How it’s made
Customers are often curious about the methods of construction we use in our furniture. In this entry, we are going to show the work that goes into our furniture, starting with when the lumber arrives at the shop.

Lumber
This is how our lumber comes to us.

Lumber 2
This will make 12-15 pieces of furniture.
Our lumber supplier (Irion Lumber) keeps stock for table tops in flitches.

flitch
Boards stacked in their flitches
Lumber comes to us as “rough sawed”. We plane it to remove the saw marks and to get it to a uniform thickness.

Planer
Vester planes the lumber

Jim
Jim works with parts lists, trying to best use the lumber and to find the best grain and figure for the various pieces.
Parts at this point are cut to 2″ over length.

Radial Saw
Jim cuts parts to 2″ over length on the radial arm saw.
Boards are then run over the jointer, which gives them a straight edge, so that they may be ripped to width on the table saw.

Jointer
Vester runs a walnut board over the jointer.
At this point, all of the boards have been marked for the width they are to be sawed. A power feeder is used to pull the boards across the saw. This gives better results than hand-feeding and makes the task safer.

Table Saw
Eddie and Jim run boards across the table saw.
Our furniture is constructed using traditional joinery. What follows are some pictures of how we cut mortise and tenon joints, which is a type of joinery that goes back thousands of years.

mortisse 1
Vester at the hollow chisel mortiser

mortisse 3
Close-up of mortise joint being cut

mortisse 2
Completed mortise

tenoning
Vester at the single-end tenoner

tenoner
Close-up of tenon being cut

tenon
Tenon as it comes from tenoner


