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Canadian Home Workshop 

Floor cabinet

A plywood box forms the heart of this project, while face features add style and grace

By Steve Maxwell, photos by Roger Yip, illustration by Len Churchill

Finish the plywood parts before assembly for easy and run-free results. Mill simple, layered mouldings on a router table to add elegance
Low-Tech, High-Style Cabinet Panels
Clamp the stiles and rails onto the cabinet again, one side at a time. Measure the length and width of the panel openings, down to the bottom of the stile and rail grooves. Determine the right panel size by subtracting 1/16" from the smallest top-to-bottom measurements and 1/8" from the side-to-side width of the openings.

I make raised panels with an ordinary benchtop tablesaw and a hand plane, even though I have a big router that could easily spin a panel-raising bit. The reason I do this is appearance-long, slim and flat-faced bevels on panel edges look great and can't be reproduced with a router.

To duplicate this panel-raising method, tilt the tablesaw blade 15° from vertical. Set the saw fence to leave 1/4" of wood at the narrowest part of the taper and rip around all four panel edges. Then, fine-tune the rough bevel with a hand plane. My saw isn't big, but it can still handle these cuts in a single pass using a sharp blade. If your saw struggles with the cut, lower the blade and make each cut in two passes.

Next, draw reference lines on the face of each panel, a little further in than the farthest reach of the bevels. These are planing guides, and help create a consistent bevel.

Clamp a single panel to the edge of your bench with an end-grain side sticking out over the edge. Smooth the bevel face with a razor-sharp jack plane, working from one side of the panel to the other. You have three goals as you do this: smooth the bevel; increase the bevel width so it extends to the pencil lines; and make the outer edge of the bevel thin enough to fit into the stile and rail grooves. It's a trial-and-error technique, so stop every few strokes and test-fit a stile or rail over the panel edge.

When all the panels are completed, hand sand the bevels and faces with 240-grit sandpaper. Dry-fit the parts once more, then assemble permanently onto the plywood box with glue and pipe clamps. Stain the edge-grain panel edges before assembling to conceal any new wood that might become exposed as it shrinks over time.

1. Build the inner box
2. High-style cabinet panels
3. Veneer and mouldings
4. Materials you will need; carving tips
5. Detailed illustration


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