Dovetails & Tool Chests

Student Nyla working on her dovetails for the tool chest project.

One student added a carved detail to the front of their cabinet.

Our current class of Wood Design: Furniture Making students began their journey with us on Aug 28th, 2023. Some were very experienced woodworkers, others had no experience at all. They came from very diverse backgrounds, and from locations all over the United States… and the UK! Out of 20 students, 16 of them left their home and moved to Adrian to attend this college woodworking program.

Lead by Instructors Zack Fealk and Noah Smith, these students began the school year learning the basics: measuring, marking, and wood selection. They quickly moved into their first two projects, cutting boards and a lower kitchen cabinet made of cherry.

In the cutting board project, they were introduced to the woodworking machinery, and learned how to use the jointer, planer and table saw together to make S4S lumber (surfaced on 4 sides). They learned correct gluing, clamping and sanding techniques.

The next project was the lower kitchen cabinet. Kitchen cabinets are not necessarily “fine furniture,” but we believe it is a necessary skill to know as a woodworker. No matter what happens in your career, you can always make kitchen cabinets. And the cabinetry skills transfer to other projects like high-end built-in-cabinetry. During this project, students made the body of the cabinet from cherry plywood, and the door fronts from hardwood cherry. They learned how to correctly install hardware for soft-close drawers and doors.

A finished tool chest from three years ago. This one was made from mahogany.

Now, eight weeks into the Wood Design: Furniture Making program, dovetails are the name of the game. Over the past two weeks, students learned how to make dovetails both by hand and by machine. Students are diligently working on the next project which is their tool chests. The tool chest project integrate all the woodworking techniques they have learned since the beginning of the college program. Students are diligently cutting dovetails, fitting their pieces together, and measuring the grooves for drawers. They are using cherry wood, which starts as a light colored wood, but then darkens as it is exposed to the sun.

There’s so much to say about each person in this year’s class, and we hope to share their progression as the move toward their graduation in early June, 2024.

Learn more about our Wood Design:Furniture Making Program

Meet our other Instructors

Learn about using GI Bill and VR&E benefits for the Wood Design: Furniture Making program

View Scholarships and Payment Options

 
Dena Koehn

Dena Koehn grew up in Rose City, a rural town in mid-Michigan, and moved to southern Michigan to attend Adrian College. She graduated in 2005 with a BFA in Studio Art and a BA in English. After school, she worked in marketing and sales. In 2016 Dena started teaching woodworking classes with Luke in a garage, which eventually became the Sam Beauford Woodworking Institute. She has served many roles at the SBWI, including Outreach Coordinator, Shaker Box Instructor, Secretary, Treasurer, Board Member, Bookkeeper, and now Director of Operations. She is also the Event Coordinator and Social Media Director of the Great Lakes Woodworking Festival, an annual event which brings together the best woodworkers from the Great Lakes region.

Previous
Previous

Why Woodworking?

Next
Next

The Art of Crafting Windsor Chairs and the Connection to the Material