How To Make A Mission Style Bedside Table
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- Опубликовано: 6 фев 2025
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This is the bedside table that I have wanted for a long time. In the past, I have made the bed and the dresser for the full bedroom set. Today we are finishing the mission-style bedroom set with the bedside table or s some call it the end table
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Beautiful! The rays are awesome! I didn't realize a card scraper was the way to deal with epoxy squeeze-out. Learn something, sometimes obvious, sometimes subtle, just by watching you work. What a pleasure!
Crazy to see a traditionalist being big on Rubio monocoat. Speaks to the quality of it!
The table looks great 🫡 another beautiful piece for you and your grandkids. Before you know it, you'll be there too!
I don't generally consider myself to be a traditional woodwork. I don't hold any one particular tradition or another. Neither do I try to reenact old methods. I just happened to use hand tools as I find them enjoyable. So I tend to do non-conventional methods that I find to be fun that don't particularly fit into a specific tradition.
Beautiful piece of furniture!
This is a nice "summary" video.. since you have done all the in depth videos already.. nicely passed, yet nice nuggets of "why" you did some of the things.
mükemmel ustalık . hayranım
Gorgeous furniture!!!! Happiness
Amazing beautiful build thank you.
What a GORGEOUS piece of furniture! For me, this is one of my favorite builds of yours. It’s just sooo Wright!!
That looks proportionally perfect. You got the skills and the style!
Thank you for this!!!
A beautiful piece!
good job
That was an awesome video
Very nicely done
Amazing work, James! Really beautiful piece!!! 😃
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
I guess you used the back saw when trimming the length of the tendons, so you would still have some tendons sticking out the distance from the blade to the outside of the back.
Beautiful. I learn something new in each of your videos.
Lovely looking piece James. Just reading one of your replies and wondered if you have any thoughts about finding a style that you really like and specialising in it, so with practice you can become really good at it. Then perhaps try something new? Regards Jim UK.
Quality work. I am a big fan of your approach to building. Hand tools, to me are the way to go. They give you more control of the cuts. Also using hand tools feels as if you are putting more of yourself into the wood.
Question, do you use a specific thin kerf saw, hope that's the right term, for cutting tenons?
I just used a Japanese saw as the back was thinner. The saw does not matter much there as long as it is crosscut.
@@WoodByWrightHowTo Thank you. you're one of my favorites.
Here is another build where I did them a bit differently. ruclips.net/video/AIaqprjjytE/видео.html
I've been watching you almost from the beginning of time but have had to give up my hobby. However I still enjoy watching you. I suppose you are using the Rubio for a more durable surface as opposed to your homemade BLO and wax. Is that correct?
Thanks. And yes. For furniture I need some that is durable, BLO is not.
What's the highest grit you sharpen your chisels to?
1200 diamond plate then quick strop
I got a question, I am new to wood working and am currently attempting to build a TV stand out of reclaimed white oak. The boards I have after I smoothed them out are just under 1 inch thick, so i laminated 2 to make my legs, they are 1-3/4 " square. I wanted to do mortise and tenon joints and so my question is this, is a 1 inch long tenon to short? If I go any longer my side and front stretcher tenons will hit each other in the leg. DO I need to make thicker/wider legs? or can I get away with what I have?
I sure hope I can get away with it because I milled and squared these up by hand and it took me for ever !
Thanks to any one who responds.
It all depends on the force you're planning on putting in the table. The traditional answer to it is to make the ends of the tenons at a 45 degree angle so the two meet and do each other. I did that in the recent live end table build. If you want it even stronger you can make the tenons pass each other like I did in this build. It means the section that goes past the other one is only half of its normal size, but it's usually better to make it longer than it is to make it taller. However, if it's just going to be sitting there without much force happening on it 1 in long tenon should be more than enough as long as you're glue is strong
@@WoodByWrightHowTo I really appreciate the reply and the advice. I had made the comment just before the part in the video where you overlapped the tenon's. I Think I may attempt that, I wanted to do through tenons to begin with but I assumed I would have to make and H style side or step down the side stretcher if that was the case because I did not know over lapping was a thing.
This is a whole new experience for me, I come from a masonry background and have never worked with wood or hand tools until this year. Your channel has been both very enjoyable and a great source of information.
A build I would like to see is a small table that is very stout. About 40 inches square. And stout enough to use a clamp-on bench-on-bench with for apartment woodworking.
The dining room table I did a few years ago would fill that build. You would just shorten it.