Saturday, January 9, 2010

Kitchen cabinet pullouts...phase 2!

Well, last time I showed some pictures of the new cabinet pullout I made and installed in my kitchen. Well today, I built another and installed it in the same cabinet to make my first double decker pullout! We don't have it fully loaded yet, but we should be able to fit loads more stuff in that cabinet than we did before, and no more crawling inside to dig around for what we are looking for.

As you can see in the picture both are full extension drawers, which is great. In the picture they look short, but the cabinet is actually just wide--the drawers are a full 23 inches deep.

Even though I have now made several boxes with my dovetail jig, I still hit some snags this time. First I accidentally cut the wrong corners together, forcing me to recut the front of the drawer. After building the whole box, I realized I had cut the front and back half an inch too wide, so I had to cut an and off of each and run them through the jig again. Oh well, I guess this is why the jig says that with practice you will rarely make mistakes. I guess there just is no perfect with this thing!
Posted by Picasa

Saturday, January 2, 2010

3 years later...another cabinet drawer!

So those of you who have found it in your souls to travel to Texas to visit know that we have a couple pull-out drawers in our kitchen cabinets. The first one we installed was purchased from our cabinet manufacturer. I was disappointed with the 3/4 extension slides and otherwise junky quality of this product and decided to build my own. The second drawer in this picture is the drawer I build in December 2006, which utilizes the full depth of the cabinet and has full extension slides.

I built this drawer out of pre-finished baltic birch drawer sides I ordered from either Rockler or Woodcraft. Building this drawer involved some improvising and messy router work, since I didn't have a table saw to do the joints I wanted to do. You can see in this picture my makeshift joint, along with my makeshift extenders for the drawer's face frame bracket to allow it to clear the door hinge.
After making the first drawer, I ordered materials to outfit my whole kitchen with pull-out cabinet drawers. I also ordered a dovetail jig to improve upon the makeshift joints I used. Finally, after all the supplies sat in my garage for three years, I finally made another drawer. This time I didn't use face frame brackets, and just installed filler wood in my cabinets so that I could screw the drawer slides to the side.


In addition, I spent the time to learn to use my dovetail jig! It took a couple hours to figure out how to use it and get everything adjusted properly, but now using this drawer stock I can create half-blind dovetail joints for a drawer in about 5 minutes! For a small box I made the joints were tight enough that I didn't even need glue, but for this larger drawer (about 19 x 22 inches) I used a few dabs of wood glue in the joints.

So, I am pretty happy with the new drawer. As you can see it is a bit crowded, so I intend to add another drawer above this one to hold small pans, lids, etc... Let's just hope it doesn't take me another three years to get to that one!
Posted by Picasa