[Tutorial > Modeling] Woodworking Dovetails - Tutorial
-
Actualy, the kitten is wearing that helmet in self defence. There's a killer hamster on the loose.
(Gidon)
-
I thought I'd add another little tutorial on a technique that has saved me countless hours of time and which is great for tweeking furniture parts.
I can't figure out how to insert a photo into the body of the text so I'll add them as attached files.
Sorry.Anyway, this tutorial deals with moving in edit mode as opposed to scaling.
(Gidon)
-
Move vs. Scale - continued.
Sorry about the clumsy way I posted this. Like I said, I can't figure out how to insert the pictures into the body of the text.
Any way, I hope you find this usefull.(Gidon)
-
So now I can make just one component of a certain style of drawer/cabinet/box etc and use the move tool in edit mode to re-size it for the application at hand verses having to make many different sizes of the same component. Cool.
-
@gidon said:
By the way Schreiber, which woodworking forum were you refering to?
I'm moderately active over at SawmillCreek.org. A lot of excellent woodworkers there.
Dave Richards showed me a much better way to do dovetails in SU and when I get a chance, I'll post a new tutorial.
Woodworkers get very picky about their dovetails because they are hard to do well and because they are a very strong way of making a drawer or a case. They can be made with a router and a jig fairly easily, but handmade dovetails can be made to look very distinctive.
Here are some really nice ones.
The gentleman who made this particular joint is Mark Singer. He is architect and a woodworker and a bunch of other things. He made this piece for a very cool California-coast house which he designed, built furniture for and won an award for. -
Beautiful.
-
That is a nice piece John.
I stopped in at Sawmill Creek a few times a while ago. A very nice forum indeed. I should go back and visit.(Gidon)
-
Over the weekend I downloaded Wink and played around with it. One of the things I did was another tutorial on drawing DTs in SU. Gotta admit, never thought about using Intersect Model to draw the DTs or pins. One thing I would add is to speed up the drawing of the lines for the DTs. I do the top and bottom half tail lines, dimension the first width line from each of those, then do a copy of each half tail line with a "/#" to do the rest of the lines.
I would not object to a special forum here for woodworking stuff, though I've learned a ton of stuff from the archetectural types and others.
BTW, I believe you have to store pics somewhere on the net, then use the [img]url%20of%20pic[/img] function to link to it from the post. Like this:
That is stored on my website and linked. Saves storeage space here.
Attaching pics limits how and where they show up. There's a work around by atttaching them to others posts then linking to them in the post you want them. PITA.
-
@schreiberbike said:
I'm moderately active over at SawmillCreek.org. A lot of excellent woodworkers there.
Dave Richards showed me a much better way to do dovetails in SU and when I get a chance, I'll post a new tutorial.
Woodworkers get very picky about their dovetails because they are hard to do well and because they are a very strong way of making a drawer or a case. They can be made with a router and a jig fairly easily, but handmade dovetails can be made to look very distinctive.
Here are some really nice ones.
[attachment=0:3asosxvb]<!-- ia0 -->IMG_2037.jpg<!-- ia0 -->[/attachment:3asosxvb]
The gentleman who made this particular joint is Mark Singer. He is architect and a woodworker and a bunch of other things. He made this piece for a very cool California-coast house which he designed, built furniture for and won an award for.The rest of the house that those dovetails are in is quite nice as well. So is the house he lives in.
Glad to have helped you out John.
FWIW, here's the method I showed John. I was kind of tired when I did it and it shows in the video.
http://www.brightcove.tv/title.jsp?title=1184386602Dave
-
@titmas said:
If dovetails are the mark of a crafstman than half-blind dovetails are the mark of...
... a compulsive-obsessive perfectionist!!
(gppatnude)
-
In all the years I've been around carpentry I've never heard that one, good call Eric.
Although not as sophisticated as the dovetail joint, the box joint is equally as strong but much less complicated to make and has a more utilitarian feet to it.
Advertisement