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#1
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History Stick
When we were having our house remodeled, the contractor used a 1 inch
square piece of wood with all the cabinet measurements on it. I haven't seen anyone else use this system of making cabinets. Is this an old system not used any more? Can't really find anything of much substance on the internet either. Thanks for your time and efforts. Don |
#2
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I seen it called a "story stick." Never used one myself or taken the time
to learn the system but a lot of cabinet makers use them. wrote in message ... When we were having our house remodeled, the contractor used a 1 inch square piece of wood with all the cabinet measurements on it. I haven't seen anyone else use this system of making cabinets. Is this an old system not used any more? Can't really find anything of much substance on the internet either. Thanks for your time and efforts. Don |
#4
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wrote in message
When we were having our house remodeled, the contractor used a 1 inch respectfully snipped Don I've heard "story board", "story stick", and "preacher board". I never heard the word "history" used in this context. In the 70's a guy told me that if I used a thin piece of lumber on doors and marked the hinge butts on it, I could easily transfer the measurements to the new door/jamb, etc. Other door specifications were also written on the wood. Asking why it was called a preacher board, he said that it "never lied". (this young carpenter's helper was impressionable at the time.) woodstuff |
#5
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On Thu, 07 Apr 2005 23:35:53 -0700, wrote:
When we were having our house remodeled, the contractor used a 1 inch square piece of wood with all the cabinet measurements on it. A "story stick" - pretty much essential for doing fitted work into alcoves. Jere Cary's kitchen cabinets book has a good piece on them. |
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#7
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#8
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#9
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Man what a group. Thanks for all the replies. Sounds
like a good way to go, especially after I know what to call it now. Keep up the great work. Don |
#11
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wrote in message ... When we were having our house remodeled, the contractor used a 1 inch square piece of wood with all the cabinet measurements on it. I haven't seen anyone else use this system of making cabinets. Is this an old system not used any more? Can't really find anything of much substance on the internet either. Thanks for your time and efforts. Don I use one on almost ever project. http://www.teamcasa.org/workshop/images/bcab6.jpg Here is a picture of mine in use on a current project. Dave Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
#12
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On Fri, 08 Apr 2005 11:34:04 -0500, Patriarch wrote:
wrote in news:k1bd51h47r80u1n9sg4bgavtgb0aeo1kc1@ 4ax.com: Man what a group. Thanks for all the replies. Sounds like a good way to go, especially after I know what to call it now. Keep up the great work. Don I learn a lot more from the old guys than I ever do from books. And now, due in part to fine examples, I'm becoming one. ;-) Which, a book, a fine example, or an old guy? |
#13
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#14
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I have never heard any of the sticks mentioned. I do have and do use a "story pole". Commercial carpenter with 40 years in the trade. (top posted for your convenience) ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Keep the whole world singing . . . . DanG (remove the sevens) wrote in message ... When we were having our house remodeled, the contractor used a 1 inch square piece of wood with all the cabinet measurements on it. I haven't seen anyone else use this system of making cabinets. Is this an old system not used any more? Can't really find anything of much substance on the internet either. Thanks for your time and efforts. Don |
#16
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I've used "story sticks." They are much better than using a tape
measure. For example, I made one to set a specific height for my electrical outlets in the shop. No measuring required. On Thu, 07 Apr 2005 23:35:53 -0700, wrote: When we were having our house remodeled, the contractor used a 1 inch square piece of wood with all the cabinet measurements on it. I haven't seen anyone else use this system of making cabinets. Is this an old system not used any more? Can't really find anything of much substance on the internet either. Thanks for your time and efforts. Don |
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