Wednesday, 3 December 2014

Make Japanese Furniture

Making Japanese furniture requires knowledge of Japanese woodworking and joinery.


If you enjoy working with wood and are inspired by the seamless, simple elegance of Japanese-style furniture, creating your own functional work of art is simple, once you learn the differences between Japanese and Eastern carpentry. Stock up on furniture-grade Japanese cedar, pick up a few tools, arm yourself with an understanding of Japanese joinery and you'll be ready to make your own furniture. Does this Spark an idea?


Instructions


1. Study the art of Japanese joinery and how it relates to furniture. Western furniture relies heavily on connecting wooden frames with the liberal use of adhesives, nails or staples and wood glue. Japanese furniture makers developed an entirely different method of fitting wood together and have used this method for centuries. They use adhesive where necessary, but much of the framework is fitted together in an almost tongue-in-groove fashion to provide clean simple lines. Check out books from your local library or go to websites such as Japanesewoodworker.com and Japanesecarpentry.com.


2. Research the specific type of furniture you want to create. The most popular Japanese furniture in America is the shoji (sliding) screen, covered with rice paper and found in many households and businesses, and the tansu storage chest, which is recognizable by its resemblance to a staircase. Or you can make a wooden dining table, or kotatsu---a low, square or rectangular table with a built-in heater and coverlet. If possible, find a completed version of the project so you get a three-dimensional example to work from.


3. Plan your furniture on paper before you start. If you're working from a blueprint, make sure you have enough wood in the correct dimensions before starting the project. Always follow the woodworking rule of thumb: "Measure twice, cut once." This is especially important when working with Japanese furniture, because you can't cover any cutting mistakes with nails or glue.


4. Chisel notches into the wood large enough to accommodate the connecting pieces, using the hammer to adjust the pressure behind each stroke. The notches should be deep enough to let the connecting planks slide in seamlessly, almost like a jigsaw puzzle. Depending on what you've chosen to make, the size and depth of the notches will vary. Keep your chisels very sharp.


5. Carve connecting pieces with tabs or pegs that fully extend into the freshly-made notches. You can use a saw instead of a chisel for this task, but a chisel will allow you more far more accuracy and control over the angle of the cut.


6. Insert the connecting pieces into the notched planks tongue-in-groove style, leaving a seamless edge when finished. You can use a small amount of wood glue to attach the connecting piece as it slides in, but the glue should not be visible when the pieces are fully connected. The durability of the furniture should ideally come from the tight, "locked-in" aspect of its pieces and shouldn't rely heavily on glue.


7. Add finishing touches. A shoji screen needs to be covered with rice paper when the frame is finished, and the table surface of a kotatsu will require a space large enough for the heater to be installed. Japanese furniture doesn't usually need much time to settle or dry, as you should be using minimal or no adhesive.

Tags: Japanese furniture, connecting pieces, covered with, covered with rice, Japanese joinery, large enough