This material I have ready and prepared for my custom cabinets is going to be used for the rails and the doors of the custom cabinets. The veridical and horizontal pieces of the custom cabinets that make up each and every door. The first thing I have to do is put up a straight edge on the custom cabinets with a joiner and then rip them up with a table saw. The rails and the style for all of my doors on my custom cabinets are two and a quarter inches wide. The reason I do this is mainly for extra strength but it’s also quite a traditional method of doing custom cabinets. We’ve got about one hundred and fifty more lineal feet of this to rip up before we can move to the next step. With my railing style stock all milled up the next part of the custom cabinets I can start on is gluing these panels up. The first I have to do is I have to run these over the joiners so they’re nice and flush with the custom cabinets. I’m going to reference the fence off that X joint I had made before so this article could go by faster. Next it’s time for a little blew up. I don’t use biscuits here the long grain of wood with long grain of the matching sides plenty strong enough with this loop for the custom cabinets to attach to. It ends up holding the whole panel together.
Cherry
Cherry