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Mike Allen1010
01-02-2020, 8:19 PM
This is a build thread for a federal style sideboard I plan to use as a bar, based on a Thomas Seymour original as described in Glen Huey’s excellent book “Building 18th-Century American Furniture”, which I highly recommend. Dimensions are roughly 46” long by 40” high by 24” deep.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/1%202_zpsb8rjv6ca.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/1%202_zpsb8rjv6ca.jpg.html)

The only significant change to the original design was to increase the height of the part of the carcass intended to hold bottles – apparently liquor bottles in the 1700s were 3 – 4 inches shorter than current examples. Primary woods are mahogany (Sapelle at my local lumberyard) and curly Maple with some ebony accents. Mahogany was a dream to work with hand tools as usual, and personally I find the figure on the curly Maple strikingly attractive, although it required very sharp, higher frog angle planes to avoid tear out.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/1_zpshl11mh4k.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/1_zpshl11mh4k.jpg.html)


First step was glue up, dimensioning and surfacing mahogany carcass sides. To lay out the tennons that will join the carcass sides of the legs I like to use a story stick for consistency.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/4_zpsgl2oqd5k.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/4_zpsgl2oqd5k.jpg.html)


https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/5%202_zpsf4xu4lmh.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/5%202_zpsf4xu4lmh.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/6_zps2cfmjz5v.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/6_zps2cfmjz5v.jpg.html)


https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/7_zpstobe1zbo.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/7_zpstobe1zbo.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/8_zpsa5adsmja.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/8_zpsa5adsmja.jpg.html)

Shop made rabbit plane creates Tennon shoulders.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/9_zps2x5n4xyu.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/9_zps2x5n4xyu.jpg.html)






https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/11_zpsmivks1k6.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/11_zpsmivks1k6.jpg.html)

Next was tapered legs. I made a poster board template of the taper. Key learning for me was reference placement of the template and layout against centerlines of the legs, rather than surfaces. Because I work primarily with hand tools, rough dimensions of table legs earn not entirely consistent, but if you reference off the centerline that doesn’t matter.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/2_zpsxsfg26ap.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/2_zpsxsfg26ap.jpg.html)

Mike Allen1010
01-02-2020, 8:28 PM
I sawed the most extreme part of the taper (foot of the leg) with back saw and panel saw and smooth the overall profile with block planes. Pics of completed mortises. When making this many mortises, I like to remove the bulk of the waste with a Forstner bit on the drill press, which along with the bandsaw are the only stationary power tools in my shop.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/12.5_zpsnxxz7cyk.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/12.5_zpsnxxz7cyk.jpg.html)


https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/14_zpssj9onkvu.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/14_zpssj9onkvu.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/17_zpse8dw0rvt.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/17_zpse8dw0rvt.jpg.html)

Next was inlaying the Maple “line” inlay on the legs. I used a trim router with fence to create the grooves and as you can see promptly screwed that up. Good news about uniform grain wood like mahogany is repair was pretty much invisible.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/18_zpsy01slazi.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/18_zpsy01slazi.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/19_zpshzitxule.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/19_zpshzitxule.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/21_zps0fskxptg.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/21_zps0fskxptg.jpg.html)

Next was M&T’s for front rail/styles. I’ve been trying to improve my speed/efficiency lately and giving a little extra attention to sawing Tennon shoulders allows for a good fit right off the saw. However I find a little final trimming with a sharp shoulder plane always helps result in a nice tight fit on the show face. Pic of Japanese mortising tool I find super helpful in cleaning out the bottom of mortises.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/22_zpsrnmtjmid.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/22_zpsrnmtjmid.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/23_zpswzggvubj.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/23_zpswzggvubj.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/24_zpsviuadzlt.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/24_zpsviuadzlt.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/25%202_zpsxj5menul.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/25%202_zpsxj5menul.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/30_zpscar5rwej.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/30_zpscar5rwej.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/26_zpsjmtp7s16.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/26_zpsjmtp7s16.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/27_zpsd8fqk2qt.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/27_zpsd8fqk2qt.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/28_zpswz0banqq.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/28_zpswz0banqq.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/31_zpsij0bmnim.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/31_zpsij0bmnim.jpg.html)

[

Mike Allen1010
01-02-2020, 8:35 PM
https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/32_zpsz2v5lz58.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/32_zpsz2v5lz58.jpg.html)

Here is glue up of carcass front. Because this is primary show surface, I invest a little extra time in relieving the back side Tennon shoulders to ensure a nice tight fit on the show surface.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/33_zps4vt9ja7s.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/33_zps4vt9ja7s.jpg.html)


https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/34_zpsxaxe3ovp.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/34_zpsxaxe3ovp.jpg.html)


Here are some pictures of making the 3 horizontal “horizontal frames” out of secondary wood (I’m sure there’s a more appropriate term than “horizontal frames” but it escapes me now). Personally, I always enjoy working secondary wood – it’s not gonna show and it’s my opportunity to value speed/efficiency above appearance, which I think preindustrial woodworkers would appreciate.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/36_zps8a7qjk0b.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/36_zps8a7qjk0b.jpg.html)


https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/37_zpsh9a7rkv6.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/37_zpsh9a7rkv6.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/38_zpsvxxyuibh.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/38_zpsvxxyuibh.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/39_zps5gvkhlep.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/39_zps5gvkhlep.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/41_zps6fmepxda.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/41_zps6fmepxda.jpg.html)

As an aside, I found this 27” inch beach Joiner plane in terrible, dehydrated condition last time I was helping my Dad clean up his shop. After some restoration work adding a brass inlay for a new mouth and making a new wedge it’s now officially one of my new favorite tools! The tapered iron takes an incredibly sharp edge. As a hand tool woodworker who places the highest possible premium on “sharpness”, I wish I knew more about metallurgy to better understand where this mythical, highly desirable “sharpness” trait comes from. I’m not that smart – all I know is this plane iron is awesome in the same way my favorite Japanese chisels are super sharp and my top-of-the-line, vintage hand saws just take a better cutting edge that yields a tangibly better result.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/35_zps7xnsu5za.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/35_zps7xnsu5za.jpg.html)


One of the unique/complex aspects of carcass design is sliding tamboured doors that enclose a central storage area. I made a plywood template with the correct radius to use an electric router to route out groove for the tamboured doors to travel in.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/42_zpsvstesbfb.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/42_zpsvstesbfb.jpg.html)


One of my favorite vintage hand tools is skewed dado plane for making through dadoes. For stopped dadoes I prefer electric router.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/43_zpsdwqmfy6g.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/43_zpsdwqmfy6g.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/43%202_zpstmusfzlh.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/43%202_zpstmusfzlh.jpg.html)

Mike Allen1010
01-02-2020, 8:42 PM
Vertical dividers that define the central storage area call for breadboard ends, again one of my favorite hand tool jobs.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/46_zpslntadlvd.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/46_zpslntadlvd.jpg.html)


https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/47_zpsztmrww9e.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/47_zpsztmrww9e.jpg.html)

Here’s some pictures of assembly of internal vertical dividers and horizontal frames. Kind of a complex glue up as the show front and side assemblies are glued up after – better hope it fits!

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/48%204_zpszeneqljp.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/48%204_zpszeneqljp.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/48_zpswlxb1129.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/48_zpswlxb1129.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/51_zpsofetptqe.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/51_zpsofetptqe.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/52_zpssq7eefr6.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/52_zpssq7eefr6.jpg.html)

Banding for table legs.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/53_zpsmbqszseo.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/53_zpsmbqszseo.jpg.html)

Making miter joints for top show frame that captures stone carcass top. Getting a nice tight fit from hand tool joinery is easily doable. For me, plastic reference squares are super helpful/anxiety reducing during glue up. I fear sometimes folks shy away from hand tools because they think first class joinery requires “precision tolerances” only achievable by machines. I think we here in the cave all know that’s BS.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/54%201_zpsyubt1paz.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/54%201_zpsyubt1paz.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/54.5_zpswuktrwdm.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/54.5_zpswuktrwdm.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/54.7_zpsnxqzxtqs.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/54.7_zpsnxqzxtqs.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/54.6_zpsjqja9puk.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/54.6_zpsjqja9puk.jpg.html)


https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/56_zpsniul5ie6.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/56_zpsniul5ie6.jpg.html)

Mike Allen1010
01-02-2020, 8:45 PM
https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/57_zpskamen27k.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/57_zpskamen27k.jpg.html)

Cleanup of carcass sides. I really like card scrapers for cleaning up areas like this with adjoining surfaces with opposing grain direction. For me, card scrapers are the easiest surfacing tool when final smoothing surfaces with directly adjacent opposing grain direction.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/59_zps3yzgkbcg.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/59_zps3yzgkbcg.jpg.html)


Adding banding to top rail.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/60_zpsk4uckyf7.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/60_zpsk4uckyf7.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/62_zps1oruczmy.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/62_zps1oruczmy.jpg.html)


I also like to sweat a little extra attention fitting flush drawer fronts to their openings. To me the smooth overall operation of the drawer and final fit of drawer front relative to adjacent surfaces is one of the true marks of fine handmade furniture. As I’ve gotten older, my tendency is to of course fit the drawer front as accurately/tightly as possible but narrow the width of the rear of the drawer so all the drama of a “piston fit drawer” happens in the last inch travel.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/63_zpslzeaiykn.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/63_zpslzeaiykn.jpg.html)

Mike Allen1010
01-02-2020, 8:48 PM
Adding curly Maple banding to drawer fronts.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/64_zpsh6egf6fy.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/64_zpsh6egf6fy.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/66%202_zpsmtfkd1kw.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/66%202_zpsmtfkd1kw.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/67_zpsapnqsifr.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/67_zpsapnqsifr.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/68_zpsj3v5it2j.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/68_zpsj3v5it2j.jpg.html)


Building rest of drawers. I favor narrow pins, but only within width that allows my narrowest marking knife to effectively fit between tales to accurately mark pins.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/69_zpsbc1mbi04.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/69_zpsbc1mbi04.jpg.html)


I don’t have great technique for sawing half blind dovetails. My current practice is to work upright in face vice which helps me align saw plate with layout lines, but isn’t very stable. I would appreciate any suggestions about how I should do this better?

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/71_zpsf0nqsyfz.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/71_zpsf0nqsyfz.jpg.html)

Mike Allen1010
01-02-2020, 8:55 PM
Sawing out and inlaying escutcheons.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/72.5_zpsi1xrelip.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/72.5_zpsi1xrelip.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/73.1_zpsdmubc6x0.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/73.1_zpsdmubc6x0.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/73.2_zpsyasdxooj.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/73.2_zpsyasdxooj.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/73.4_zpsbelg4iem.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/73.4_zpsbelg4iem.jpg.html)




Tall, bottom “bottle drawers” require a common federal design motif –ellipse surrounded by mitered frame. I depend on simple MS Word/PowerPoint software to create outline of ellipse templates which I can transfer to the work piece.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/74.5_zps8upxbde6.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/74.5_zps8upxbde6.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/75.1_zpssdzcrgwv.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/75.1_zpssdzcrgwv.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/74_zpsmhdxem6e.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/74_zpsmhdxem6e.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/76%202_zpsgvlix1e7.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/76%202_zpsgvlix1e7.jpg.html)

Here’s the half blind dovetails for drawer fronts. This is probably old hat to most people, but for me, I always pair are the inside shoulders of dovetails prior to fitting to ease assembly.

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/72_zpsnqdejnrn.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/72_zpsnqdejnrn.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/77.3_zps2jyawouu.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/77.3_zps2jyawouu.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/77.4_zpsivpai3j6.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/77.4_zpsivpai3j6.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/77.5_zpsd0ef3tmj.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/77.5_zpsd0ef3tmj.jpg.html)

Mike Allen1010
01-02-2020, 9:03 PM
Finally, here’s some pictures of the sliding tambours and the completed piece absent stone. This was my first time with sliding tamboered doors and it was pretty straightforward gluing them on to canvas from the local fabric store. Highly recommend being really conservative with glue so you don't inadvertently glue adjacent timbers together (don't ask me how I know this!).

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/78_zpsxsachomn.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/78_zpsxsachomn.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/79_zpsxj355bcv.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/79_zpsxj355bcv.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/85_zpsji8v8tz4.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/85_zpsji8v8tz4.jpg.html)

https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/86_zpsn9nxj6iz.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/86_zpsn9nxj6iz.jpg.html)


https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/87_zpshbaamf7k.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/87_zpshbaamf7k.jpg.html)


https://i1078.photobucket.com/albums/w498/mikeallen1010/Seymor%20Sideboard/89_zps47a7b8p8.jpg (http://s1078.photobucket.com/user/mikeallen1010/media/Seymor%20Sideboard/89_zps47a7b8p8.jpg.html)

Choice of stone/color/figure etc. clearly out of my pay grade – waiting for the boss to weigh in.

Thanks for looking, Mike

Mark Rainey
01-02-2020, 9:04 PM
Mike, really nice build and helpful display of hand tool technique. In a couple of areas, you create tenons by scoring a line, then cutting rabbets with your shopmade rabbet plane. Do you repeat scoring the line with your cutting gauge as you get deeper? I always have a bit of anxiety over tearout when planing crossgrain. If I knife the line again and again, my knife sometimes undercuts the shoulder. I have had success using a dado plane to get the crisp crossgrain cuts for breadboard tenons, then using a jack plane to clean up the material away from the dado. I just got a LV low angle rabbet plane with round cross grain scoring nickers, I am looking forward to trying that.

Mike Allen1010
01-02-2020, 9:26 PM
Mark great question – personally I think it's really challenging to set up your rabbit plane to get clean, square shoulders. The cross grain "knicker" and outer edge of the iron need to line up exactly. If iron is outside the knicker, you'll get definite tear out on the show surface. Correspondingly if the iron is inside the knicker you'll end up with a sloped shoulder that isn't square.

This is a hand tool job where I try really, really hard to line these two cutting cutting edges up as exactly as possible. However my eyes are as good as they used to be – sometimes it works, sometimes not so much. Consequently my "cheat", particularly on a obvious show surface, is to use a square and marking knife to establish a clear shoulder, and then set up fence on my rabbit plane so it's just short of the layout line. That way if my rabbit off the plane isn't perfect, I can use the super sharp shoulder plane, with the drawer held vertically in the vice to to plan exactly to the layout line with the perfectly square surface.

The LV rabbit plane is an excellent tool and I would encourage you to get the rounded knickers in the iron super sharp and then practice getting them perfectly aligned. Getting a clean, perfectly square rabbit off a rabbit plane is one of those woodworking skills that looks really easy on YouTube/TV, but is really dependent upon getting the plane set up just right. Just my experience YMMV.

Cheers, Mike

Patrick Walsh
01-02-2020, 9:35 PM
Best thread I have seen here in years.

Thanks so much this is why I love the internet.

David Eisenhauer
01-02-2020, 9:36 PM
Many thanks for sharing Mike. This is a beautiful execution of an old design that you have recreated. I very much admire your inlay and banding work that always sets your work apart form many of the rest of us. I have that Huey book on my short list and believe it has just moved up to the top of the list.

ken hatch
01-02-2020, 9:53 PM
Mike,

As always your work leaves me speechless, Beautiful work, good job, and all those are about as good as "thoughts and prayers" but bottom line that is best I can do. Thanks for the photos,

ken

Phil Mueller
01-02-2020, 10:32 PM
Mike, I’m a big fan of Federal style and you have done it proud. Really excellent work. It’s a real challenge for me to get an ellipse inlay looking good - nice job! I suppose some of your marquetry work has excelled your skill level. Beautiful choice of woods. Thanks for sharing.

Patrick McCarthy
01-02-2020, 11:38 PM
Again Michael, your work is stunning. Absolutely lovely. Patrick

Kris Cook
01-03-2020, 10:52 AM
Very nice work. Love the Federal style. For me this was inspirational to try a Federal piece.

Jim Koepke
01-03-2020, 1:07 PM
Beautiful work and the read was also great, thanks for sharing.

jtk

Mike Allen1010
01-03-2020, 5:37 PM
Thanks for the feedback, I appreciate your kind words! I think might be too many pics, but that’s what I like and thought I would just go for it and include them.

I’m interested in how others do half blind DT’s and appreciate and suggestions .

Cheers, Mike

Tom M King
01-03-2020, 5:49 PM
Not too many pictures, at all. Your build threads are fantastic, as are the pieces!

Gerald Schram
01-03-2020, 8:15 PM
mike thanks for posting all the pictures. the side board came out beautiful! did you make the banding? when i cut half blind dt i usually clamp the drawer front flat on the bench and over cut the base line a bit jerry

Tom M King
01-03-2020, 8:38 PM
I saw to the sharp pencil line (might have to whittle down the sides of a pencil, but I don't get along as well with a scribed line), and clean it out with a little router-StewMac plunge base w/Milwaukee 12v cordless rotary tool (current favorite in that base). Derek makes a special base of the small Makita router for this job. I thought about copying Derek's design, but I like the little one, since I can keep both my hands on the piece beside where I'm cleaning it out. I forget what size bit I use, but it's a little one. Finished with a dovetail chisel in the corners-reground blue handled Marples.

Jerry Olexa
01-03-2020, 9:11 PM
Nice work and GREAT pics,,I believe that is a G. Huey project...

Derek Cohen
01-04-2020, 8:51 AM
Wow Mike, that is super work!

You have no idea what a life saver you are ... here I am, trampling the streets of Europe, and have not yet seen a furniture display to set my pulse racing (although I hit the Bauhaus museum in a few days). Back in the quiet of the hotel, missing my shop terribly, I find your build ... and what a build! It has everything .. handworked joinery, inlay, design ... thanks.

Regards from Berlin

Derek

Josh Robinson
01-04-2020, 9:38 AM
Wow not sure which is more impressive, the piece or the pics and narrative!

steven c newman
01-04-2020, 11:37 AM
Looks good, made me tired just reading it all....may have sprained the index finger, scrolling down through it all.....I guess I had better get back to work...

Joe A Faulkner
01-04-2020, 12:14 PM
Beautifully and skillfully executed. Thank you for taking the time to document the build. Well done. Very informative and inspiring.

Derek Cohen
01-04-2020, 12:44 PM
... I’m interested in how others do half blind DT’s and appreciate and suggestions .

Cheers, Mike

Mike, is there something specific you want to compare with your method?

Regards from Berlin

Derek

Jim Koepke
01-04-2020, 2:39 PM
Originally Posted by Mike Allen1010:
... I’m interested in how others do half blind DT’s and appreciate and suggestions .

This is an old post of mine involving half blind dovetails:

https://sawmillcreek.org/showthread.php?258465

Two points on mine are sawing a kerf in the middle of the waste and using a tool to extend the kerf to the base of the socket of all three kerfs.

jtk

Mike Allen1010
01-05-2020, 9:45 PM
mike thanks for posting all the pictures. the side board came out beautiful! did you make the banding? when i cut half blind dt i usually clamp the drawer front flat on the bench and over cut the base line a bit jerry

Jerry, thanks for your comments. No, I absolutely didn't make the banding myself- that is waaay above my head. I got the banding from my local Rockler store- I believe it pretty standard for them to stock.

Mike Allen1010
01-05-2020, 9:58 PM
Wow Mike, that is super work!

You have no idea what a life saver you are ... here I am, trampling the streets of Europe, and have not yet seen a furniture display to set my pulse racing (although I hit the Bauhaus museum in a few days). Back in the quiet of the hotel, missing my shop terribly, I find your build ... and what a build! It has everything .. handworked joinery, inlay, design ... thanks.

Regards from Berlin

Derek

Derek, I'm glad I could provide a woodworking fix for a weary traveler! I have learned so much and thoroughly enjoyed your posts over the years – glad I could reciprocate in a small way. I would love to hear your impressions of the the Bauhaaus Museum. Not exactly my aesthetic choice of style but I certainly appreciate their stylistic influence on furniture and their high standards of execution. If you get a chance, I'd love to hear your thoughts and get some pictures. Best wishes for safe travel.

All the best, Mike

Mike Allen1010
01-05-2020, 10:02 PM
Nice work and GREAT pics,,I believe that is a G. Huey project...

Jerry you are absolutely right, the design/plan for this piece came from Glen Huey's excellent book "“Building 18th-Century American Furniture”. I built for the pieces described in his book and the pictures and build descriptions are excellent. Everybody has a different idea of styles that appeal to them, but I think all the pieces in Glenn's book are classic designs and fun to build.

Cheers, Mike

Mike Allen1010
01-05-2020, 10:08 PM
Jim and Derek, thanks for your comments and suggestions regarding half blind dovetails. I have 2 challenges;

1)how to orient the work piece on the workbench so that I'm able to align the saw plate with the layout lines. Currently I position the work piece vertically in my face vice and end up kneeling on the floor to try and get the saw plate aligned with layout lines. Aside from the uncomfortable posture, I'm hoping there is a better way to get a solid work piece with clear sightlines.

2) removing the waste between tails is always time-consuming and fraught with the danger of inadvertently breaking through the show surface when chiseling. Currently I remove the bold waste with a Forstner bit in the drill press and then start chiseling. I think your suggestion about using a small router bit is interesting and something I will give a try.

Thanks, Mike

Mike Allen1010
01-05-2020, 10:14 PM
This is an old post of mine involving half blind dovetails:

https://sawmillcreek.org/showthread.php?258465

Two points on mine are sawing a kerf in the middle of the waste and using a tool to extend the kerf to the base of the socket of all three kerfs.

jtk

Jim thanks for sharing your very informative post on dovetails. Through dovetails for me are a lot easier/faster than half blind DTs. Your suggestion about making the dovetails 5/8 the thickness of the drawer front is a helpful guideline. I've had problems clearing the waste between tales and breaking through the show surface. I'll give your ideas a try. Thanks for sharing.

Best, Mike

Derek Cohen
01-06-2020, 2:42 AM
Jim and Derek, thanks for your comments and suggestions regarding half blind dovetails. I have 2 challenges;

1)how to orient the work piece on the workbench so that I'm able to align the saw plate with the layout lines. Currently I position the work piece vertically in my face vice and end up kneeling on the floor to try and get the saw plate aligned with layout lines. Aside from the uncomfortable posture, I'm hoping there is a better way to get a solid work piece with clear sightlines.

2) removing the waste between tails is always time-consuming and fraught with the danger of inadvertently breaking through the show surface when chiseling. Currently I remove the bold waste with a Forstner bit in the drill press and then start chiseling. I think your suggestion about using a small router bit is interesting and something I will give a try.

Thanks, Mike

Hi Mike

1) This is a situation where a Moxon vise would change your experience forever. The Moxon vise will raise your work piece about 6". Better lighting always helps as well. Lastly, ageing eyes was the reason for using blue tape when transferring dovetail marks, and this makes such a difference, I cannot go back to not using it.

2) Removing the waste on through dovetails: use a fretsaw to 1mm above the base line, then pare the last bit ...

http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/ThroughDovetails3.html


http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/ThroughDovetails3_html_6ebe88a1.jpg







Next I saw off the ends. Once again, as close to the line as possible. At best, there is no waste to pare away. At worst, this takes a couple of strokes.


http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/ThroughDovetails3_html_m46d81eff.jpg



http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/ThroughDovetails3_html_236c5ff2.jpg


http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/ThroughDovetails3_html_2a161e0e.jpg


Half-blind dovetails: I have been using a router increasingly .. http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/PowerRemovingWaste.html

http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/PowerRemovingWaste_html_m214ace9e.jpg

http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/PowerRemovingWaste_html_m58890b69.jpg

http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/PowerRemovingWaste_html_m456ddfc5.jpg

http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/PowerRemovingWaste_html_m6216eb11.jpg


Or, use a kerf chisel and drill the waste .... http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/HalfBlindDovetailswithBlueTape.html

http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/HalfBlindDovetailswithBlueTape_html_m479fb95e.jpg

http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/HalfBlindDovetailswithBlueTape_html_m1478f261.jpg

Split it out ...

http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/HalfBlindDovetailswithBlueTape_html_m471602d2.jpg


Regards from Berlin

Derek

J. Greg Jones
01-06-2020, 5:37 AM
Outstanding work Mike, thanks for sharing the details and pictures! I’m sure Glen would be very impressed with what you have created.

Mike Allen1010
01-06-2020, 9:08 PM
Derek thanks much for the link to your website explaining how you router half blind DT's – like all your website content, super helpful! Your facility with tools is extraordinary – I'm surprised you're not an engineer (no disrespect to your chosen profession of pediatric psychology – definitely super impressive!).

The results you achieve are exactly what I'm looking for – super efficient removal of bulk of the waste which allows for final pairing with chisels. I confess I couldn't 100% follow the associated tool/work holding jigs. I'm guessing if we had 5 minutes together in the shop something that would be intuitively apparent. Bottom line for me is I am going to try using a router next time I do half blind dovetails. I very much appreciate the inspiration and direction.

All the best, Mike

James Pallas
01-06-2020, 10:40 PM
Beautiful work Mike.

Christopher Charles
01-07-2020, 11:23 AM
Mike,

Many thanks for the New Year's treat! Your build threads are one of my favorite things on the site and you've taken it to a new level with this build. And I always pick up a good trick from all of your photos, so definitely not too many.

I agree with Derek that a Moxon or similar arrangement would be a game changer for both getting the workpiece to the right height and also for stabilizing the end of the board.

Now for the important question: what drink will be served first?

Best,
Chris

Mike Allen1010
01-10-2020, 8:10 PM
Mike,

Many thanks for the New Year's treat! Your build threads are one of my favorite things on the site and you've taken it to a new level with this build. And I always pick up a good trick from all of your photos, so definitely not too many.

I agree with Derek that a Moxon or similar arrangement would be a game changer for both getting the workpiece to the right height and also for stabilizing the end of the board.

Now for the important question: what drink will be served first?

Best,
Chris

Chris, thanks for the endorsement of the Moxon vice I guess I really need to give that a try.

Regrettably, sideboard is still taking up space in the shop until the LOML can find time to find exactly the right piece of stone for the top. Personally, I just want it out of the shop and am ready slides some bricks in there and call it done.

As for the first drink, I have a bottle of 30-year-old Lagavulin single malt I've been saving for one of the Boys to get married or maybe even grandkids. If I succeed in getting the boss to let me move this out of the shop and into the house, I might have to cracked the seal.

Cheers, Mike

Oskar Sedell
01-12-2020, 12:41 PM
very nice Mike! thanls for sharing!

glenn bradley
01-12-2020, 1:08 PM
Wonderful work Mike. Thanks for taking the time to share your methods and all the pics.

Steve Jenkins
01-12-2020, 1:29 PM
Wow. Impressive and very nice

Mel Fulks
01-12-2020, 3:54 PM
That is the neon sign of sideboards ! A wonderful example done perfectly.
Fun Fact: before modern plumbing sideboard doors often concealed a pee bucket. The REAL reason the ladies went to
another room to "allow the gentlemen to talk politics".

Patrick Walsh
01-12-2020, 4:36 PM
Is that true.

If so I’m putting a pee bucket in my dinning room sideboard.

This had me so excited..


That is the neon sign of sideboards ! A wonderful example done perfectly.
Fun Fact: before modern plumbing sideboard doors often concealed a pee bucket. The REAL reason the ladies went to
another room to "allow the gentlemen to talk politics".

Mel Fulks
01-12-2020, 4:46 PM
Yes, it's true. But I get the feeling you don't find it important. And that's OK. There were also urinals that were decorative
and stayed out in a dining room corner all the time. And Samuel Pepys made a diary entry about coming home from work and walking through the dining room and
seeing a lady friend of the family "doing something upon the pot".

Patrick Walsh
01-12-2020, 4:57 PM
Depends on your definition of important.

But yes my opinion is I do find it important.

I’m quite fond of buckets as I don’t much care for job site porta Johns..


Yes, it's true. But I get the feeling you don't find it important. And that's OK. There were also urinals that were decorative
and stayed out in a dining room corner all the time. And Samuel Pepys made a diary entry about coming home from work and walking through the dining room and
seeing a lady friend of the family "doing something upon the pot".

steven c newman
01-12-2020, 5:41 PM
I get the feeling this thread has gone to pot.....:rolleyes:

Patrick Walsh
01-12-2020, 6:02 PM
Let’s just say I have spent waaaaay to much time on a construction site.

I’m very comfy with the idea of no indoor plumbing. Well I prefer it to other germs..

But let me not derail the thread it s good one. Actual Woodworking project content. More than I offer.


I get the feeling this thread has gone to pot.....:rolleyes:

Todd Zucker
01-17-2020, 1:35 PM
Just wanted to add my comment. This is a gorgeous piece, and it is really helpful to see it in progress--including mistakes and correcting them!