I been working on a cutting table for my wife with a bank of 10 pull-through
drawers below. That is 20 "drawer fronts".
Since the wood is highly figured and adjacent drawer fronts were each cut
from the same board, they have a very specific order. In addition to that,
there was a fair amount of hand fitting that would not lend itself to
interchanging drawers.
The drawers are aranged in 2 columns with heights of 4",4",5",6.5" and 6.5"
(top to bottom)
I'm looking for a clever way of indicating to someone (when I'm not around)
column, row and "which front" orientation. something more subtle than
writing top, left, west on the underside of the drawer with a sharpie.
I was thinking of doing something with inlaid dots that would not be too
obtuse, but pass as decorative to someone who was not paying close
attention.
Perhaps a "key" on the bottom of the carcase.
Any ideas in either an encoding scheme and method of presentation more
intuative than say, numbering them 1 to 20 in binary with maple and walnut
"bits":-).
Thanks,
Steve
Sat, Nov 15, 2008, 9:01am sawdust-nospam@primelink1.net (C=A0&=A0S) did
publicly post.
<SNIP> I'm looking for a clever way of indicating to someone (when I'm
not around) column, row and "which front" orientation. something more
subtle than writing top, left, west on the underside of the drawer with
a sharpie. <SNIP>
I stopped by to see if Swingman had responded to a post I'd made,
and saw this thread.
OK, you made the table for your wife. Which would suggest to me
that she's going to be the one using it. I would think she's only going
to pull out one drawer at a time, and possibly not even remove it
completely. But, saying that she did remove it completely, you're
worried she's going to turn the drawer around and get it in backwards?
That sounds like you're saying she isn't too bright. Or do you expet
strange people to be using the table and pull all of the drawers out at
once, then put them in backwards? Hell, even if they did, wouldn't be
brain surgery to figure which drawer when which way and which slot in
just a minute or two, probably in less time then deciphering your "code"
even.
Seems to me your so-called "problem" would have been solved by just
telling your wife to only pull out one drawr at a time, if she's going
to take anycompletely out, and not turn them end for end before she
slides them back in.
Time for me to go to someplace fun.
JOAT
Where the choice is between only violence and cowardice, I would advise
violence.
- Mohandas Gandhi
Top left drawer.
On the top edge of the back of the drawer place a single dot at one
end
Place a coresponding dot on the top edge of the face frame at the
bottom of the opening for that drawer at the same end.
Then as you get ready to place the drawer into the empty slot, you see
the dot on the drawer and the dot in the opening where it belongs.
Both are hidden once installed
For the next drawer down, make two dots at the same end.
For the drawer one column over make the dots at the other end.
Use inlayed dowels for the dots.
On Nov 15, 6:01=A0am, "C & S" <sawdust-nos...@primelink1.net> wrote:
> I been working on a cutting table for my wife with a bank of 10 pull-thro=
ugh
> drawers below. That is 20 "drawer fronts".
>
> Since the wood is highly figured and adjacent drawer fronts were each cut
> from the same board, they have a very specific order. =A0In addition to t=
hat,
> there was a fair amount of hand fitting that would not lend itself to
> interchanging drawers.
>
> The drawers are aranged in 2 columns with heights of 4",4",5",6.5" and 6.=
5"
> (top to bottom)
>
> I'm looking for a clever way of =A0indicating to someone (when I'm not ar=
ound)
> column, row and "which front" orientation. something more subtle than
> writing top, left, west on the underside of the drawer with a sharpie.
>
> I was thinking of doing something with inlaid dots that would not be too
> obtuse, but pass as decorative to someone who was not paying close
> attention.
>
> Perhaps a "key" on the bottom of the carcase.
>
> Any ideas in either an encoding scheme and method of presentation more
> intuative than say, numbering them 1 to 20 in binary with maple and walnu=
t
> "bits":-).
>
> Thanks,
>
> Steve
C & S wrote:
> I'm looking for a clever way of indicating to someone (when I'm not around)
> column, row and "which front" orientation. something more subtle than
> writing top, left, west on the underside of the drawer with a sharpie.
Encrypt it in the number and width of each drawer front's dovetails. :-)
--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/
C & S wrote:
> Some day, the piece will get moved to a diffent house, or from upstairs to
> down. It is simply too big and heavy to be moved with the drawers installed.
> That's when I beleive that the encoding wil be useful.
When you decide to move, let me know and I'll send you a pad of small
Post-It notes. :)
--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/
"C & S" <sawdust-nospam@primelink1.net> wrote in message
news:yCATk.1086$VN1.43@newsfe02.iad...
>I been working on a cutting table for my wife with a bank of 10
>pull-through
> drawers below. That is 20 "drawer fronts".
>
> Since the wood is highly figured and adjacent drawer fronts were each cut
> from the same board, they have a very specific order. In addition to
> that,
> there was a fair amount of hand fitting that would not lend itself to
> interchanging drawers.
>
> The drawers are aranged in 2 columns with heights of 4",4",5",6.5" and
> 6.5"
> (top to bottom)
>
> I'm looking for a clever way of indicating to someone (when I'm not
> around)
> column, row and "which front" orientation. something more subtle than
> writing top, left, west on the underside of the drawer with a sharpie.
>
> I was thinking of doing something with inlaid dots that would not be too
> obtuse, but pass as decorative to someone who was not paying close
> attention.
>
> Perhaps a "key" on the bottom of the carcase.
>
> Any ideas in either an encoding scheme and method of presentation more
> intuative than say, numbering them 1 to 20 in binary with maple and walnut
> "bits":-).
>
> Thanks,
>
> Steve
I am going to sound like a smart ass here but. It is common to mark the
bottom side of the drawer bottom. Which would be more distracting, markings
that you only see if you pull the drawer out and turn it upside down or
inlays that might draw the attention away from the highly figured wood?
Believe me, some one that is not paying close attention is not going to pull
the drawer out dump its contents and look on the bottom.
I have built a similar chest and use it daily. We have not ever had a
problem with keeping the drawers properly orientated. Seldom do we ever
remove the drawers and if we do we generally let the contents tell us which
way the drawer should go back in.
Possibly name the columns A- Z and the drawers, 1-? then your
information sheet underneath somewhere
So that would make the drawers named starting top left 1-A and the one
under 1-B etc,
the next column would be top drawer B-1 and the next one under B--2 .
etc
CC
"C & S" <sawdust-nospam@primelink1.net> wrote in message
news:yCATk.1086$VN1.43@newsfe02.iad...
>I been working on a cutting table for my wife with a bank of 10
>pull-through
> drawers below. That is 20 "drawer fronts".
>
> Since the wood is highly figured and adjacent drawer fronts were
> each cut
> from the same board, they have a very specific order. In addition
> to that,
> there was a fair amount of hand fitting that would not lend itself
> to
> interchanging drawers.
>
> The drawers are aranged in 2 columns with heights of 4",4",5",6.5"
> and 6.5"
> (top to bottom)
>
> I'm looking for a clever way of indicating to someone (when I'm not
> around)
> column, row and "which front" orientation. something more subtle
> than
> writing top, left, west on the underside of the drawer with a
> sharpie.
>
> I was thinking of doing something with inlaid dots that would not be
> too
> obtuse, but pass as decorative to someone who was not paying close
> attention.
>
> Perhaps a "key" on the bottom of the carcase.
>
> Any ideas in either an encoding scheme and method of presentation
> more
> intuative than say, numbering them 1 to 20 in binary with maple and
> walnut
> "bits":-).
>
> Thanks,
>
> Steve
>
>
>
Final solution posted to ABPW
"C & S" <sawdust-nospam@primelink1.net> wrote in message
news:yCATk.1086$VN1.43@newsfe02.iad...
> I been working on a cutting table for my wife with a bank of 10
pull-through
> drawers below. That is 20 "drawer fronts".
>
> Since the wood is highly figured and adjacent drawer fronts were each cut
> from the same board, they have a very specific order. In addition to
that,
> there was a fair amount of hand fitting that would not lend itself to
> interchanging drawers.
>
> The drawers are aranged in 2 columns with heights of 4",4",5",6.5" and
6.5"
> (top to bottom)
>
> I'm looking for a clever way of indicating to someone (when I'm not
around)
> column, row and "which front" orientation. something more subtle than
> writing top, left, west on the underside of the drawer with a sharpie.
>
> I was thinking of doing something with inlaid dots that would not be too
> obtuse, but pass as decorative to someone who was not paying close
> attention.
>
> Perhaps a "key" on the bottom of the carcase.
>
> Any ideas in either an encoding scheme and method of presentation more
> intuative than say, numbering them 1 to 20 in binary with maple and walnut
> "bits":-).
>
> Thanks,
>
> Steve
>
>
>
Joat
But, saying that she did remove it completely, you're
worried she's going to turn the drawer around and get it in backwards?
That sounds like you're saying she isn't too bright. Or do you expet
strange people to be using the table and pull all of the drawers out at
once, then put them in backwards? Hell, even if they did, wouldn't be
brain surgery to figure which drawer when which way and which slot in
just a minute or two, probably in less time then deciphering your "code"
even.
No to all of the above.
Some day, the piece will get moved to a diffent house, or from upstairs to
down. It is simply too big and heavy to be moved with the drawers installed.
That's when I beleive that the encoding wil be useful.
-Steve