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Showing results for tags 'moulding toolpath'.
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Often I end up with odd shapes/corner scraps/etc. of small pieces of good wood. For example when cutting a round table top out of a square panel of wood. Thought I'd salvage some good scraps and glue them up to make a useful small board and this is one result: A simple tray/dish, perhaps to set on your dresser as a place to put you jewelry on at the end of a day or maybe a candy dish to set out for company. I don't know what I'll use this for, but I like it better than the raw scraps alone it was made from. Still need some sanding and a finish. CNC cut the top center and rounded edge, then a trip to my routerr tanle to bevel the sides 11.25 degrees, followed with a 45 degree chamfer transition to the bottom surface. Doesn't show well in this top view. Made from 3 scrap pieces you can see if you look closely. 4D
- 16 replies
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- cnc dish
- moulding toolpath
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Table top is fresh off the bed of my CNC. Had to assemble to see if reality matches original design expectation. It'll get some maple stain to even out the color. Seems happy to be nearly finished. Only deficiency is that a view from above doesn't show the contours underneath the top. 4D
- 5 replies
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- hard maple
- rotary axis center post
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I've just delivered this book stand to my college library rare book room. It now sits in the front large window of that room where it can be seen from the general library space. I was asked by the chief librarian to design something original and representative of the creative design environment our college is. These photos are of it in the finish room of our fabrication lab where I teach different sections of woodworking and furniture design to students in Interior Architecture and Industrial Design. CNC created aspects of this piece include the VCarved quotes cut into the two stretchers, the soft curve on the front of the dark front ledge, and all joinery including sliding tapered dovetails to slide the side support of the back shelf into, bowtie tenon rows between stretchers and feet stretchers and posts, and also between feet and posts. You can see a 4-tenon stacks of thru tenons bowtie shaped piercing the top. The thumbnail curve on the top edge of the feet was also done using the moulding toolpath in Aspire.
- 57 replies
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- furniture design
- white oak
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