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Arts-and-Crafts Style
Joinery details make this chair strong and handsome
by Rex Alexander
hen the curator of Dennos Mu-
seum in Traverse City, Mich.,
asked me to design and build
some Arts-and-Crafts style furniture for an
upcoming exhibit, I jumped at the chance.
We agreed that I'd look for a customer who
would buy the furniture after the exhibit. I
approached Jay and Sue Wisniewski, who
have been steady clients on a number of
projects. They were excited by the idea.
I immediately ordered more than $100
worth of books by or about Stickley (see
the further reading box on p. 47), Greene
and Greene, Roycroft and others. These
books gave me a feel for designs of this
period. And they told me what type of
wood to use and how it should be cut and
finished. I studied detailed drawings and
proportions to help with the design.
The deal with the museum didn't work
out, but my clients gave me the go ahead
for a dining table and some chairs. We still
had to agree on a final design, and it had to
be compatible with a reproduction Frank
Lloyd Wright chandelier they had already
bought for the dining room.
I learned that Gustav Stickley, in design-
ing his No. 384 chair, was influenced by
Wright's work. I knew I had found the in-
spiration to my design problems. It was
this chair (first built in 1905), with its rush
seat and vertical slats on both the sides and
the back, that I drew upon to arrive at the
Building a Chair,
W
A Stickley style dining chair
The author based the design for this chair on a Stickley original. Stickley
was influenced by Frank Lloyd Wright. Mortise-and-tenon joinery makes
this chair sturdy enough to withstand the stresses of daily use.
Routing back posts
final design for these chairs. The chairs are
shown in the photo on p. 42.
A plywood jig for
shaping the back
posts.
A little time
Solve problems by building
a prototype
I developed a scale drawing of the chair to
help determine a materials list (see the
drawing on p. 43). For several reasons, I
also decided to build a prototype: the join-
ery is complicated, I had to buy tooling
and make jigs, and I wanted to be sure my
clients were satisfied with the comfort of
this chair. Also, I could use the prototype to
verify the proportions and to resolve some
of the details of the frame and the fit of the
inset rush seat.
Building six chairs is a small production
run. A prototype helped me to organize
each step and avoid many construction
problems. I made the prototype with
poplar scraps accumulated from other jobs
and assembled it without glue so it could
be taken apart. A mistake with poplar at
this stage would not be too costly.
Once I was happy with the prototype, I
took it apart and measured each piece for a
final materials list. Each chair was made
from front and back posts, seat rails, side
stretchers, a horizontal stretcher, curved
upper and lower back slats and vertical
slats. There were 35 pans in all, including
four oak dowels to pin the stretchers to the
front and back posts.
guaranteed that
all back posts
size and shape. A
shaper with a rub
collar works as
well as a router.
would be the same
A jig for trimming the back posts to size and shape
This jig is sized to handle two legs at a time. After cutting the profile for the front of the
leg, the author moves the leg to the back of the jig and finishes the profile.
1. Mount the first back post,
cut slightly oversized on the
bandsaw, into the jig. The
top of the jig is held
down with screws
and T-nuts.
2. Trim the front edge by
making several passes with the
router, adjusting the depth of
cut for each pass. A template
guide rubs against the
edge of the plywood jig.
Machining the parts
All the parts started out as quartersawn
white oak. I could resaw the 2-in.-thick ma-
terial into -in. seat rails, stretchers, and
slats and still have plenty of material for the
-in.-sq. front and back posts. For a table,
six side chairs and two arm chairs, I or-
dered 400 bd. ft. I wanted heavily rayed
pieces for the sides of the front and back
posts, the bottom side stretchers and the
curved upper and lower back slats. I chose
lightly figured white oak for the seat rails.
Except for the back posts, I rough-cut all
the chair parts on a tablesaw and then
cleaned them up with a jointer and a plan-
er. Later, after making tenons, I cut out the
curved upper and lower back slats on the
bandsaw (see the top photo on the facing
page), marked with a -in. plywood tem-
plate made to a 36 in. radius. I cleaned up
the bandsaw marks with a spokeshave and
a compass plane.
I made a special jig to clean up the back
posts after they had been rough-cut to size
on the bandsaw (see the photo and draw-
ing at left). The jig is based on one in
Tage
3. Move the first back
post to the back side of
the jig, and insert the
second back post in
its place. Reassemble
the jig.
4. Make a pass on
each leg, front and
back, at each router
depth setting. Clean
up machined surfaces
with sandpaper.
invested in this jig
Frid Teaches Woodworking: Furniture mak-
Cutting curved back slats
ing
(The Taunton Press, 1985).
Two legs are sandwiched between two
pieces of birch plywood. One side of the jig
is shaped for the outside cut and the other
for the inside cut. Support blocks on each
end and one in the middle of the jig register
the pieces to be cut. Machine screws
through one side thread into T-nuts in the
other side and hold the legs firmly in place.
I applied strips of self-adhesive sandpaper
to the inside of each piece of the plywood
jig to keep the legs from slipping.
I trimmed the legs to size with a 3 hp
router equipped with a -in. template
guide and a 4-in. solid carbide up-cut
spiral bit. I cut the front of each leg first and
then moved it to the other side of the jig
against the registration blocks. You can
avoid too much stress on the bit and pre-
vent tearout by making several passes with
the router, adjusting the depth of cut a little
at a time.
Cutting the mortises
All the chair parts except for the vertical
slats are connected with -in. mortise-and-
tenon joints. Years ago, I developed a sim-
ple jig to cut the mortises for a batch of
screen doors, and I was able to use it again
for this project (see photos 1-4 on pp. 46-
47). This jig is made of -in. plywood with
sides that act as a carriage for the router. A
-in. slot runs down the middle of the jig,
stopping 2 in. from each end. Two ad-
justable stop blocks sit square in the car-
riage and control the length of the mortise.
I held the piece to be mortised in the jig
by clamping it to the underside, below the
-in. slot. I used my 3 hp router with a
-in. by 4-in. solid carbide up-cut spiral
bit, adjusting the depth of cut with stops on
the router. Even with the jig, this was a
time-consuming process.
Router bits don't cut square-cornered
mortises. Rather than cleaning out all the
corners by hand, I devised a method that
works really well. I chucked a Lie-Nielsen
corner chisel into my drill press (make sure
it's unplugged). I clamped an adjustable
fence to the drill-press table to rest the
stock against and squared the chisel to
the fence. The rack-and-pinion force of the
drill press pared a clean, sharp corner in
the mortise.
Cutting the curved back slats
—Convex and concave cuts
from lumber yielded -in-thick slats, after the surfaces
were scraped clean. These slats are the only curved pieces
of the chair.
Cutting angled tenons
Cut the tenons on the tablesaw
All the Stickley chairs that I've seen are
wider in front than in back. The side chair
in Gustav Stickley's
Making Authentic
Double-blade tenoning on the tablesaw—
With a custom-
and side seat rails. Sawblades were set at a 4° pitch to the
surface of the saw table and separated by a -in. spacer.
made jig, the author cut angled tenons for the side stretchers
A jig for routing mortises
1. Movable base supports make
adjustments easy.
Built for mortising a
2. Use chair part to set jig.
After
securing one base piece, the author
snugs the other one against a side
stretcher and screws it in place.
3. Stop blocks for the router
deter-
mine the length of the mortise cuts and
keep them all consistent. Pencil lines
help to align the stock.
cut mortises in stock of different widths.
Craftsman Furniture
narrows toward the
back by in, I built these chairs to that
dimension— in. wide at the front and
18 in. wide at the back, with a seat depth of
in. Because of this design detail, either
the mortises or the tenons have to be an-
gled on the seat rails and the stretchers. I
decided it was easier to angle the tenons.
I used the tenoning jig shown in the bot-
tom photo on p. 45.
By drawing the seat-plan view to fall size
on a scrap of plywood, I determined that
the front and back of the chair related to the
sides by 4° off square, or 86°, so I set the
sawblade to that angle. To cut the cheeks of
the tenons on the seat rails and bottom
stretchers, I used two blades of a dado set
with a -in. spacer between them. You can
adjust the height of the blades off the table
to account for tenons of different length.
After cutting all the angled tenons, I
straightened the blade mechanism back to
90° to cut all the cheeks for the horizontal
stretcher, front and back seat rails, and the
upper and lower back slats. The tenons for
all these pieces are straight—parallel to the
pieces themselves.
Next I removed one of the dado blades
from the table and set the remaining blade
at 4° to cut half the shoulders of the angled
tenons. I used a miter gauge with a positive
stop. I lowered the blade, still set at 4°, and
moved the miter gauge to the other slot to
make the shoulder cuts on the other side.
Then I straightened the blade and adjust-
ed the height for cutting the shoulders of
the rest of the tenons, except the horizontal
stretcher. That piece has straight tenons,
but the ends of the piece are cut to 86° to
follow the shape of the chair seat. So the
shoulder cuts for the horizontal stretcher
are cut at 86° with the miter gauge.
The tenons for all the -in.-sq. vertical
slats were simple to make. To get -in.-sq.
tenons, I cut all four sides at each end with
a dado blade. A wooden backer board
mounted with double-faced tape held each
piece firmly against the miter gauge. I cut
each piece slowly to avoid tearout on the
corners of the slats. I used a sharp knife to
carve the tenons down to a dowel shape to
fit -in. holes drilled in the back slats, the
side stretchers and the seat rails.
side with a Forstner bit in the drill press.
Scraping and sanding removed all the
milling marks and provided a smooth sur-
face for finishing. After a satisfactory dry-
fit, I completely disassembled the chair and
stained all the parts.
You have to think through the order in
which the pieces of a chair go together, but
it's really pretty simple. Vertical slats went
in first, glued into both the back slats and
the side-stretcher and seat-rail assemblies.
I assembled whole sides by adding the
front and back posts and clamped them to
dry overnight. The next day, I put two sides
together with the horizontal stretcher, the
front and back seat rails, and the back-slat
assembly to make a complete chair frame.
I let any glue squeeze-out around the joints
cure partially before removing the glue
with a sharp chisel.
After the glue had cured, I removed the
clamps and glued and screwed -in.-thick
corner blocks to the inside bottom of the
chair. These add stability to the frame and
support the inset rush seat. I go over the
chair completely with 400-grit wet-or-dry
sandpaper and follow that with a good
rubdown using #0000 steel wool.
Fine-tune and dry-fit the parts
Before final assembly with glue, I always
like to check the joinery by dry-fitting the
parts (see the photo at right on the facing
page). It helps me avoid surprises when I
can least afford them. I check the fit of
every piece and make adjustments as nec-
essary with a chisel or a shoulder plane.
I marked the through-dowel pins for the
lower stretchers ( in. dia.) with a home-
made gauge at 4 in. up from the bottom of
each post. I drilled halfway in from either
A finish from Sam Maloof
Oil on wood is really a beautiful finish,
bringing out a depth that looks superior to
any film finish. But on furniture and cabi-
set of doors, this jig can be adjusted to
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