Showing posts with label cabinet making. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cabinet making. Show all posts
Monday, February 27, 2017
How much does your wood move?
Wood movement is one aspect in furniture making that is more important than many really know or willing to understand. There are books, articles, and charts to determine wood movement and one particular book that comes to mind is Understanding Wood by Bruce Hadley. While books and charts are good sometimes recording wood movement physically is a better option. Especially since most lumber that are available these days are not fully mature before they were cut. Also sadly the wood drying has changed rapidly. Today wood is being pushed to the limits, often drying too quickly. I know this from the visual piles of wood in the short bins full of end checks that go several feet in from the ends.
My preferred method to measuring wood movement is to gather several pieces of soft wood and hard wood that I commonly use. For me that is pine, poplar, cherry, oak, walnut, maple, and mahogany. I often use a small off cut that has been milled over the years. I will use this off cut record how much the wood itself has or will move in width. Several times a year I even measure the length. Yes even wood moves in length, but not much. When recording the width I also record the date, humidity, and time. A perfect example it the pine shown in the photograph, it has moved a 1/16 of an inch just this month alone. The humidity has changed rapidly last few weeks and that plays a huge role in furniture making. I will record all wood movement for 1-2 years to ensure I get an average and understanding of possible movement. The instrument I use to measure humidity and temperature is the AcuRite 00613 Indoor Humidity Monitor. I have one in every room in my shoppe and it is quite accurate.
So while its fun just slapping furniture together, always beware wood will always move and if you don't compensate for wood movement the results can scare you. Trust me!
Cheers!
Sunday, January 29, 2017
Hide glue for sale.
Hide glue the oldest of all the glues commonly used in woodworking. With any glue there are pros and cons. The cons are the glue must be hot, some form of a double boiler must be used, it can spoil, open time can be a concern, and cheap glue smells badly. The pros are reversibility, easy to repair, easy of sanding, perfect for hammer veneering, non-toxic, no creep, will stick to old hide glue, and best of all the glue is transparent to most finishes.
Hide glue is the ideal traditional protein glue for veneering, and with a bit of practice you can successfully veneer without a pile of clamps or the need of a vacuum press. It's the perfect glue for the occasional user. You can do many joints just by rubbing the wood together until they get tacky and stick - no need for clamps.
Commonly hide glue is sold in many different "gram strengths." The higher the gram strength of glue the tackier and stronger the glue. The stronger the glue is often the less "open time" you have. For this simple reason I only stock 192-gram strength hide glue. The hide glue I stock is made by the last supplier of hide glue in the states and it's the highest refined hide glue available with the least amount of odor.
Mixing:
Use equal parts of water and glue. Once the glue is in liquid form the rule for adding water is hot glue means hot water/cold glue means cold water must be used. Ideal temperature is 120-150 degrees. Anything higher and the glue will start to cook and weaken. If any mold is formed the glue shouldn’t be used. If the use the glue isn’t regular than it can be placed in the refrigerator for safekeeping.
Shelf life:
In granule form the glue will be good standing for 100 plus years.
If interested in purchasing some glue please visit my etsy store found here: https://www.etsy.com/listing/489778424/hide-glue-192-gram-strength?ref=shop_home_active_1
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