Pirate Chest Project

Submitted by Rich in NC on Thu, 01/02/2014 - 14:41

After my Daughter had twin boys in December 2012, I decided I would expand on my woodworking experience by making them this Pirate Chest toy box. Since there were two of them, my 'work' was doubled.

I DID learn some new things with this project. I had never used Pocket Hole joinery before and I was a little timid about doing it. I found that it's really pretty easy.

I also learned that when cutting on the table saw, I could NOT cut on the line drawn on the wood. As a result, some of the cuts were a bit short (but wood filler helped there).

My biggest problem was cutting the radius on the box tops since I don't have a band saw. It was difficult cutting the curve with a Jig Saw, so the Rasp, Plane and sandpaper came in handy.

The other problem I had was getting the slats on the top to meet up tightly. I found I had to cut a slight bevel on each edge so that the top of the slat would meet the next one.

I presented the boxes to the Boys at their First Birthday party just after Christmas and received a number of compliments. There was one woman that may want me to make one for her son. Needless to say I was a bit proud of myself.

Estimated Cost
Roughly $100 each.
Estimated Time Investment
Week Long Project (20 Hours or More)
Finish Used
2-coats of paint, 3-coats of gloss Polycrylic Urethane - this will not change the color of the paint.
Glued novelty wood ocean characters on front and sides.
White poly-rope handles on sides - decorative only.
Casters for easy movement when full.
Recommended Skill Level
Intermediate

Comments

Email Me
Free Plans

Get new plans sent right to your inbox for free!

    We won't send you spam. Unsubscribe at any time.