pampelmuse
4th December 2011, 01:33 PM
I have just finished "restoring" this Kauri chest of drawers. It is my partners and she has had it since she was a child, bought for her by her parents as an antique. (It aint no antique but I'll get to that.) I noticed that not only were the drawer fronts sagging back into the frame but they were leaving trails of sawdust on the inside of the cabinet. I took one look inside and found out why, the narrow drawer sides were completely worn away and/or split off at the base, the now lowered drawers were dragging across the nails holding the drawer stops in place and various bodgy repairs had nails rubbing on moving surfaces. All in all it was a complete disaster area. I started this repair ... well let's see.... about 2 years ago now and I got as far as starting to replace the bottom of the drawers sides with hardwood runners (pic 1 and 2) and then realised I needed better facilities to complete the job. Thus it was the primary incentive for me wanting to build my woodworking bench (documented in these forums). It has sat, until the bench became at least 75% functional, in the garage ever since taking up valuable space. It is one of those jobs that I started and as I got into it quickly came to the conclusion that it was probably not worth my time or effort, but as I had already invested time in it I would see it through to the finish. The piece has seemingly led a very checquered existence and had so many problems that it was really beter suited to firewood. I ended up taking the whole thing to pieces but I didn't take any photos over the course of the rebuild except just before putting the completed thing back together.
The main structural issues (amongst a litany) after the drawers repairs were:
(a) The whole thing was built I suspect by a rank amateur and basically nailed and glued together with barely a straight edge or 90 deg angle in the whole piece. Definitely not a fine furntiture antique. Many of the components were bowed including one of the drawer fronts which, in the centre sits slightly proud of the newly rebuilt cabinet. The old drawers runners were thin (10mm) pieces of roughsawn kauri nailed to the undersides of batons that were nailed and glued to the cabinets sides. These were totally unsupported at the front or back and were relying on nails to hold them horizontal. These were so worn that someone had attempted to repair them by taking them off and flipping them over to provide a new running surface!
(b) The inability to expand/contract across the cabinet sides due to the glued/nailed runners was compounded by the fact that the skirt was also nailed in position and this had caused the sides (also 10mm boards) to split almost their entire length. (one side had two parallel splits!). The cabinet had been subsequently painted and the paint was inside the cracks making a simple reglue impossible.
(c) The whole thing had had a "restoration" job done on it at some stage which had involved striping off several layers of paint, replacing the handles with ones that don't cover the impression marks left by the old ones, doing some crappy repairs on some drawers parts with nails and leaving the whole thing covered in coarse orbital sander scratches.
The solution, inspired by other posts in this part of the forum, was to completely rebuild the internal frame and use as many of the original timbers as possible for exposed surfaces. After planing out most of the bowing, removing the splits in the sides, straightening the drawer fronts and re-sizing the drawer sides, the finished piece ended up about 20mm shorter and about 15mm narrower across the width. The internals were rebuilt with reclaimed window/door framing timbers and the the sides were allowed room to move by gluing them to the rear M&T'd frame and loose morticing the drawer runners into said frame. The horizontal kauri members were dowelled into the front uprights replacing the old nails. (Pic 3 and 4)
The result is a something that looks far more attractive and sturdier than it did (pic 6 and 7) but I would hardly call it a beautiful piece of furniture as there are filled nail holes on exposed surfaces, the timber is stained in places from nail corrosion (eg in Pic 5), has numerous marks and dings here and their and still has small traces of paint in some depressions in the top (partly due to something being nailed onto the top surface at some stage). I also had to fill in a gap at the front of the cabinet but the fill-in doesn't match the shade of the old front timber very well. Similarly I had to glue a strip along the bottom of one lowest drawer front to get it level.
It is finished in danish oil and polished with Ubeaut trad wax.
The main structural issues (amongst a litany) after the drawers repairs were:
(a) The whole thing was built I suspect by a rank amateur and basically nailed and glued together with barely a straight edge or 90 deg angle in the whole piece. Definitely not a fine furntiture antique. Many of the components were bowed including one of the drawer fronts which, in the centre sits slightly proud of the newly rebuilt cabinet. The old drawers runners were thin (10mm) pieces of roughsawn kauri nailed to the undersides of batons that were nailed and glued to the cabinets sides. These were totally unsupported at the front or back and were relying on nails to hold them horizontal. These were so worn that someone had attempted to repair them by taking them off and flipping them over to provide a new running surface!
(b) The inability to expand/contract across the cabinet sides due to the glued/nailed runners was compounded by the fact that the skirt was also nailed in position and this had caused the sides (also 10mm boards) to split almost their entire length. (one side had two parallel splits!). The cabinet had been subsequently painted and the paint was inside the cracks making a simple reglue impossible.
(c) The whole thing had had a "restoration" job done on it at some stage which had involved striping off several layers of paint, replacing the handles with ones that don't cover the impression marks left by the old ones, doing some crappy repairs on some drawers parts with nails and leaving the whole thing covered in coarse orbital sander scratches.
The solution, inspired by other posts in this part of the forum, was to completely rebuild the internal frame and use as many of the original timbers as possible for exposed surfaces. After planing out most of the bowing, removing the splits in the sides, straightening the drawer fronts and re-sizing the drawer sides, the finished piece ended up about 20mm shorter and about 15mm narrower across the width. The internals were rebuilt with reclaimed window/door framing timbers and the the sides were allowed room to move by gluing them to the rear M&T'd frame and loose morticing the drawer runners into said frame. The horizontal kauri members were dowelled into the front uprights replacing the old nails. (Pic 3 and 4)
The result is a something that looks far more attractive and sturdier than it did (pic 6 and 7) but I would hardly call it a beautiful piece of furniture as there are filled nail holes on exposed surfaces, the timber is stained in places from nail corrosion (eg in Pic 5), has numerous marks and dings here and their and still has small traces of paint in some depressions in the top (partly due to something being nailed onto the top surface at some stage). I also had to fill in a gap at the front of the cabinet but the fill-in doesn't match the shade of the old front timber very well. Similarly I had to glue a strip along the bottom of one lowest drawer front to get it level.
It is finished in danish oil and polished with Ubeaut trad wax.