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BY JOHN A. FRY CUSTOM CRAFTED FURNITURE
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This TV armoire is a commissioned piece that is 100% veneered. The
carcass is
done in qtr sawn sepele, and each door is done with 36 “pyramids” of zebra,
Peruvian walnut, ziracote, and jarrah. This unit measures 48 1/2 inches wide, 62
½ inches tall, and 27 inches deep. The edges of each carcass panel, the doors,
the aprons, and legs are veneered with the ribbon grain of the sepele being
cross banded. The designer and clients spent three weeks sorting through 63
pieces of exotic wood samples to come up with final choice. This shot shows the inside of the cabinet
with the doors opened and slid back into their pockets. Delivered, and in the clients home. Whew!
They loved it!! Every piece of veneer used is
“shop-sawn”. This is 60 pieces of 6 ½ inches X 54 inches X 1/16th inch thick
sepele. This was re-sawn at 3/32 inch thick from 4/4 stock and then drum
sanded to thickness. The sheets where edge glued together, and
then veneered to ¾ MDF substrate using a vacuum press. Here are the exotics for the front doors
after re-sawing to 7/16 inch thick. They were then sanded and ripped to
width. I called the squares pyramids because they are 3/8 inch thick at the
center point where the four pieces meet, and beveled to 1/16th thick at the
outer edge. To cut the triangles, I rigged, and
tweaked, and attached stop blocks and a hold down to my crosscut sled. I
micro tweaked a speed square as a fence. Every angle had to be perfect with
these cuts or the 72 pieces in each door would not glue up right. At each
corner where four squares meet, there are eight pieces of wood. If they are
not all exactly 45*, there will be gaps. Here they are, and yup, they are all
perfectly cut. Those are poplar pieces on the right to help with the set up
of the beveling sled that will cut the taper on the faces of each piece.
This is the sled that holds each triangle at the correct angle to cut the
face bevels. I then made fixtures to glue three
squares together, and then glue them up in sixes. They were getting pretty
fragile to handle because of the weight and only being edge glued on a
1/16th inch thickness. I was afraid they would break as I tried to lift and
move them around, so I stopped at six. This left three panels of six to be
laminated to each door. This was the moment of reckoning. If these puppies
aren’t perfectly square, I will never be able put 36 of them together, and
laminate them to a perfectly square door substrate and make it look right. I tapered, veneered, edge banded and then
inlaid miniature pyramids into the legs.
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