Monday, February 10, 2014

Shaker Inspired Medicine Cabinet The Tool Kit

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The Full Tool Kit



This is the tool kit I actually used when building this project.





Left Side:

rip saw, crosscut saw, hack saw



Center (back to front):

#7 jointer plane, #4 smoother plane

#62 low angle jack plane, #5 1/4 jack plane, side bead moulding plane, dropped quarter round moulding plane

#271 router plane, shoulder plane, rabbet plane, #18 block plane

Hand drill, awl, nail set, mallet

square, combination square, 3/4" chisel, bit and brace

file, round file, nippers

marking gauge, marking knife, flush cut saw, hammer, screw drivers

dowel plate, pencil (And yes, Dixon Ticonderoga 1388 #2 HB - one of the vintage, good ones from before they sold out!), hammer, folding rule



While working on this project, I wasnt trying to limit myself tool wise in any way. If there were multiple tool options, I tended to use the one that was either easiest or produced the best results. Of course, there are many, many different paths to the same destination. It would be possible to build this project with much less in the way of tools.



With that in mind, I though I would do something similar to my tool kit post on the Shaker Cupboard project. So, heres my take on the most basic set of tools that would create the same final result (different techniques would be required - such as forming the rabbets with a chisel rather than rabbet plane).



The Minimum Tool Kit



This is the minimum tool kit that could be used to build the project.





Back to Front:

rip saw, cross cut saw, #5 jack plane, #4 smoother plane

flush cut saw, 3/4" chisel, hand drill, block plane, side bead moulding plane, dropped quarter round moulding plane

screw drivers, brace and bit, square, marking gauge, knife

pencil, nail set, hammer, folding rule



I assumed that you would be able to find appropriate hinges and could forgo the tools I used to make my own.



As you can see, you dont need a shop full of tools to make a project. That said, I like having tool options and specialized tools that make some tasks easier, or allow for superior results.



So, will I make a second medicine cabinet using only the smaller tool kit? Well, my son cant reach the Tums anymore, and I have about a billion other projects waiting for my very limited time, so "Nah!"



Not anytime soon anyway...








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