Well I got a little lazy and used all this weather action as an excuse to put away my material. Wood does warp in humid conditions ... right? LOL Anyway, thank God that the hurricanes and storms have left us for a bit. My well wishes for those survivors of any calamity and prayers for those we've lost.
I started working before I realized I wasn't documenting so I apologize, but I didn't get too far. I'm not sure I mentioned this the last time, I'll go back and read it again later, but, The projects I work on are for any one to do. I have some skills but sometimes not enough for the project. I do a lot of internet research or I may ask someone I know or maybe the people who work where you buy your hardware and materials. They do sell it for a reason ... But like this project, I have work on smaller wood projects. I have experience using basic tools and basic electric tools (you know ... screw driver, hammer, drill, level hand saw or circular saw). Some of us just have high school or home skills. AND THAT IS ALL YOU NEED! did I make that clear. I may not name the tool its proper name or use the right tool for the situation. I may not measure right or I may just make a mistake here or there. Most I can fix. I am just not here to be a professional or to make you one. I do hope you enjoy my creativeness. Some ideas are mine, some are others. I may have seen a DIY project online an I wanted to try it out, or maybe add my twist to an existing one. But anything I post here I will document it as much as possible so you can see it is mine because I made it. Now on to the project.
It is Labor Day weekend, the last day in fact. Had family day on Saturday, quiet fun on Sunday and now working like any Monday. Let's begin:
"The Queen Sized Bench"
Part 2
As I mentioned above, I started the project before I started the picture documenting part to show the progress. The only thing I did not fully photograph was the measuring and drilling of the dowel holes on both parts of the material to be joined.
Why use dowels you say? Being the most difficult part of the project because you have to make sure it matches the holes on the other part being joined, I feel it is necessary so that (1) you don't have a lot of screws to deal with and cover before painting, and (2) I feel it offers more strength and stability to a wooden project. In reality it would be nice to do it all with hidden dowels but I also feel that when all done with the project, but before paint, the screw will tighten it all up as a final step.
All I did was to logically guess where the dowels would work best. I wanted ample wood around dowel and solid wood at that. If you look at the piece in question (below) you will see that the main length is split by the track made for the panel. Even though I glued in the panel edge into the track and sanded it down, it wasn't strong enough for a dowel. Remember this is a bench and it needs to hold weight.
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Dowel holes made in solid wood on arm for bench |