I would like to thank everyone on this forum for their suggestions, help and ideas over the last few months. Without this forum there is no way that I would have been at this point right now; from tool selection to design help I took it all in.
The details:
This bed was built out of 2" walnut slabs for the legs and 4/4 rough sawn walnut for everything else. The rails were doubled up 4/4 boards and the panels were 3/4" final thickness boards. I was able to make the side panels and foot board out of a single board each leaving the headboard as the only edge jointed panel.
The bed is constructed of tongue and groove panel construction for the headboard, foot board and side rails with the bottom of the panel glued to the bottom rail and the rest of the panel being allowed to expand and move with the humidity changes. These panels are joined to the legs with M&T and bed bolts to allow for "easy" relocation.
The mattress is supported by a box spring, supported by 1" thick poplar slats spanning the width sitting on 1" angle irons that I rabbetted flush into the bottom side rail. I also put short legs in the middle of 3 slats (one at the top, middle and bottom of the box-spring) to keep the center of the bed supported.
The bed was sanded progressively with a 5" ROS ending with 220-grit and finish sanded by hand with the grain to smoothen things out. I then used Rubio Monocoat (boiled, catalyzed oil) http://www.monocoat.us/ to finish the bed.
It is tough to see any real figure in most of the photos so I need to get a better lighting setup but you can get an idea of the figure in the lone photo of the foot board.
Again, thanks for all the help.
The details:
This bed was built out of 2" walnut slabs for the legs and 4/4 rough sawn walnut for everything else. The rails were doubled up 4/4 boards and the panels were 3/4" final thickness boards. I was able to make the side panels and foot board out of a single board each leaving the headboard as the only edge jointed panel.
The bed is constructed of tongue and groove panel construction for the headboard, foot board and side rails with the bottom of the panel glued to the bottom rail and the rest of the panel being allowed to expand and move with the humidity changes. These panels are joined to the legs with M&T and bed bolts to allow for "easy" relocation.
The mattress is supported by a box spring, supported by 1" thick poplar slats spanning the width sitting on 1" angle irons that I rabbetted flush into the bottom side rail. I also put short legs in the middle of 3 slats (one at the top, middle and bottom of the box-spring) to keep the center of the bed supported.
The bed was sanded progressively with a 5" ROS ending with 220-grit and finish sanded by hand with the grain to smoothen things out. I then used Rubio Monocoat (boiled, catalyzed oil) http://www.monocoat.us/ to finish the bed.
It is tough to see any real figure in most of the photos so I need to get a better lighting setup but you can get an idea of the figure in the lone photo of the foot board.
Again, thanks for all the help.