The pictures that I took are not real clear but you can see the dovetails below. On the smaller drawers there are 3 1/2 and on the larger there are 4 1/2. They are also not the same size but they fill the space.
I plan on duplicating these.
First I need to mill a lot of 1/2 inch pine for the the sides, backs and bottoms of the drawers.
While I was at it I milled pine for the back of the chest.
The drawer sides will be 7/16 and everything else will be 1/2 inch.
After I resaw all this pine from 5/4 stock, I am letting it adjust to the shop humidity by letting it rest for a couple of days before I mill it to final size.
I laid out the tails on the drawer sides of the smallest drawer. I leave a 1/2 on the bottom for the 1/4 inch groove for drawer bottom and the balance for the 1/2 in bottom with the bevel for the groove.
We will see this in detail later.
Chopping out the dovetails in this 7/16 inch pine sides is very easy. I first saw out the shape, then chop out the balance of the material between the tails.
Pushing out the waste between the tails after chopping them free.
I traced the tails on to the back of the drawer and then saw and chop out the pins. Here I am test fitting the sides to the back.
I use a dead blow hammer to bang the sides into the back. They make a nice tight fit.
Looks like 3 sides are done, now for the front.
Sawing out the half-blind dovetails on the fronts is a little different than the through dovetails in the back. I angle the saw to stop at the front scribe line but allow the saw cut to be much longer in the back. This is normal for 18th century dovetails. I make sure to cut on the waste side of the pin.
Now I chop out the tail shape leaving the pins. If you do everything carefully they should fit right together. The sand paper in the picture is just being used as a piece of paper as a filler between the curved front and the cutoff block underneath.
Using the dead blow hammer to assemble the drawer sides to the front.
I chipped one of the tails when I banged it in. I will use a little super glue to fix it before final assembly.
Now I need to put a 1/4 in groove into the curved drawer fronts. It will be 1/4 inch deep. I use a router bit and large bearing to make this. The top of this groove is 1/2 in from the bottom edge. Because I planned for this there is no material in the drawer front where the grooves exits the edge. This will be hidden by a tail on the sides.
I change out the bearing for the drawer sides, since they are only 7/16 thick the groove should only be 7/32 inches deep in the side.
Now I have a 1/4 inch groove all the way around on 3 sides. I cut the back off 1/2 inch to match the groove.
Now I make the bottom by cutting the 1/2 in pine it to size, cutting the curve on the front to match and putting a bevel on the edges to allow it to slip into the groove.
Again if I do everything careful it should slip right in.
Looks like a good fit. I left the drawer bottom a little proud in the rear. This is normal for 18th century drawers.
Normally I would nail the back and glue up the sides now to complete the drawer. But I want to stain the dovetails on the side with the front color. So I will be doing the staining before I glue up the drawers.
So the drawers are complete except for gluing and nailing the bottom to the back. Next I am going to work on the top of the chest.
where can I get the plans for curved block front chest? I can find them nowhere.
ReplyDeleteI drew my own from the measurements I took from the piece at Yale. If you give me your email I will send them to you.
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