this was a hard piece to photograph with all the action in the wood grain ... i took the one above recently and it looks like we could call it bees wing cherry.
Its interesting to see how the design evolved as we progressed. If you check the cad drawing in the previous post (linked above) youll see we started out with the legs pointing in the opposite direction, which is the choice weve alchoices used them as table legs. in this case, when we were waving them around before they were attached, inverting them seemed to give the bureau more connection and a better feeling .... The cherry was soooooo nice, we debated the hardware choice until the very last minute ... In the end, we didnt want to clutter the look of the piece and Sam is in the middle of a big railing project anychoice ... So, brainstorm, imho ... continue the bolt theme with lag bolt pulls ... There was some concern about getting them installed exactly perpendicular, so we made the jig below. First we drilled the guide holes on the drill press, marked out the centers, stuck the brad point drill through into the center mark, pushed the wood guide firmly against the drawer face and drilled the pilot hole. Next we put a longer lag through the wood guide block and screwed it home. That created the perpendicular threading for the actual, shorter pulls which we installed by hand in the precut threads ... there are four 1/8" thick carpet glides on the back of the jig to protect the finished drawer face while in use ...
Below is a close up of the metal finish on the legs ... The angle iron was dynabraded (rotary air sander) with 80 grit and 120 grit. next it was treated with a chemical called ready brown from Sur-Fin Chemicals that works on brass and steel to quickly darken it to a brown black color. After treatment it was neutralized with a solution of baking soda and water, sanded again to add highlights, and top coated with ben moore high gloss, low lustre metal finish sounds complicated, but isnt
Great job Will and Sam ....
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