When I am through cleaning up the styles for my custom cabinets I like to just put the doors together to see how they fit. Then I set it to the side and do the rest of them. With my door parts all complete my rails and styles my tongue to my grooves all done now it’s time to stop focusing on the panels of the custom cabinets. The first thing I need to do before I run it through the planer is to take off all of thr dried glue that had squeezed out and gone in the clamps during the beginning parts of the custom cabinets. How I do that is I use a Stanley number five jack plane. That is something a real cabinet maker uses for his custom cabinets. Because my panels only need to be a half inch thick and I’ve used ¾ inch material for all of my custom cabinets I get to use the planer to take off the excess material so my panels will fit perfectly on my custom cabinets when I am attaching them to the rest of the project later on. Now that the panels have gone down the planer and gone down a final thickness I then send them through the drum sander to take out any shadow marks and then spend some time cutting every panle of my custom cabinets to its final size and give it the finishing touches before I start attaching them to my now perfect custom cabinets.
Kentmoore Maple Wood Natural
Kentmoore Maple Wood Natural