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Derek Cohen
03-14-2020, 10:52 AM
The full build details are on my website, a record of the build-along on the Hand Tool forum. I would have liked to have posted it here, as it progressed, since the tools used were a blend of power and hand. This is how I believe it should be - one compliments the other. I know many here use hand tools, but perhaps more would like to see how hand tools can be used better. If interested, visit the website: http://www.inthewoodshop.com/index.html Or, just go directly to the furniture build index, and scan down until you get to Entry Hall Table For a Niece: http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/index.html

Copying from the Hand Tool forum ....

My niece is getting married at the end of March, the entry hall table she asked for is completed, and in a couple of days it will head off to Sydney.

This is the model for the table she wanted me to build, but to build it in Jarrah ...

https://i.postimg.cc/3xzcRy9f/Jes-Entry-Table.jpg

I needed to make a few modifications. The most notable were, firstly, that there are three drawers, where the model has two. With a little research, it became evident that the model was a "flat pack" build from a store in the UK, and it used slides and poppers for the drawers. Without slides, wide drawers will rack since the depth-to-width ratio is all wrong. Three drawers change this ratio and make it workable.

Secondly, building a drawer to ride wood-on-wood, one cannot use poppers - and so drawer handles are necessary. My niece was keen that drawer handles would not be seen, and I have done my best to make them unobtrusive.

Together with the desire to avoid drawer handles, there was also the request to make the drawers appear to be a single piece, rather than drawers separated by drawer dividers. The fact is, we had to have drawer dividers. So, to hide them, drawer fronts were given lips, with a lip covering half the width of a divider. In this way, the dividers could double as drawer stops. Making lipped, half-blind dovetails was a first for me. In the end, they were not too bad.

The case of the original table is mitred, and this is likely butt jointed and supported with either dowels, biscuits or dominos. My choice was to use mitred through dovetails, both for their strength and also for aesthetics. Although I have done a number of similar cases in recent years, this joint is one where you hold your breath until it all comes together. Then you wonder what the fuss was about :)

A fifth change was the attachment of the legs. The model likely used a metal screw per leg, which was common with Mid Century furniture. I wanted something stronger and durable so, in place of this, my decision was to stake the legs into a thicker base, which was firmly attached to the underside of the case with tapered, stopped sliding dovetails. A bit more work, but I will sleep better at night.

At the end of the day, it resembles a box, and only a woodworker will recognise that it is a very complex box. :)

Okay, here it is. It is photographed in my entrance hall ....

https://i.postimg.cc/qRZB673m/1a.jpg

The wood is fiddleback (curly) Jarrah.

https://i.postimg.cc/3RwJwGd4/2-1a.jpg

https://i.postimg.cc/nrjF4tKn/3a.jpg

A close up the waterfall on one side ...

https://i.postimg.cc/KvTc4xvN/4a.jpg

... and on the other ...

https://i.postimg.cc/T1zRQHQg/5a.jpg

The obligatory dovetail shot ...

https://i.postimg.cc/05F28bxj/6a.jpg

Those drawers! The lipped drawer fronts are 20mm, with the drawer sides 1/4". The back is 15mm thick. The thin sides necessitated drawer slips. These were beaded to create a transition from slip to drawer bottom. The drawer bottoms are 1/4". The wood used here is Tasmanian Oak.

https://i.postimg.cc/13Zmq28Z/7a.jpg

https://i.postimg.cc/pLY2YCj5/8a.jpg

https://i.postimg.cc/FKrhPSbW/9a.jpg

https://i.postimg.cc/wBwgnB06/10a.jpg

Derek Cohen
03-14-2020, 10:53 AM
Since the case and internals are build from hard Jarrah, the underside of the slips was given a Jarrah slide to improve ware properties.

https://i.postimg.cc/Kz4xbyHt/12a.jpg

As mentioned earlier, the aim was to present a single board at the front ...

https://i.postimg.cc/mkH4cyRD/15a.jpg

Here may be seen how the lips share the drawer divider and use it as a drawer stop. The spacers at the side of the case are half the width of the dividers as they do not share two drawers.

https://i.postimg.cc/Wtcv0qb7/17a.jpg

https://i.postimg.cc/v8Jg0P40/18a.jpg

Now those drawer handles ...

I tried to keep the design as simple as possible, and used the same wood as the drawer fronts so they would blend in. The upper drawer shows the finger grip on underside of the handle ...

https://i.postimg.cc/y6g3Xq8J/19a.jpg

Drawer extension is good - about 80-85 percent ...

https://i.postimg.cc/XY3ZbpcF/21a.jpg

The internal bevels around the case ...

https://i.postimg.cc/zGjyX80Q/22a.jpg

... maintained a straight edge to the drawer line. Plus the gap between the drawers (about 0.5mm) ...

https://i.postimg.cc/wB43LFKc/24a.jpg

Near-to-last, the case back: this is made from the same Jarrah - one never knows if the piece will end up against a wall or out in the open.

https://i.postimg.cc/XJh37DRm/13a.jpg

Someone will ask if the brass screws were clocked ... of course they were! :)

And a final photo to provide some scale. This is taken with a chair I built a few years ago ...

https://i.postimg.cc/G2BtQYd0/25a.jpg


Regards from Perth

Derek

Jack Frederick
03-14-2020, 11:06 AM
I have enjoyed following your build of this table. It is lovely and beautifully executed.

Jim Becker
03-14-2020, 11:08 AM
Really outstanding!

jerry cousins
03-14-2020, 11:12 AM
wonderful final piece and thanks for the "build along"
very elegant and deceivingly simple looking
jerry

jim sauterer
03-14-2020, 11:23 AM
Looks great what talent love the look

John TenEyck
03-14-2020, 12:49 PM
Just outstanding Derek, as is the chair. I'm sure it will be a treasured heirloom.

John

mreza Salav
03-14-2020, 12:55 PM
Well done. Looks great.

David Zaret
03-15-2020, 12:36 PM
that's beautiful. you should be proud of your work.

Derek Cohen
03-15-2020, 1:21 PM
Thank you all for your kind words.

Regards from Perth

Derek

Edwin Santos
03-15-2020, 1:24 PM
Very nice, thanks for sharing the build!

Now that it is complete, what if anything, would you have done differently?

Edwin

Derek Cohen
03-15-2020, 7:46 PM
Thanks Edwin.

Do differently? Possibly have purchased the flat pack example that my niece liked and sent that to her instead of building it :)

Only a design factor niggles me ... making the legs thicker near the base.

I wonder what others would suggest, build or design?

Regards from Perth

Derek

Mike Waddell
03-16-2020, 10:35 PM
LOVE the look of this piece, Derek!

David Utterback
03-17-2020, 12:11 PM
Nice, nice work and great display of the results. Thanks

Matthew Hills
03-17-2020, 12:21 PM
How did you decide where to place the drawer pulls? (with a lower-half placement vs. centered vs. high?)

Matt

Bill Carey
03-17-2020, 12:33 PM
extraordinary Derek - a really beautiful piece. And the pulls, placed below center, look absolutely right. Well done.

Derek Cohen
03-17-2020, 8:01 PM
How did you decide where to place the drawer pulls? (with a lower-half placement vs. centered vs. high?)

Matt

Matt, as with most design elements, one begins with the traditional .. in this case, pulls positioned centrally. It occured to me that this drew the eye to the pulls, and they looked intrusive. I positioned them lower, and this altered their “feel”. With the lower positioning, my thought was that this way the look is interesting but harmonious. Your thoughts?

Regards from Perth

Derek

james manutes
03-17-2020, 8:20 PM
Love it , really well done .

Justin Rapp
03-17-2020, 9:05 PM
Derek

only one word 'WOW'

Justin

lowell holmes
03-18-2020, 4:30 PM
Show Off :)

Frank Martin
03-20-2020, 2:33 AM
Looks awesome as usual! Thanks for sharing.

Zac wingert
03-20-2020, 3:58 AM
Nice work. What type of tree is jarrah? Like what plant family. I’m always interested in different woods than the general US domestic. I’m in Hawaii, so local grown variety is all
over the place.

Derek Cohen
03-20-2020, 5:14 AM
Hi Zac

Jarrah is a Eucalyptus, and only grows in Western Australia.

It is extremely hard wearing - was used for building piers, railway sleepers and even paving roads in London.

https://www.wood-database.com/jarrah/

Regards from Perth

Derek