Making basic mortise- and- tenon joints 29
(d) Turn the work (or yourself ) around and run the
saw in the established cut, down again to the shoulder;
(e) Level out the saw and carefully finish sawing
down to the shoulder line.
Deeping repetition
Repeat the above procedure on the other cheek of the
tenon – and on all the ends of the rails to be tenoned.
Note that if the inner- edges of the rails are to be
grooved, moulded or rebated, the rails are left with the
tenons deeped, but not yet shouldered; the tenon-
cheek waste material is left on to allow a better start
and run- off of the hand planes, powered router or
spindle moulder used to form the edge- detailing.
Cutting shoulders
Figure 3.18: Once the edge detailing has been done,
each rail can be laid on a pair of wooden bench hooks
and the shoulders can be cut with a tenon- saw (not
the one with the rip- saw teeth!). When the shoulders
have been scored with a marking knife, it is good
TENON SAW TENON SAW
TENON SAW
(a) (b) (c)
Figures 3.17 (a)(b)(c)
Deeping procedure for
removing tenon- cheek
waste
Figures 3.17 (d)(e) Final
stages of the deeping
procedure.
TENON SAW
TENON SAW
(d) (e)
AA
SECTION A-A THROUGH CHISEL
RAIL
Figure 3.18 Paring the V- shaped furrow against the
tenon’s shoulder.