Well, it's been a while since any real progress on this, for a variety of reasons. When we last left off, it looked something like this...
...that's the carcass made, the bottom drawer finished, the rest of the drawer fronts fit to the openings, and drawer #4, as I'd numbered them, had the front lapped dovetails cut.
At that point, health problems kept me out of the workshop for a while, then a new job, and then when I came back to it I found that this had happened:
I discovered that around last November and got a bit demoralised, so decided to do some easier, smaller, things before figuring out what to do about this. However, this piece sitting in the workshop is both a constant reminder that I need to finish it, and also takes up enough space that I really can't take on anything else of any size until it's out of the way. So, a week or two ago I decided to bite the bullet and get on with it.
It wasn't just the pieces I'd cut tails on that had cupped beyond rescuing; about half of my planed stock for the drawers had done the same, if not to the same extent. As things stand I've got enough flat-enough stock for the top pair of drawers, and the back panels for two of the other three. Time to start on those top two while I order new material and wait for it to arrive. With that said, I'm going to do as much as possible in batch making mode, so I started by making up all the slips I'd need - that's five pairs.
Last week sometime I rifled through my narrow oak offcuts and found enough to make 11 sticks, each a relatively exact 10mm wide by 15-25mm high - they'll all be planed flush with the bottoms once fitted, so for now I'm just leaving the height oversized on each of them and restricting my efforts to the other three faces.
Next it's time to dig out the very rough-and-ready sticking board I made for this purpose nearly two years ago, and the plough plane with a beading cutter:
Now, I'm going to be ploughing on both adjacent faces and necessarily going in opposite directions for each cut, so it's not possible to cut with the grain all the time. However, I quickly decided to make sure I arranged things so that the bead - which is the part that'll be visible in the end - was cut with the grain, because of what happened when it wasn't:
...I'm not sure how obvious it is from the photo, but that tearout has basically taken off the entire bead. Good job I made a spare piece. Soon, planing the right direction, I had a set of ten sticks with a bead on them.
Next, I swapped out the cutter for a 1/8" straight one, and set the far edge of the cut to match exactly the thickness of the 1/4" birch ply I have for the drawer bottoms.
Now, working on the other edge means they're too wide - in the new orientation - to put on the same sticking board, so I threw together another one.
And of course, I'm now planing in the opposite direction, so almost all of these are being ploughed against the grain. Luckily, this is the part that'll be hidden by the drawer bottoms
As you can see they're quite scrappy straight from the plough, but a quick swipe on each with a shoulder plane quickly cleaned that up. It was also at this point that the batteries gave out in my worklights, which was a convenient place to leave it for the night and also meant that the final photo is under very different lighting.
The bead section does look a bit fragile here, but it's never going to be under any sort of stress so I'm pretty confident it'll be fine.
Next up, make the two small top drawers. Once those are done, the new material has arrived, and we're back from an upcoming trip to India, I'll have to wrestle with the problem of how to mark a new set of tails from a lapped pin board, with no access from the outside of the joint.