Right, where were we? It seems that I had just glued up the frames of the smaller units. Let's carry on from there.....
I brought the frames in so that I could mark up the side panels against the wonky wall and floor:
Cutting them out didn't warrant a photo, but using a hole-cutter does, I think. Firstly, I sharpened it, because it was burning in the wood. Then, after drilling a pilot hole and cutting in from both sides in the normal way, I had an almighty fight trying to get the waste out of the cutter. That led me to try this:
...and it worked a charm. The bits dropped out of the cutter without me trying. These holes are ventilation holes in the side of the computer cupboard:
There'll be a socket near my knees:
I brought the boxes back in again, and spent ages squaring things up and levelling. This was all happening in the odd hour or two in the evening during the week:
I also finished carving roses:
.......and did some more reeding:
I glued a piece onto two of them, the purpose of which you'll see in a minute:
The weekend. I can now put some hours in. Whilst the carcases were in and everything squared up, I made a pattern for the desk-top:
I used this to mark up the top and then cut it out:
It fits, but it's a pain getting in and out of position:
I took the desk top and the smaller pedestals back to the workshop. First job was to glue the corner pieces on (here's why I glued some pieces on to a couple of them), and the other facing piece:
At this point (Saturday lunchtime), my wife went out for the afternoon, which was a perfect opportunity to turn the power off and do some work on the electrics (and phone). Here's the sockets etc when I started:
And this is what it was like 5 hours later:
I have since plastered the holes in the wall where the back boxes were removed (using 2 year-old plaster, slowed down by mixing with some cement). I've left some cables slack and un-clipped because until everything is in from the workshop I can't be certain of where they will need to run.
Sunday saw a welcome return to woodwork. I started with the skirting around the pedestals:
Lots of sawing and planing (shooting):
Just a comment on sawing. I know a lot of people cut mitres on chop saws, but I do it by hand, with a cheap tenon saw I bought from the local hardware shop in Leicester in the late 70s. It really isn't hard to be very accurate with a tenon saw:
Coping. I'm going to do a little tutorial, which you might want to skip over if you know how to do it.
I have two places where I can't mitre skirting to skirting, but have to cope one to the other. This is at the junction between the big carcase and the small carcase each side, because it is impossible to know precisely where they will sit in relation to each other until they are fixed to the wall. I start coping by cutting a mitre:
The line where the mitre meets the face is the line you need to cut out. Grasping this principle is the key to coping. Have a think about it if you haven't come across this concept before. Then it is just a case of cutting and filing:
The cut in the photo above is more interesting than you might think. You will get no chance to clean it up, or tweak it, so you have to get it right off the saw. As with the entire coped joint, everything is undercut (backwards):
The coping saw removes the curved stuff at the top, and then you just clean up carefully with a file, and a chisel:
I glued the skirting in place, and then set to work on the moulding under the desktop. Firstly, I had to prepare the underside of the top, which is complicated by the edge trim being wider than the veneered MDF. I glued and pinned some bits in place to bring everything level with the bottom edge of the trim:
I was assured the other day on here that parcel tape has zero thickness. :lol: :lol: So, I taped up the places where the quadrant-like moulding will be:
....and got on with the fitting of it. Here's a dry fit, with the carcase upside down in position on the underside of the desk-top:
Then glued and pinned:
I then scratched the edge detail into the desktop front edge:
This evening I separated everything, and you can see the weirdness this junction between carcase and desk-top causes:
But I'm happy with the look:
I slapped on some woodstain, and wiped off the surplus:
Tomorrow morning I'll get the first coat of thinned oil-varnish mix on, and this lot can come in by the end of the week.