Here
are a few pictures of making the drawer bottoms for the slips, which
may interest a few.
Bill was not enamoured with the slips
as they had this ruddy great groove down one side. That was a
too-wide quirk from the beading blade. Not to worry Bill, I cut that
section away, leaving just the bead.
Here are the slips being
glued in ...
The
drawer slips and bottoms are Tasmanian Blue Gum. The drawer sides are
Tasmanian Oak. Both are 1/4" thick.
The groove
in the slip is 1/8" (3mm). The slip requires a matching 1/8"
rebate. This was planed with a skew rebate plane on a sticking board
...
Although
the plane has a nicker, I always scribe the line as well ...
It
is worth the effort to set up the rebate plane for a precise cut
...
Once
the one side is done, slide the tongue into the groove of the slip,
and mark off the width of the drawer bottom ...
Then
saw to width ...
Any
fine tuning is done with a shoulder plane ...
The
drawer fronts are all curved, and the drawer bottom must be scribed
to match this ...
Here
is the fit behind the front of the drawer, and the match with the
beaded slips ...
The
rear of the drawer, with the added bearing surface from the slips
...
The
profile of the drawer sides ...
Regards
from Perth
Derek
June 2019