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AShakerBlanketChest

The document discusses the evolution of storage chests, particularly the Shaker blanket chest, detailing its construction from simple boxes to more complex designs with drawers and dovetail joints. It provides step-by-step instructions on how to create a dovetailed blanket chest, including tips on layout, cutting joints, and assembly techniques. The guide emphasizes the importance of wood selection and proper fitting to ensure durability and aesthetic appeal.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
11 views8 pages

AShakerBlanketChest

The document discusses the evolution of storage chests, particularly the Shaker blanket chest, detailing its construction from simple boxes to more complex designs with drawers and dovetail joints. It provides step-by-step instructions on how to create a dovetailed blanket chest, including tips on layout, cutting joints, and assembly techniques. The guide emphasizes the importance of wood selection and proper fitting to ensure durability and aesthetic appeal.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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A Shaker Blanket Chest

Dovetails, figured wood,


T
he earliest storage chests were simple boxes made of six
boards. As they evolved, a base, or plinth, was added to lift
them off the floor and give them aesthetic appeal, while
and traditional moldings molding the edges created a more finished look. However, anyone
who used such a chest soon found that they had to fish around for
enhance this timeless piece small items that ended up on the bottom. To solve this problem,
furniture makers added first one drawer, and then two or even
three drawers. Finally, the lid was eliminated, leaving a full chest of
B Y C H A R L E S D U R F E E drawers as we know it today.
During the evolution from blanket box to chest of drawers, the
grain in the sides changed from horizontal to vertical. Many of the
single-drawer versions exhibit an intermediate stage in this evolu-
tion, with vertical grain in the sides nailed to horizontal grain in the

46 FINE WOODWORKING Photo, this page: Michael Pekovich


D O V E TA I L
THE CHEST
Lay out the dovetails.
Use a pair of dividers to
lay out the dovetails
evenly. The spacing on
the front corners may
need to be slightly dif-
ferent from the spacing
on the rear due to the
presence of the drawer.

Extend the layout to


the end of the board.
After marking the tails
on the face of the
board with a sliding
bevel, extend the lines
across the end of the
board using a square
and a knife. The knife
cuts will help guide the
saw as you cut.

front, which probably is the only way they could be joined. In this
piece, the older style with all horizontal grain is retained, which
enables the front, back, and sides to be joined with dovetails. As
long as the sides don’t get too tall, this is a superior form of con-
struction: Seasonal wood movement results in the parts moving to-
gether, instead of against each other. Line up the boards. Before laying out the pins, ensure that the boards
are flat and meet at 90°.

Match the dimensions to your hand-picked boards


Although the Shakers probably would have used painted pine,
modern woodworkers may prefer the natural look of fine wood. I
used some excellent single-log Pennsylvania cherry with lots of
curl, nicely matched in grain and color.
You may need to adjust the overall dimensions if you want to use
specific boards in particular places. In this case, I made the overall
height a bit less than planned so that I could use an exceptionally
fine single-width board for the front. You can lay out the actual di-
mensions on a story stick, using one face each for height, width, Mark the pins
and depth. The story stick will give you all of the information nec- from the tails.
essary to begin construction, so you won’t need any drawings. With the boards
After double-checking to ensure planning and layout make secure, use a
sharp pencil to
sense, mill and glue the boards for the front, sides, back, top, and
transfer the loca-
drawer front. Leave the inner bottom oversize; it should be sized
tion of the pins. A
to just fit into its grooves. In addition, you can make up the bot- flashlight helps
tom frame-and-panel. Remove any dry excess glue and flatten you see into the
the boards using planes or sanders and a straightedge. To save corners.

Photos, except where noted: Mark Schofield SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2004 47


time, I take the parts to a local mill shop and run them through a LIPPED-FRONT DRAWER
thickness sander. The cherry drawer front is lipped on the top and sides. The sides, back,
and bottom of the drawer are made of a secondary wood.
With the case front, back, and sides cut to size, run the grooves
for the inner bottom (on the front, the groove technically is a rab- Groove, 1⁄4 in. deep
Thumbnail by 1⁄2 in. wide
bet). The grooves need to be stopped before the ends and care- profile Drawer
fully aligned from the top so that all four grooves match up. I use bottom,
1
⁄2 in. thick
a 3⁄4-in. straight bit in a plunge router and run the tool against a
straightedge to ensure a straight cut. Make the rabbet for the
frame-and-panel bottom in the same fashion, stopped at the rear
corners only.

Construct the carcase with dovetails


Drawer front,
There are a lot of dovetails to cut in this project, so you might as 13
⁄16 in. thick, has a
well decide on a method of cutting them and stick with it. If you 1
⁄4-in. rabbet along the Drawer sides
sides and a 1⁄4-in. by and back, 1⁄2 in.
use a router setup, make sure the jig can handle the long row of 5 thick
⁄16-in. rabbet at the top.
the rear corners or has a way to index setups. I cut the dovetails
with hand tools, which mostly is an exercise in sawing and mark-
ing accurately.
When laying out the joints, aim for a spacing between pins of
about 13⁄4 in. on center. This chest has the peculiar problem of the Front, 3⁄4 in. thick
front and back rows being different lengths, due to the drawer by 13 1⁄2 in. wide
by 38 in. long
opening. Try to have the front series end with a small half pin or a
small half tail, for appearance’s sake. Make your scribe marks on
the front edge of the sides down to the drawer opening only.
When cutting the dovetails, orient the outside face of the side
toward you. Begin sawcuts at the top back corner; come across the
top edge to set the saw in and then down the front face at an an-
gle, keeping the saw completely in the kerf. Then finish the cut by
raising the handle gradually. To ensure the cut is made to its full
depth, I follow an old-timer’s practice of cutting slightly past the
scribe on the back side. After cutting the tails, check that they are

D O V E TA I L E D B L A N K E T C H E S T W I T H A D R AW E R
Because of the drawer, the front corners have fewer dovetails than the rear corners. The dovetail
spacing may be slightly different on the back than on the front but should appear to be the same.

40 1⁄2 in. 19 3⁄4 in.

Rabbet,
1
⁄4 in. deep
13 1⁄2 in. by 3⁄4 in. wide

21 1⁄4 in.
27 in.

5 in.

39 1⁄2 in. 20 in.

48 FINE WOODWORKING
The side molding on the top TOP-MOLDING DETAIL
slides on dovetail keys and is The molding consists of a half-
glued only at the miters (see round and a cove glued together
Top, 3⁄4 in. thick
detail). and attached to the chest lid.
by 18 5⁄8 in. wide
by 38 1⁄4 in. long, Half-round
not including Key, 1⁄4 in. molding,
molding thick by 7
⁄8 in. thick by
1
⁄2 in. wide 1 1⁄8 in. wide
Inner bottom, 3⁄4 in.
thick by 17 7⁄16 in. wide
by 36 7⁄8 in. long, glued
at front only

Cove
molding,
1
⁄2 in. by
1
⁄2 in.

Back, 3⁄4 in. thick


by 21 1⁄4 in. tall by
38 in. long

Cedar lining, 1⁄4 in. thick

Stopped groove in Rabbet,


3
each side, 3⁄16 in. ⁄8 in. deep
deep by 3⁄4 in. wide by 3⁄4 in. wide

Stopped groove,
3
⁄8 in. deep by
3
⁄4 in. wide
Bottom frame,
18 1⁄8 in. wide
by 37 1⁄4 in.
long

Sides, 3⁄4 in.


thick by 18 1⁄2 in.
wide by 21 1⁄4 in.
tall
Panel, Trim pieces,
1
⁄2 in. thick, 1
⁄2 in. thick by
with 1⁄4-in.-thick by 3
⁄4 in. wide by
3
⁄8-in.-wide tongues 7 1⁄2 in. long

Base front and back,


3
⁄4 in. thick by 5 in.
wide by 39 1⁄2 in. long Frame, 3⁄4 in. thick by
2 in. wide, with 1⁄4-in.
by 1-in. tenons
Cleats, 3⁄4 in. square,
screwed to base and Base sides, 3⁄4 in. thick by
bottom frame 5 in. wide by 20 in. long

Drawings: Fred Carlson SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2004 49


When things go wrong with your dovetails
Hand-cut dovetails should not be perfect, and indeed rarely will be. However, some faults that occur during
fitting or assembly need to be repaired because they detract from the overall appearance of the piece.

WHEN A TEST FIT U N S I G H T LY G A P S B E T W E E N


CRACKS THE WOOD PINS AND TAIL S

When dry-fitting dovetails, it takes only Don’t despair if there are gaps on either
one pin that is too tight to cause a side of the pins and tails. If the gaps are very
crack. This needs to be repaired before narrow, you can repair them by inserting
the two boards are dovetailed together. some glue and peening the tail or pin with a
It’s difficult to force glue down into the ball-pein hammer. The blows spread out the
crack. But by placing the board half end grain until it fills the gaps. This method
hanging off the bench and then flexing it while pushing the glue requires that the tail or pin protrude at least 1⁄16 in., because it
into the crack with your finger, you can work the glue in from both will be necessary to plane away the crushed surface end grain.
sides until the joint is saturated. Place waxed paper over the joint If the gaps are wide, the best way to fill them is by tapping in
to protect the clamp that keeps the two sides of the crack paral- a thin wedge lubricated with a little glue. After the glue has
lel, and then place another clamp across the board to pull the dried, saw off the protruding part of the wedge and smooth the
crack together. surface with a block plane. The end grain of the wedge will be
an almost perfect match with the pin or tail.

Repair a crack. Peen small gaps.


While flexing the Small gaps can be
board up and down, filled by inserting a
force glue into the little glue and then
crack (right). Use one hitting the pin or
clamp to keep both tail with a ball-pein
sides of the crack hammer. Do this be-
aligned, with waxed fore planing the
paper between the pins flush so that
glue and clamp; then the hammer marks
close the crack with can be removed.
another clamp across
the board (below).

Shim larger gaps.


A narrow wedge dri-
ven into the gap be-
side a pin will make
an almost invisible
end-grain repair.

50 FINE WOODWORKING
square and do any necessary paring. In this way, any adjustments
to get a good fit are done only on the pins.

Use the tails to mark the pins—When marking from one part to
the next, make sure that the front and back are perfectly square
to each side, and that the grooves line up so that the inner bottom
will be able to slide in. I use a very sharp pencil lead extended
from a lead holder for marking. It leaves a fine line, is much easier
to see than a knife scribe, and doesn’t accidentally cut the tail.
With the case dovetailing done, cut the recesses for the trim
pieces on the lower front edges of the sides.

Dry-fit the carcase before final assembly


When dry-fitting the case parts, push the joints together as much as
possible by hand, then use a rubber mallet. When the joints are al-
1 most there, resort to clamps. You walk a fine line when fitting ex-
posed dovetails: Too tight, and you risk splitting the wood; too
loose, and you leave gaps between the pins and tails. Fortunately,
splits and gaps can be fixed (as shown on the facing page).
For the glue-up, I make special clamp cauls (see the photos at
left) to span the pins because they protrude somewhat. To make
the glue-up less nerve-wracking, break down the process into
steps. Assemble the front, the two sides, and the inner bottom as a
unit first. The front edge of the inner bottom is glued only to the
front rabbet (the rest is unglued to allow for seasonal movement).
If necessary, cut a temporary spacer to hold the rear edges in the
correct alignment. The second step is to glue on the back. When
the back is dry, fit and glue the base frame into the bottom rabbet.

Conceal the end grain with trim pieces


With the carcase assembled, cut a notch in the base frame at each
front corner for the trim pieces. On original Shaker chests, these
2 trim pieces as well as the moldings simply were nailed on, which

ASSEMBLE
THE CHEST
I N S TAG E S
Gluing this many dovetails
is stressful enough without
trying to do all of them at
once. Before you start,
make some cauls on the
bandsaw to fit over the
protruding pins. (1) First
glue the front to the two
sides and slide in the inner
bottom, gluing the front
edge into the rabbet and
allowing the rest to float.
(2) When this first assem-
bly has dried, glue on the
back, again using the
cauls. (3) When the back
is dry, fit and glue the
frame-and-panel base into
the bottom rabbet.

3
not only caused seasonal wood-movement problems but also were
aesthetically unpleasing in an unpainted piece. A more elegant so-
lution is to attach these cross-grain parts with sliding dovetail keys
(see FWW #170, pp. 50-58). I vary this method slightly, screwing the
key on beginning at the inboard end and pulling off the molding,
fastening as I go. The segments are cut out and the molding slid
back on with glue at the inboard end. Leave the bottom end of the
trim pieces about 1⁄4 in. short of the case bottom to allow for sea-
sonal expansion. The cove molding will cover the gap.

Build the base and the top before attaching the molding
On this chest, the base runs around all four sides, as opposed to
most early-American chests that have bracket bases on the front
and sides only. Saw the dovetails first, and then cut out the profile
on the bandsaw; you can save the cutouts to use as clamp cauls.
Nail a plywood template to the back of the base pieces and clean
up the profile on the router table with a top-guided bearing bit.
Screw cleats to the inside of the base and drive screws through the
cleats to attach the base to the chest.
Because the moldings overlap the top edge of the case, the top
should be sized so that the front clearance is proportional to the
amount of seasonal wood movement. I built this chest in the win-
ter, and the wood’s moisture content was 6%, so I sized the top
with a minimal clearance of a strong 1⁄16 in. (3⁄16 in. to 1⁄4 in. should be
sufficient clearance for a summer-built chest).
The top molding consists of a half-round and a cove made on the
router table and then glued together. While you’re at it, make some
extra cove molding for the base. The front piece is mitered and
glued to the top, while the sides are installed over dovetail keys,
with glue at the miters only.
1
Apply glue CAP THE
only at the top.
END GRAIN
To conceal the end
grain, the sides are
Notch in
notched adjacent to
chest side the drawer, and trim
for trim pieces are attached
piece over dovetail keys.
(1) After assembling
the case, notch the
case bottom where it
Notch the chest
bottom to
Dovetail 2 intersects the sides.
key (2) Then screw the
accommodate
the trim piece. dovetail key to the
case using the trim
piece to aid alignment.
TRIM PIECES HIDE (3) Finally, saw apart
THE END GRAIN the key to allow for
Trim pieces are attached seasonal movement of
with sliding dovetail keys the case. Glue the trim
that allow for seasonal piece only at the top.
Trim piece
movement. The pieces slides onto
stop short of the bottom the key.
by 1⁄4 in., with the gap
concealed by the cove
molding of the base.
3

52 FINE WOODWORKING
I N S TA L L T H E B R AC K E T B A S E
Frame-and-
panel bottom

Cove
molding,
1
⁄2 in. by Save the waste
1
⁄2 in. piece. After cut-
ting the profile of
the base, save the
offcuts, which can
be cut in two and
Cleats are used as clamping
5 in. screwed to cauls when gluing
the base together the base.
and chest. 4 in.

Corner block is
glued to the
base.

3 in.

The drawer front is in the traditional style, lipped on the top and
sides and molded all around. The sides and back on my drawer are
quartersawn pine, and the bottom is poplar. You can find quar- Attach the
tered stock at any lumberyard—just look through a stack of boards cleats. Screw
for ones with growth rings perpendicular to the board’s face. cleats to all four
Cut the drawer front first, with its side rabbets trimmed so that sides of the base.
they just fit into the opening. The top rabbet needs to have only Then drive screws
up through each
about 1⁄16 in. of clearance, because seasonal movement of the
cleat to attach the
drawer will be in the same direction as the case. Cut the dovetails base to the chest.
by hand, but use a Forstner bit to drill out the bulk of the waste be-
tween the half-blind pins.

Attach the hardware and finish the piece


By now you will have something that looks like a chest. The top is
secured with mortised-in butt hinges. I used extruded-brass hinges
from Whitechapel (307-739-9478; www.whitechapel-ltd.com), but
you may opt for a more authentic style with thinner leaves. When
the top is fastened, find the location for the stay. I used a brass
chain, which isn’t strictly traditional Shaker but still shares a similar
simplicity. (For more on installing lids, see FWW #161, pp. 46-51.)
Throughout the construction process, you should have been
planing, scraping, and/or sanding to all but the final passes. I gen-
erally take out machine marks (including the tracks left by the
thickness sander) with a handplane and scraper. The final work is
done with a 220-grit disk in a random-orbit sander.
I used Minwax Antique Oil, but any oil/varnish mixture will
work well. The first coat is always exciting—the figure fairly jumps
off the surface—but it also reveals any dents, dings, and glue
splotches that should be wet-sanded with finish using 220- or
higher-grit sandpaper.
After the finishing is completed, add the thin cedar lining in the
chest bottom. I used some leftover western red cedar clapboards. I
planed them down, shiplapped the edges, and tacked them in, leav-
ing them unfinished. Years hence, a light sanding will refresh the
smell, allowing me to recall the pleasure of building this piece. 
Fit the molding. Because the grain on the chest runs horizontally, the
Charlie Durfee builds furniture in Woolwich, Maine. base molding can be glued to both the base and the sides.

SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2004 53

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