- Details
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The concept of joinery is as old as recorded history. Furniture with hand-cut dovetail joints has been found entombed with the mummies dating back to ancient Egypt. Several thousand years later, dovetails are still being used today to fasten objects of wood.
- Product # 070902
- Type Paperback
- ISBN 978-1-56158-856-5
- Published Date 2006
- Dimensions 8 1/2 x 10 7/8
- Pages 160
- Photos photos
- Drawings and drawings
The fact that there are thousands and thousands of pieces from 18th century still being used today shows just how durable good joinery can be. In these articles collected by the editors of Fine Woodworking magazine, youll learn how to use your hand and power tools to make tight joints that will help your furniture last for generations.
Learn the secrets to:- Through Mortise and Tenon Joinery
- Slip Joints
- Through Dovetails
- Sliding Dovetails
- Wedged Mortise and Tenon Joinery
- Rabbets and Dadoes
- Testing (and fixing) Joints
- Table of Contents
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Introduction
Legs to Stand On
Timothy S. Philbrick
Through Mortise and Tenon Joinery
Jim Richey
The Slip Joint
Frank Klausz
Cutting Through Dovetails
Vincent Laurence
Housed Sliding Dovetails
Tony Konovaloff
An Edge-Jointing Primer
Gary Rogowski
Designing the Wedged Mortise and Tenon
Carl Swensson
First Aid for Failing Joints
Jeff Jewitt
Rabbets and Dadoes
Sven Hanson
In Search of the Right Mortising Technique
Strother Purdy
Tenoning Strategies
Gary Rogowski
Testing Joints to the Breaking Point
Bruce Gray
Double Mortise and Tenon Improves Joint Strength
Craig Vandal Stevens
Master the Miter
Gary Rogowski
Compound Angles without Math
Steve Brown
Laying Out Compound Angle Dovetails
Steve Brown
The Mighty Wedge
John Nesset
Pinned Box Joints
Seth Janosfsky
Joint Making Machines
Michael Standish
Simplified Three-Way Miter
Richard Gotz
Shopmade Slot Mortiser
Gregory Paolini
A Lesson in Basic Joinery
Mario Rodriguez
Fortify Your Joinery
Garrett Hack
- Introduction
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You can have the most beautiful wood and lovely design, but without rock-solid joinery, your furniture wont hold up. Joinery holds the structure together and allows the piece to be used and even a bit abused. Take dining chairs, for example. Although they have four legs, your guests may occasionally test their structure by leaning back so that only two legs of the chair support their entire weight. If you havent built your chair with sufficient joint strength, your diners could well end up on the floor in a heap of sticks.
The concept of joinery is as old as recorded history. Furniture with hand-cut dovetail joints has been found entombed with the mummies dating back to ancient Egypt. Several thousand years later, dovetails are still being used today to fasten objects of wood.
Fast forward to the 18th century, a period that is arguably the zenith of fine furniture making. The joints used -- dovetails, mortise and tenons and edge joints, are still the most predominant joints used today. And there are thousands and thousands of pieces from that era still being used today.
While the tools may have changed in the last two centuries, the concepts have not. We know a little more about how wood behaves -- cross grain joints, for example, are risky unless the parts are narrow -- and we now have better glues. But for the most part, you can still build furniture using the exact joinery employed by craftsmen dating back to Colonial times. As long as they are properly executed, your pieces will last into the next generation and beyond.
The most essential factors to strong joints are dry wood and close tolerances.
Whether you cut mortise and tenon joints with hand tools or craft them with machines, the same rules apply. In this book of articles reprinted from Fine Woodworking magazine, youll learn the secrets to tight fitting joints using both traditional and modern tools.
When you fit together a well-crafted joint, the experience is as satisfying as putting on a pair of well-designed leather gloves. And the pride you feel will the appreciated by those whose use your furniture and arent relegated to a pratfall.
-Anatole Burkin, Editor-in-Chief
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