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Stools by Stuart
Every stool has a story.

"To practice any art, no matter how well or badly, is a way to make your soul grow. So do it!"; Kurt Vonnegut.

Stool #11: Maple Cutting Board Stool

Stool #11
Stool #11 in Maple

October 2024: Has it been 12 years since I made one of these?

I dusted off the jigs and fixtures I had made to build these stools. I was looking for a use for an old cutting board that I found in an abandoned storage unit. This seemed like a good use.

top vies
Top View showing cutting board grain

The laminated cutting board top has varied grain and color

This Maple doesn't look very pretty in this picture. It was made for a cutting board, after all. And this image doesn't do it justice.

top view
Bottom signature

Show signature and postage stamp that I use for makers mark.

bottom view
Bottom View

Show details of construction. Also Maple with Black Walnut laminated between.

I haven't worked with Maple before so I don't have any scrap Maple laying around. I was able to get some reject Maple pieces from a furniture factory. They weren't wide enough to make legs so I laminated three pieces together with strips of Black Walnut between. Then I ripped it down the middle at an angle to make two legs.

leg
leg assembly

Maple with Black Walnut laminated between.


New Techniques and Fixtures used in this assembly

leg glue fixture
leg glue fixture

Redesigned fixture for clamping leg pieces.

leg glue up
leg glueup

Clamping fixture with leg pieces.

This image is kind of a mess. Click on image to enlarge to get better view.

There are four clamps shown here:

  1. Clamp fixture to table
  2. Clamp leg to trapizoid piece
  3. clamp to hold trapizoid piece to base.
  4. clamp to hold leg to base

Clamp 3 and 4 are just insurance that the top surfaces of the trapizoid and leg remain flush during clamp.

In previous stools I installed the screws (see below) during the glue process and used those screws instead of clamps to hold the pieces together for gluing. It was very hard to keep everything lined up during this process. So I decided to make it a two-step process -- shown here.

drill jig
Fixture for drill

Fixture for drilling screw holes to secure leg to trapizoid.

This image is kind of a mess. Click on image to enlarge to get better view.

In previous stools I installed the screws (see below) during the glue process and used those screws instead of clamps to hold the pieces together for gluing. It was very hard to keep everything lined up during this process. So I decided to make it a two-step process -- shown here.

drill left hole
drill left hole

[Left] Hold leg against left side to drill/countersink left hole.

With the trapizoid already glued to the leg, this step is very precise. The leg lays flat on the fixture and the trapizoid butts up against the front edge and hanges down. It's easy to line up the screw hole with the countersink.

drill right hole
drill right hole

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[Right] Slide leg to right side to drill/countersink right hole.

base glue fixture
Base Clamping Fixture

Fixture for clamping leg pieces together to form base.

I have used this fixture for most of the stools. It can be adapted to many different size stools with the use of spacers.

This stool is the largest that I have made and it barely fits in the fixture.