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  #1   Report Post  
charlie b
 
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Default Rail & Stile Edge Treatment Question

Am doing some simple rail and stile cabinet doors.
Want to keep the edge treatment simple - want to
go with 1/8th inch roundover. Easy and straight
foreward on the outside edges but the inside
edges are a problem in the corners where the
rail and stile come together.

Am considering rounding over the ends of the
rails as well as the inside edges. Have posted
the idea and some shots of some scrap with the
idea to ab.b.p.w.. The rail to stile is obvious
but soft and may be a design element since it
adds another shadow line.

So comments, suggestions, opinions would be
appreciated.

charlie b
  #2   Report Post  
Lowell Holmes
 
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Default Rail & Stile Edge Treatment Question

I would make a sample door and see how it looked. :-)


"charlie b" wrote in message
...
Am doing some simple rail and stile cabinet doors.
Want to keep the edge treatment simple - want to
go with 1/8th inch roundover. Easy and straight
foreward on the outside edges but the inside
edges are a problem in the corners where the
rail and stile come together.

Am considering rounding over the ends of the
rails as well as the inside edges. Have posted
the idea and some shots of some scrap with the
idea to ab.b.p.w.. The rail to stile is obvious
but soft and may be a design element since it
adds another shadow line.

So comments, suggestions, opinions would be
appreciated.

charlie b



  #3   Report Post  
Toller
 
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Default Rail & Stile Edge Treatment Question

I tried that same approach on my first cabinet. 2 of the 8 corners were
okay, so I threw the doors out and bought a R&S router bit.

Save yourself the trouble and do it right the first time. It is possible to
do it your way (as evidenced by my 2 good corners) but it requires a lot of
fussing and practice. Even then, a R&S bit does a better job.


  #4   Report Post  
Chris Merrill
 
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Default Rail & Stile Edge Treatment Question

charlie b wrote:
Am doing some simple rail and stile cabinet doors.
Want to keep the edge treatment simple - want to
go with 1/8th inch roundover. Easy and straight
foreward on the outside edges but the inside
edges are a problem in the corners where the
rail and stile come together.


A slight variation would be to do the plain door and add quarter-round
molding to the inside edges. Saves the cost of the router bit set and
gets the same look (with a little more work, maybe). Might even save
time, since the quarter-round can be sanded more easily prior to
glueing it to the door.

C

--
************************************
Chris Merrill

(remove the ZZZ to contact me)
************************************

  #5   Report Post  
Bob S.
 
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Default Rail & Stile Edge Treatment Question

Charlie,

Don't overlook the eye appeal of a stopped edge treatment. You're thinking
it's a problem when in fact it's used probably more than you think. Dry
assemble the stiles and rails and clamp them. Now run the router and
roundover bit around the inside edge. The small amount of the edges in the
corners that are not rounded over will add - not detract - to the overall
appearance. Try one.

Bob S.

"charlie b" wrote in message
...
Am doing some simple rail and stile cabinet doors.
Want to keep the edge treatment simple - want to
go with 1/8th inch roundover. Easy and straight
foreward on the outside edges but the inside
edges are a problem in the corners where the
rail and stile come together.

Am considering rounding over the ends of the
rails as well as the inside edges. Have posted
the idea and some shots of some scrap with the
idea to ab.b.p.w.. The rail to stile is obvious
but soft and may be a design element since it
adds another shadow line.

So comments, suggestions, opinions would be
appreciated.

charlie b





  #6   Report Post  
James D. Kountz
 
Posts: n/a
Default Rail & Stile Edge Treatment Question

Another good thing to do is stop the profile 1-2" before the corners leaving
it square in the corners only. I saw this in a magaine not too long ago and
thought it looked ok. I think it may have been a chamfer though.

Jim


"Bob S." wrote in message
...
Charlie,

Don't overlook the eye appeal of a stopped edge treatment. You're thinking
it's a problem when in fact it's used probably more than you think. Dry
assemble the stiles and rails and clamp them. Now run the router and
roundover bit around the inside edge. The small amount of the edges in

the
corners that are not rounded over will add - not detract - to the overall
appearance. Try one.

Bob S.

"charlie b" wrote in message
...
Am doing some simple rail and stile cabinet doors.
Want to keep the edge treatment simple - want to
go with 1/8th inch roundover. Easy and straight
foreward on the outside edges but the inside
edges are a problem in the corners where the
rail and stile come together.

Am considering rounding over the ends of the
rails as well as the inside edges. Have posted
the idea and some shots of some scrap with the
idea to ab.b.p.w.. The rail to stile is obvious
but soft and may be a design element since it
adds another shadow line.

So comments, suggestions, opinions would be
appreciated.

charlie b





  #7   Report Post  
Luigi Zanasi
 
Posts: n/a
Default Rail & Stile Edge Treatment Question

On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 01:58:08 -0800, charlie b
scribbled:

Am doing some simple rail and stile cabinet doors.
Want to keep the edge treatment simple - want to
go with 1/8th inch roundover. Easy and straight
foreward on the outside edges but the inside
edges are a problem in the corners where the
rail and stile come together.

Am considering rounding over the ends of the
rails as well as the inside edges. Have posted
the idea and some shots of some scrap with the
idea to ab.b.p.w.. The rail to stile is obvious
but soft and may be a design element since it
adds another shadow line.

So comments, suggestions, opinions would be
appreciated.


I've almost always used a mitre for the joint between rails & stiles
sticking or edge treatment. It means that you need to make the stile a
little narrower at the end, and the tenon on the rail might need to
have different sized cheeks.

Bad ASCII art of a corner.
_________________________________________________
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Of course, that's been for making windows where the back side is a
rebate. Avoids buying excess router bits. (1)

Luigi
Replace "nonet" with "yukonomics" for real email address

(1) WTF am I talking about? Can anyone have excess router bits or any
other tool??
  #8   Report Post  
terry boivin
 
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Default Rail & Stile Edge Treatment Question

On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 16:33:47 GMT, "Bob S." wrote:
I agree with Bob. I use stopped champfers from time to time and the
look is rather elegant. Try it out.

TJB

Charlie,

Don't overlook the eye appeal of a stopped edge treatment. You're thinking
it's a problem when in fact it's used probably more than you think. Dry
assemble the stiles and rails and clamp them. Now run the router and
roundover bit around the inside edge. The small amount of the edges in the
corners that are not rounded over will add - not detract - to the overall
appearance. Try one.

Bob S.



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