I decided to make it in the Greene and Greene style, and use mahogany.
I cut the pieces for the inside tray and the walls of the box. The tray uses a locking rabbet joint, which can be made with a few table-saw cuts. The finger joints on the outside pieces were cut using the router-table.
Here is the dry-fit:
This time I decided to sand and finish the pieces before gluing them together. I had to tape off all the glue surfaces before staining.
After staining:
The more clamps, the better:
The rails that would hold the tray were glued into the slots:
I have an old box of veneer, it was cut about 100 years ago. The ads in the newspaper padding the veneer were for new cars!
I glued two pieces to the front and back of some thin plywood. Again, the more clamps, the better. Thick plywood on the outside distributes the pressure, and the aluminum foil is to prevent any stray glue from gluing the thick plywood boards to the project.
Clamps off:
Cut to size:
The veneered piece sits in a frame connected with bridle joints.
I made a jig to hold the strips of wood vertically, and push them over the blade. It slides over the table saw fence.
Dry fit:
The joints sanded, and a slot cut to accept the panel:
The glue surfaces taped, and stain applied:
The lid glued together:
Hinges installed:
I still had to finish the tray. I first cut a slot to hold the bottom piece, and glued it together.
I put some rosewood strips on the top edge of the tray for trim.
I stained the tray, and cut the dividers from 1/8 in thick stock.
I made little tabs out of ebony that would hold the dividers in place, but still allow you to remove them.
I made a little brace to help me glue the tabs in the correct spots.
I used spray adhesive to glue velvet to some thick cardboard, and put that beneath the dividers.
Before I shipped it out, I took a few glamour shots!


