12 Drawer Dresser

 

Along with the other projects I have been working on, I have been slowly designing new bedroom furniture to replace those we still have that I bought decades ago as a young single man with not much money. They have held up well despite being cheaply made and will likely still be of service to one of our children until they start obtaining those sorts of things. Although you can't really see the joinery, it is all there, the tenons, the dadoes, the figuring out how I am going to build it. 

When I was a working engineer with access to expensive software, this job was a bit easier but after retiring and losing access to said software, I spent about a decade mostly sketching things on paper in a notebook, making lots of notes and then still spending lots of head scratching while I was mid-build trying to figure things out. The end goal was usually accomplished but it wasn't a terribly efficient way to progress and mistakes inevitably get made along a way. 

"The difference between a good woodworker and a great woodworker is that a great woodworker is better at disguising their mistakes." - Unknown

During my project to build an altar for a church, I was introduced to a new to me free online software called OnShape which I have taken to like a duck to water. Unlike other free software that I have tried over the years, it is more intuitive to my engineering mind in how things get designed. It allows me to design things that fit and will grow or shrink as my design changes instead of hard and fast dimensions. I often don't know many of the dimensions until the day I print off a part in preparation of making it. Because of OnShape, I am creating a inventory of future projects to build so that when the weather is nice, I can make sawdust in my garage instead of scratching my head and trying to figure things out with a pencil and paper.

Above is the carcass design and below is the dresser with the drawers in place. It is undecided yet on the handle design though I think my wife wants me to make wooden handles out of wood. We'll see when we get there. Although the doors are considered "overlay" in that they will shut against members of a the carcass frame, they will appear "inset" from the observational standpoint. I am thus calling this sort of a hybrid style and not one I have seen before though I'm sure it has been done. It gives it a more modern look while still combining elements of arts and craft, which seems to be my go to style these days. Note the humanoid was just added at the end to give some sense of scale. The overall dimensions of the dresser are going to be 42" tall and about 64" long with 15" deep drawers.



Comments

  1. That seems like good free software.

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    1. Not perfect but the best I have found for my way of designing things.

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  2. That is a good sized dresser, what a great project! We have walnut handles on our knotty pine kitchen cupboards and I like them.

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    1. That is likely the way we'll go too. I did some like that for some knotty cabinets that went into a tiny home and they looked pretty good against the pine.

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  3. My carpenter husband got into making some pieces of furniture in his later years. He wasn't an engineer and didn't have any computer programs, but had a good eye and a gift for building things. He wasn't ambitious enough to make a dresser; he did build a nice bookcase for me though.

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    1. I enjoy furniture making. At least for arts and crafts (ish) designs, it isn't too complex or hard to figure out. However when it gets into modern stuff, I struggle.

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  4. I like that you provided the "person" for scale! Are you a mechanical engineer?

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  5. I always enjoy your detailed description of how you put things together.

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    1. It beats the alternative of boring you to tears.

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  6. When we were first dating, my husband-to-be made a skinny tall lingerie chest for me and painted it bright red (my favorite color at the time). It was a bit clunky but perfect for my undies and such. It was almost 50 years ago and I still use it daily. A treasure made by a loved one is a treasure to cherish forever.

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    1. I don’t have much for passed down furniture but I’m hoping to change that in the future.

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  7. That you’re still designing like an engineer, even without the old expensive software, is everything. The 42×64×15‑inch dresser is a beast in the best way, and the OnShape pivot is a game‑changer. Wooden handles out of wood? Yes, please.

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    1. Do you want a guess how many drawers I will get out of twelve when it is built? Zero!

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  8. I love the things I learn from my blog friends. You, Ed, are always teaching me about something! I say "about" because it's not like I would ever do most of the things you do, but it's fascinating to witness you (and others) using your skills.

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    1. I guess if I had been born in the last 20 or 30 years, I would be called a "maker" with a future in content creation. Instead, I just have a healthy love of Legos and woodworking.

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  9. Ed, how refreshing to find a free software that is useful.

    Like you, a new dresser would likely not result in any actually new space for me as well.

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    1. I fully expect that it won't remain free forever. I have seen several start off free, develop a following and then slowly start implementing pay for features before fully transitioning to a pay for a license software.

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  10. Love the quote. Dan and I often remark that mistakes are the reason they invented trim and paint. :)

    I like the dresser design. It's interesting that you find the software intuitive. That is such a huge plus. It must have been designed by an engineer. The learning curve for computer programs can be quite discouraging.

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    1. ... and caulking!

      It was definitely designed for a collaborative approach. The one feature I dislike about it is that there is no saving your work on your hard drive. It is all stored in the cloud and free for anyone to use. That means if it goes away someday or becomes a pay for license software, I lose all my work. So I have to manually export all my drawing to my hard drive so I could rebuild if necessary but I will still lose access to my model to ever make changes.

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  11. I agree that it looks like a huge dresser too. But it will sure hold a lot. I like the idea of wooden handles. However, would it be hard to keep it clean? You are an amazing designer.

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