Door - Making A Solid Wood Door
Door - Making A Solid Wood Door
Door - Making A Solid Wood Door
For Openers
Making your own doors is not as difficult as
you might imagine, and the design
possibilities are almost unlimited. I make a
number of doors each year in different styles
for clients whose homes range in age from
brand-new to more than 80 years old.
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Material Matters
I chose knotty pine for this painted door project. Knotty pine is
inexpensive, easy to work with and the knots can be sealed to prevent
them from bleeding through the painted topcoat easily by applying two
coats of shellac-based primer.
I cannot emphasize enough the importance of using dry, straight-
grained lumber for a project such as this. When I began this project,
the moisture content of this material was approximately seven per
cent, which is just about the perfect level for making doors and means
future dimensional changes of the frame should be minimal.
The materials list shows the material required to make one 30" x
80" door, a common size, but it can easily be adapted to suit doors of
other dimensions.
Finishing Up
Before the gluing and clamping operations are complete, check the
door for square by measuring across its diagonal lengths, ensuring
they are equal. Leave the door in the clamps for 24 hours to ensure a
solid glue bond.
Once the glue has dried, remove the door from the clamps, sand
thoroughly and fit into its opening. For fitting techniques, see the
September 2002 issue of Canadian Home Workshop, Hanging the
Door, page 28.
Trim it Out
Hang the door in the opening and trim it with new casing, plinth blocks
and baseboard as desired. Be sure to prime the door with two coats of
shellac-based primer to prevent the pine knots from bleeding through
the paint. Finish with two coats of oil-based semi-gloss paint.
3. Forming tenons on the top, middle and lower rails of the door is the next step. There are
many methods to choose from when it comes to making tenons, but this is one process that I
have found to be both fast and accurate. Cut the tenons using a dado blade, stacked to a
width of 3/4" and raised to remove just enough material to make for a snug fit of the tenon
into the mortises. Set the fence of the tablesaw to act as a stop to prevent the tenon length
from becoming longer than the depth of the mortise. Use a scrap piece of material of the
same thickness as the rails as a test piece. The tenon should be sized so that it can be
pressed into the mortise without having to force it into place with a hammer.
4. Refine the tenons by rounding off the square corners left by the tablesaw cutting
operation so they fit snugly into the rounded corners of the mortise. Work a piece of cloth-
backed sandpaper across the square edges of the tenon (similar to polishing shoes with a
cloth) until the tenon has an evenly rounded profile that matches the mortise in the stile. The
strength of this joint is due in part to the fit between the mortise and the tenon, and close
attention to detail is a key contributor to a strong joint.
5. Measure between the stiles to set the dimensions of the interior panels. If the door will be
painted, use medium-density fibreboard (MDF) for the interior panels. MDF is extremely
stable, and using it will eliminate any concern about the interior panels expanding or
contracting with the changing humidity. Once the panels are cut to dimensions, shape them
on the router table to give them their raised profile. They are now ready to dry-fit into the door
frame.
6. Once the mortise-and-tenons are fitting snugly, the door frame can be dry-fit and then
clamped together to check that its square. Measure the door diagonally from both corners: if
the measurements are equal, the door is square; if theyre not, adjust the parts as required.
Make any necessary adjustments to the frame at this point, before gluing. Also, test to
ensure the door will lie flat under the pressure of the clamps as its glued.