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Encyclopedia > Frame and panel
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Frame and panel construction is a woodworking technique often used in the making of doors, wainscoting, and other decorative features for cabinets, furniture, and homes. The basic idea is to contain the panel within a sturdy frame, as opposed to say a slab drawer front which is simply a single piece of material with exposed endgrains. Artists can use woodworking to create delicate sculptures. ... The front door of a house is often decorated to appear inviting. ... Wainscot or wainscoting (pronounced with a long ō, as in oat) is wooden or other panelling applied to the lower 1. ... Cabinet making is the practice of utilizing many woodworking skills to create cabinets, shelving and furniture. ... Furniture is the collective term for the movable objects which support the human body (seating furniture and beds), provide storage, and hold objects on horizontal surfaces above the ground. ...


The vertical members of the frame are called stiles while the horizontal members are known as rails.


One simple example of frame and panel construction is sometimes referred to as a 5 piece door. This kind of door consists of two top and bottom rails and two stiles, as well as the panel. If multiple panels are used then the dividing pieces are known as "mid rails" and "mid stiles" or "muntins". Panels can be raised panels made from solid wood, or flat panels typicaly made from sheet stock.


With raised panel doors a variety of different profiles can be used. Some popular profiles are the Ogee, Chamfer, and Scoop.


The styles and rails, often referred to collectively as the "door parts", may also have both an inside and outside profile. Outside profiles are more common for cabinet doors. These profiles use the same terminology though they are typically smaller in scale compared to the profiles on the panels.


The inside of the frame contains a dado which is meant to hold the panel in place, the dado is typicaly made twice as deep as the panel overlap (typically a 1/4" overlap and 1/2" deep dado) and the space is often cushioned by something known as a spacer ball to absorb the expansion and contraction of the material. The lower part of a wall, below the dado rail and above the skirting board. ...


Door construction style falls into two categories one being mitred doors and the other being cope and stick. Cope and stick is the most common method, as it is less expensive to manufacture. Most doors that have multiple panels will use cope and stick construction. MITRE is a US federally-funded research and development center whose main activities are applying computer-based automation to large and complex tasks. ...


The process of making raised panel doors begins with gluing up panels, then moves onto cutting and preparing the parts. Next the panels are cut to size and shaped. Parts and panel are then sanded before construction. The joints are glued and set into clamps, if the doors are paint grade they are sometimes nailed at the joint on the reverse side. The panel sits freely in the dado and is never glued to allow for differential wood movement. The door then moves onto finish sanding where it is brought to it's final thickness, and the outside profile is added.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Frame and Panel Construction (814 words)
Leave 1/8" to 1/4" between the edge of the panel and the bottom of the groove.
For panels made from 1x stock, glue-up the stock so that it is slightly wider and longer than needed to make the finished panel.
Cut the panel so there is 1/8" to 1/4" of play between the edges of the panel and the bottoms of the grooves in the assembled frame.
ArchitectureWeek - Building - Frame-and-Panel Cabinetry - 2002.0417 (314 words)
It works like this: A panel is trapped within a framework, yet the panel is free to expand and contract within that frame.
Because the grain in the panel normally runs vertically, the top and bottom rails are made wider than the stile to prevent panel distortion.
In this case, the remainder of the rail after cutting the arch is typically equal to the stile width.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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