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260543 William Ghio <bghio@m...> 2016‑11‑28 Re: Delicate joinery
> On Nov 28, 2016, at 12:50 PM, John M Johnston (jmjhnstn) 
wrote:
> 
> Bill, I'm working (occasionally) on an 18th century shaving box with exactly
the same challenge.
> 
> My thought at this point is to make a deep knife line at the center point of
the V, then use a shoulder or rabbet plane tipped on its edge at 45 degrees to
take a couple of passes with the edge of the plane riding in the knife line,
flip the work around and take a couple (or however many are needed) of passes to
make the other side of the V.
> 
> This idea came to me when watching Don McConnel's excellent DVD on making
moulding. It looks like it would not be too difficult to control the angle and
the depth of the V in this manner. I'd thought about the chisel route as well
but using a plane seems like there would be more control.
> 
> Cheers
> John
> 
> “P.S. If you do not receive this, of course it must have been miscarried;
therefore I beg you to write and let me know.” - Sir Boyle Roche, M.P.
> 
> William Ghio wrote:
> Making a jewelry tray — 3/16th material. For the cross pieces I am planning to
have them die into V-notches in the long pieces as I have seen in period
furniture. Question is, what is the best way to make the incised V? I am
thinking I will just mark and carve w/ a chisel, but if anyone has experience,
knows a trick or knows what tool was used historically, I would love the input.

I had considered the method you propose and I guess I didn’t not think it thru.
I will try prototyping w/ both methods. I need to have this done by Xmas so
can’t wait for you to do the prototyping and report. 8>)
I have the little Lie Nielsen 1/2 inch shoulder plane (no longer made, which
makes no sense to me) which should be perfect.

Bill

Recent Bios FAQ