Lol! I know. I don't believe I've seen a board like this before. The effect is really interesting.I was wondering why I didn't see the dark pieces on the back side...
Lol! I know. I don't believe I've seen a board like this before. The effect is really interesting.I was wondering why I didn't see the dark pieces on the back side...
Ok, thanks! The fence on the jointer was slightly out of 90 degrees. Which caused a slight cup on my glue ups. Corrected most of it while planing. There is still a very slight cup. If you didn't have a straight edge on it. I doubt you'd notice it.A new thing seems to be " picture framed " boards . Double stacked face grain center sections with an edge grain frame around the outside to hide the seam and highlight the center .
Do the same with end grain center , and edge grain frame .
I'm not seeing what your calling out on the joints , but I'm gonna send you a setup I do for all my glue ups on a table saw . Works great , especially on shorter lengths .
That sounds interesting. Might give that a go as well.A new thing seems to be " picture framed " boards . Double stacked face grain center sections with an edge grain frame around the outside to hide the seam and highlight the center .
They overlap. I'm not sure how the other layer being 90 degrees could be stronger. More joints. I really don't think the results would be appealing visually speaking. Might even be using more wood. IMHO.Steve, that is actually an excellent idea. As long as the joints in the top and bottom layer don't align you gain added strength by gluing the two layers of thinner boards together.
Plus you can use thinner lumber and avoid the premium some places charge for the thicker stuff.
An even stronger board could be made by turning the layers at 90 degrees to each other.
Because of the grain direction . That's how laminated sheet goods are made ( plywood ) .not sure how the other layer being 90 degrees could be stronger.
Understand. Just didn't think it would be useful on a cutting board. Or pleasing to the eye.Because of the grain direction . That's how laminated sheet goods are made ( plywood ) .
Not needed on a cutting board , but a legit comment on strength .
Looks like an oops ! Probably how the picture framed boards came about . Someone fixing their mistake .Or pleasing to the eye.