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brad jansen
12-09-2013, 3:18 PM
I just finished this spokeshave cabinet. I used handtools for all of the major joinery work, which was a lot of fun.

It is made from select pine from the big box store and a 12 x 16 glass pane. Dovetailed casework, and 7 rows of spokeshave holders that can be stacked 2 spokeshaves deep.

The finish is briwax over 2 coats of while milk paint, over red barn milk paint. Posting as this may give someone else an idea as well. Thanks

http://i492.photobucket.com/albums/rr287/bjjanse/nov13002_zps2b3f046d.jpg (http://s492.photobucket.com/user/bjjanse/media/nov13002_zps2b3f046d.jpg.html)

http://i492.photobucket.com/albums/rr287/bjjanse/nov13001_zpse6eabd03.jpg (http://s492.photobucket.com/user/bjjanse/media/nov13001_zpse6eabd03.jpg.html)

http://i492.photobucket.com/albums/rr287/bjjanse/nov13011_zps0a495ffe.jpg (http://s492.photobucket.com/user/bjjanse/media/nov13011_zps0a495ffe.jpg.html)

http://i492.photobucket.com/albums/rr287/bjjanse/nov13010_zpsfdaf81b0.jpg (http://s492.photobucket.com/user/bjjanse/media/nov13010_zpsfdaf81b0.jpg.html)

Sean Hughto
12-09-2013, 5:16 PM
Very handsome. And a great selection of shaves too!

paul cottingham
12-09-2013, 5:20 PM
You are a serious collector of shaves! Nice cabinet indeed.

Bobby O'Neal
12-09-2013, 6:56 PM
Very nice cabinet. I think the pine is a great look. Did you leave some compression room in your joints?

brad jansen
12-09-2013, 7:46 PM
In the dovetail joints? Probably not, tell me about it please?

Bobby O'Neal
12-09-2013, 9:17 PM
Not much to tell I suppose. I'm not asking out of expertise, rather just curious about it. Softer woods can compress easily so I wondered if it were advantageous to cut joints a little bit fat and let them mash together a bit.

Gordon Eyre
12-09-2013, 11:07 PM
A cabinet to be proud of. Well done.

brad jansen
12-10-2013, 7:33 AM
Bobby, I understand your compression question. I did not purposely intend to leave compression room in the joints, I simply cut the tails like you would for anything else....but then again, my cuts are not perfectly clean, nor perfectly straight...and that in itself provides a bit of compression.. 3 of the 4 sides were very tight, the fourth I could remove by pulling it. Once I glued it and planeed the sides, the tails looked good.

gary Zimmel
12-10-2013, 8:15 AM
A fitting home for some fine tools...
Nice work Brad.

Bobby O'Neal
12-10-2013, 10:28 PM
Bobby, I understand your compression question. I did not purposely intend to leave compression room in the joints, I simply cut the tails like you would for anything else....but then again, my cuts are not perfectly clean, nor perfectly straight...and that in itself provides a bit of compression.. 3 of the 4 sides were very tight, the fourth I could remove by pulling it. Once I glued it and planeed the sides, the tails looked good.

Gotcha. They look really good. Again, I'm no expert. I've just fiddled a bit and it seems that the softer the wood, the better my joints look if I skip on the paring. Skil aside, I wondered if it'd be helpful for tight fits be it tails, tenons or otherwise.

Again, a very cool cabinet. Great work.

Mike Henderson
12-10-2013, 10:53 PM
Cool cabinet. You're fortunate to have the wall space to be able to put it. I have zero wall space left in my shop. I store my spokeshaves in a LV spokeshave roll (http://www.leevalley.com/US/wood/page.aspx?p=51504&cat=1,50230,51504)and put the roll in a drawer. I have enough spoke shaves that I'll probably have to buy a second roll if I buy any more.

Mike

[BTW, the LV spokeshave roll is a good product. Holds lots of spokeshaves, wraps up nicely and has a carrying handle.]

276817276818

Mark Hulette
12-15-2013, 4:28 PM
Nice work! Looks good--- and appropriate to the tools! Thanks for sharing.

Alan Lightstone
12-15-2013, 5:30 PM
I have the spokeshave roll also, and am now feeling quite inadequate.

Beautiful cabinet.