Easy DIY Picture Frame Stock (WnW
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- Опубліковано 10 сер 2017
- Two Router Bits and a Table Saw
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Related Projects:
Designing Picture Frames - www.wordsnwood.com/2013/framed...
Picture frame build (with this design) -- wordsnwood.com/2013/framebuild/
Hello Internet Nail and Gear Plaque - www.wordsnwood.com/2016/nail-a...
Calendar Frame - www.wordsnwood.com/2008/calendar/
Mirror Frame - www.wordsnwood.com/2012/mirror/
I came up with this picture frame design a few years ago and I have used it in several projects. It is very simple to build. All you need are a router table and tablesaw, and two basic router bits.
You could try it with a handheld router, but you’re on your own with that!
Check out the first two project links to see closeup photos of related projects that use similar picture frames.
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Thank-you! - Навчання та стиль
I think those table saw kerfs really make the simplistic profile more elegant! Great stuff, Art!
Its amazing how those two cuts on the table saw can really set the frame off! Looks great!
Dustin Penner thanks, Dustin!
The frames are beautiful. I'm new to this and this video certainly motivated me to give it a try. Thank you for sharing with all of us 😊.
Found these two bits in my new set, going to make my first frame today.
Thanks for the good video. :)
Thank you Art. This is exactly what I needed to see! Well done.
Two really nice frames there. It's amazing what router bits can do with a bit of imagination.
Barry (ENG)
Good one, Art! Such simple actions yielded such nice results. Good job!
Simple & effective, nice work as usual.....................
As always Art, a very good video on how to get a nice look without a lot of effort.
Very cool and you explained it very well.
Great tips and thanks for sharing!
Good presentation, Art. Thanks for sharing.
Nice frames and tips! I have some to make and I'm going to give it a try Art!
Thanks for sharing!
Excellent video focused on the point you wanted to make, i.e. beautiful frame with 2 common router bits, rather than buying architectural bits to improve the appearance.
very cool technique. Gonna have to try that.
Brilliant. Thanks for sharing 👍 😊
As a new wood worker I follow lots of wood working channels. Izzy Swan, April Wilkerson, Steve Ramsey etc. After watching just one of your videos (router table) I just knew your channel would be one of my favorites. After watching about 3 more, I’m hooked.
P.S. those miter cuts are perfection. 🙀
thanks and welcome!
I like the look. And easy to make.
Great. simple & advanced technique
Nice video tutorial on using router bits for making frame
Thanks for the Idea!
Incredibly elegant. Love the Cove cut. Buying precut Picture frame sticks is extremely expensive as they normally are shipped in 10 or more foot lengths. I will search to find a spacer for my Dado blades to allow spacing the blades apart one to two blade widths for the grooves you cut. Doing this in one step. Your method looks good to me to follow along. I enjoyed the informative video, well lit, good audio.
What an amazingly simple way to make a really nice looking frame! One thing you did not mention was the saw blade needs to have a flat cut instead of the double angle cut.
Good job sir,thank you
Fantastic! Thank you for this video! I’m just barely finishing a frame using this technique. Much appreciated
I just need to figure out a way to easily stain or paint inside those pin stripe grooves. What do you do for finishing the frames?
usually rattle-can spray lacquer or something simple like that.
ps: try applying some wide tape BEFORE you rip the pin stripe grooves. Then spray something dark in the grooves, then remove the tape, then finish the frame build
@@Wordsnwood great thoughts, thank you! I made a pretty large frame using this technique I’ll see if I can share a photo or something. I think it turned out great. Thanks again
nice frame
Great tutorial I made a frame today.
Thank you
Since you are doing outdoor scenes there, I’d like to know what you would think of making a frame to look like a window. The scene would then appear to be a window to the outside of your house. My father made picture frames but I always thought his were too fancy and detracted - I never told him this - from the picture itself.
Nice
I love the "more about technique than the dimensions" approach! Why do some people seem to almost fall apart, if they are not given every single dimension of a project?! Work it out yourself I say...make it fit your own requirements...instead of just copying what you see in the video down to the very last tiny little millimetre.
If you don't mind, what size cove, and round over did you use? Great video! I love the picture frame.
3/8" The articles linked from the video description goes into more details.
Thanks
Nice haircut and very useful tips! What did you use to stain the frames? Looks very smooth.
Andreu Ahn I never stain cherry. As for the oak.... Sorry, don't recall. Maybe a minwax early American or golden oak...
I just checked... A sealcoat of shellac and then polyurethane on the cherry
Ah that sealcoat...looks real smooth and touchable. Thanks!
Beauty, eh!
With the cherry and the jointer being the first stop, I thought I was watching Brian Grella :)
John Heisz I would need more stubble to pass for Brian...
Perhaps he's the Canadian version of Brian Grella.... ;)
And Brian's latest video is maple. What is the world coming to???
Scott Kershaw don't worry, Matt Cremona is still doing crotch and matthias Wandel still avoids pocket holes. So not everything has changed
Btw I love cherry and have preferred it for years, but I did run out a while back so not a lot of cherry has appeared in my videos music pas t year+
I watched this video thinking I was going to see what bit you used to do the rabbit of the frame. I guess I'll just figure that out.
My apologies... it's been six years, I no longer remember why I skipped over that. On the router table a Rabbeting bit would do the trick: amzn.to/3LYm7EL But I would probably use a dado blade on the tablesaw.
cherry burns like maple hard woods seme to have a habbit of that
thnx
I have neither a planer or a thicknesser, nor do I have room for even a machine that does both. I do have an electric plane and I was hoping to use this prior to get my wood level and untwisted. Just how crucial are they to picture frame making please? That’s why I’ve taken up an interest in woodwork, I just to make A2 frames for my archival images.
I have no experience at all with hand held electric planes. Sorry!
You can buy wood that is fully surfaced, it just costs more. Some lumberyards offer this as a service as well.
Wordsnwood (Art Mulder) Thank you for your prompt reply and suggestion.
Nice work. What is the diameter of the milling circle?
there are more details in the website article: wordsnwood.com/2013/framebuild/
Thank you.!
You don't mention what size cove bit you are using. Not on the website either. Can you say?
is there a spot for making frames for dummies without all the tools?
Try the Woodworking For Mere Mortals channel. Steve does a lot of "limited tools" projects.
But you could do all of this with a router table + tablesaw. Second hand tablesaws are pretty cheap and it is often the centrepiece of a shop so I kind of expect people that watch my channel to have one. And a router table can be made for practically nothing. I have a video where I show my basic router tables which were made for less than $25 or so: ua-cam.com/video/GgA-69nnKFo/v-deo.html
I cut my rabbits on the jointer :)
i normaly buy my router bits from m l c s no shiping cost and reasonable prices
I feel that the pictures are taking away the beauty of the frames.
That’s a deceptive title. If all I need is a table saw and router, why are you showing me professional carpentry tools that I’ll never own? Jointer? In my dreams. I was hoping you’d show me an accessible project, based on the title of your content.