The Technique of FURNITURE MAKING
Draughtsmanship and workshop geometry
The drawing office
Technical drawings are the link between the designer and the producer (even if they are the same person).
1 They force the designer to make a clear statement of what he really has in mind.
2 They force the craftsman to decide exactly how the components of the construction are going to be put together.
3 As the drawings are made they point to problems before expensive materials are cut or time is wasted on unsatisfactory construction.
4 By the drawings the whole production routine can be planned before work starts.
EQUIPMENT
Modern practice is to use transparent plastic, fibre, or aluminium for T-square blades. For use in the workshop, and for 'full sizing' on sheets of plywood, a fibre bladed T-square, such as sold for school blackboard use, is ideal.
Clear plastic set squares have the advantage of the draughtsman being able to see what has already been drawn beneath them. A large adjustable set square is expensive but well worth the outlay. When buying or ordering remember that most manufacturers quote the hypotenuse of the closed set square as its size.
The same advice is given with regard to compasses. Cheap 'school' compasses are a frustrating nuisance. A large, well-engineered instrument of good quality is well worth the expense. Multiple outfits in velvet lined cases, or 'drawing sets' containing such items as ruling pens and ruling nibs for compasses are of little use in the workshop.
Circles under 2 in (50 mm) diameter are best dealt with using a circle template, the most practical being made of transparent plastic with a graded series of holes punched through them. They are accurate when used with a sharp pencil
or a stylus pen and in the smallest sizes of circle are more comfortable to use than any pair of compasses.
For the drawing of curves, a set of large french curves makes a useful addition to the workshop, also a set of boat curves or railway curves which may well be picked up from junk shops. The latter are Victorian or Edwardian in origin, made of pear wood, and are frequently in well-constructed boxes. For the drawing of long sinuous or continuous curves a spline made from thin plywood, cut so that the grain of the outer skin lies across the width of the spline, is indispensable. It is a two-man job to use it.
Good quality HB or F pencils will give a thin and dark line, while a Japanese Pentel enables drawing office standard drawings to be made with a propelling pencil, the lead being half a millimetre in diameter. Should the drawing need to be reproduced, modern pencils and reprographic machines can make a very satisfactory copy without recourse to ink.