Hello Hand Plane Enthusiasts,
I hope everyone is off to a great start in 2022. I’m doing okay, and do engage in a lot of woodworking since retiring almost three years ago. Last summer we moved from the Midwest to the east coast. It took a few months just to pack up my shop. Anyway, I have a new shop and it’s just about 100% up and running. I’m out in the shop between four and six hours every day working on a few different projects from furniture building to machinery rehab/restoration, etc. And yes I’m still collecting and using and making hand planes……
At least 15+ years ago I started making a queen size bed. For whatever reason, the project stalled about halfway to the finish line. Maybe it was work, kids activities and sports, or just a combination of things, but my woodworking sort lost momentum for several years. The bed project was the victim of bad timing in my life. I had too many other priorities. So, I wrapped all the parts in movers blankets and set them aside for a long time. Well, when I was packing up my shop, I had to decide what to do with this half finished bed. I hated to scrap it because the wood is really beautiful, and I already had a lot of time into it. I decided I’d move it with the rest of the contents of my shop. Wrapped in the blankets, the bed parts made the trip in the ramp compartment beneath the trailer along with some other long planks. Fortunately the bed parts made it here without a scratch. I spent a good part of the summer and fall setting up my new work space and vowed that once I got things operational I’d get going on the bed. So after fifteen or more years the bed project is nearing the finish line.
The bed construction is almost exclusively accomplished using mortise and tenon joinery. As a result, one can imagine what type of planes I’m using to accurately fit the joints together. I hope you’re thinking shoulder planes. With the right combination of carefully adjusted planes, set for a light pass, I can make joints that fit perfectly. Recently I used a Stanley #90, a #92 and and a #60 1/2R Lie-Nielsen rabbeting block plane modeled after the Sargent #507, to fit the tenons on two natural edge boards that will act as center stretchers in the headboard and footboard. Check out the photos below.
Jim C.