In this video i go step by step on how to make a cope and stick framed with a raised panel.
Cope and stick door.
Some cope and stick bit sets are now made to be adjustable so you can vary the slot width for the door panel opening.
A decorative edge on the door s rails and stiles frames the panel to set it off and tenon and groove joinery gives it long lasting durability.
The cope and stick cabinet door design is durable and lasts longer than simple slab cabinet doors.
Cope and stick joinery produces great looking frames for cabinet doors but you need specialized router bits or shaper cutters to do the job the traditional way.
Add easy elegance to your furniture projects.
The first bit routs a profile and panel groove on the inside edge of all the frame parts.
Traditional or cope stick cabinet doors have been a favorite in new homes for decades and still are today.
When fine woodworking art director michael pekovich was faced with making 31 cabinet doors he soon realized he d need a simple speedy solution.
So we found a low cost low tech alternative based on a simple dovetail bit.
Driven by a passion for innovation in design quality and functionality our focus is to be the leading provider of reclaimed building material.
Nothing dresses up a cabinet like a raised panel door.
Check the instructions that come with the router bits to see if they allow for slot adjustment.
Cope and stick is a charlotte north carolina based vintage lumber yard furniture and millwork shop.
Mitered versus cope and stick door joinery a customer s red herring about strength of mitered versus square door joinery leads to a discussion of the pros and cons of different door construction joints from the cabinetmaker s point of view june 7 2011.
This is helpful for making glass panel cabinet doors or when using plywood with a thickness that s less than 1 4 in.
You can easily create the sticking profile on the inside edge of the door.
These bit combinations allow you to rout door frames quickly in two steps.
Enter the cope and stick joint.
This is due to the design s ability to compensate for changes in the cabinet door s size.
Wood will always react to moisture and the humidity in the air.
I use mainly my router table and some specialty router bits to do.
Those items don t come cheap.