner.
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