Shaker Sewing Cabinet
Built for corralling sewing tools and supplies, this Shaker-inspired piece can serve other needs as well.
The original cabinet that inspired the one you see here came from the Shaker colony that once thrived in Hancock, Massachusetts. The formal description from antique dealers would be “A four-over-two-over-one sisters sewing cabinet.” The drawer count is clearly important to today’s audiences. The Shakers, though, saw things with a more holistic eye. The relation of their buildings to the land, the rooms to the buildings, and the furniture to the rooms, were all governed by a precise set of intentions — the singular mission of simplicity. This cabinet’s clean, clear, and organized geometry echoes all of this. Gorgeous cherry glows all over this project. With poplar serving as a pragmatic supporting cast for the drawer shells and cabinet back. Birch plywood humbly works as drawer and cabinet bottoms. If you’ve been meaning to brush up on your joinery skills, this project will get you flexing in no time at all. It starts with a handful of mortise and tenons to bring the side assemblies together. Those steps are a warm-up for more mortise and tenons you’ll tackle in the rails and stretchers. (Throw in dovetail tenons on the top rails for some spice.) Then you’ll spend some time making dovetail drawers at the table saw. The project winds down with making a rule joint for the top and drop leaf. A full plate of woodworking indeed.
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What You Get:
- 8 pages of step-by-step instructions
- 33 full-color photos, illustrations, and exploded views
- Materials List & Project Supplies Sources
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Similar Woodsmith Plans
Imperial Plans
The United States Customary System of Units (USCS or USC), more commonly referred to as the English or Imperial system, is the standard set of units for our plans. It uses inches and feet for measurement. This is the one you probably want if you are in the United States, and it is the one we have traditionally offered on this website.
Metric Plans
The International System of Units (SI), more commonly referred to as the metric system, is the alternative set of units that we have available for some of our plans. It uses millimeters, centimeters, and meters for measurement. This is the one you probably want if you are outside the United States. These plans are provided by our business partner, Australian Woodsmith, and are based on the original Woodsmith plan. However, dimensions and other elements of the plan may vary between the metric and standard versions. Be sure to double-check the plan before building.
Premium Plans
All of the information that you need to build our plans can be found in the standard plan. However, if you want even more granular detail to make your job easier, you should consider our premium plans. These come with additional shop diagrams that we drew when creating the prototypes. Shop drawings are not available for every plan.