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 Bold design, strong joints and graceful cutouts.These 
are hallmarks of the Arts and Crafts furniture made by 
the Charles P. Limbert Company of Holland, Michigan. 
In 1910, Limbert designed a large oval library table 
that’s become an icon of American design.
 
Here’s a smaller round version that’s more practical for 
today’s homes. All the parts fit together with four 
different kinds of half-lap joints made on a bandsaw. 
Follow along with us as we turn the bandsaw into a 
precision joint-making machine by adding one simple 
shop-made jig.  
  
Tools and materials 
You’ll need a jointer, planer, 
bandsaw, router, router table 
and jigsaw to build the table. 
We recommend using a 1/2- 
in. 4-tpi blade in your 
bandsaw. You’ll use two 
special router bits; a 1/2-in. 
bottom-bearing flush-trim bit ($18) and a 1/8-in. 
roundover ($23).You’ll also 
need 1-in. and 1-1/4-in. 
Forstner or spade bits and a 
5/8-in. brad-point bit. (See 
Sources, below, for 
bandsaw blade and router 
bit suppliers.)
 
The table requires 
approximately 15 bd. ft. of 
4/4 and 8 bd. ft. of 6/4 
lumber. Our lumber cost 
about $100. In keeping with 
traditional Arts and Crafts 
style, we used quartersawn 
white oak for the top, rails 
and shelf. It’s hard to find 
quartersawn lumber thicker 
than 4/4, so we used carefully 
selected plainsawn white oak 
for the legs (see Choosing 
Wood for the Legs). 
You’ll also need some figureeight 
style desktop fasteners 
($5). (See Sources, below, 
for quartersawn oak and the 
fasteners.)
 
  
Make the lower rails 
Select wood for the lower 
rails (E). It’s better to glue 
up the rails from two or 
three narrow boards rather 
than use one wide board.A 
wide board might not stay 
flat while you build the table, 
particularly if you use 
plainsawn lumber, and that 
would spell trouble in 
making the rails’ half-lap 
joints.You’ll also need a test 
piece (F) for making the 
half-lap joints. It must be the 
same thickness and type of 
wood as the rails. Cut both 
rails and the test piece from 
one long glued-up blank. 
The rails will then match in 
color and figure.
 
1. Joint the faces of the 
boards, and plane them 7/8- 
in. thick. Then joint both 
edges.
 
2.Glue the boards together, 
and scrape off any dried 
glue.
 
3. Run the blank through 
the planer, alternating sides, 
until it’s 3/4-in. thick. Plane 
another piece of wood 
(spacer G) to exactly the 
same thickness.
 
4. Rip the blank to final 
width, and cut the two rails 
to length.  
  
Rout openings 
in the rails 
1. Make a router template 
from 1/4-in. hardboard or 
melamine (Fig. F, page 61). 
Cut it exactly the same size 
as both rails. Drill the three 
holes in the template with a 
1-1/4-in.bit.Cut the opening 
with a jigsaw, staying 1/16- 
in. away from the layout 
lines. Clean up these rough 
cuts with a drum sander in a 
drill press or use a file and 
sandpaper.
 
2.Trace the template openings 
on the left and right sides of 
each rail.Drill 1-in.-dia.holes 
in the corners of the cutouts. 
Rough cut the openings with 
a jigsaw (Photo 1). Avoid 
cutting right on the line, but 
cut as close as you can, 
leaving no more than 1/16- 
in.waste.
 
3. Rout the openings with a 
1/2-in.-dia. flush-trim bit 
(Photo 2).
 
4. Flip over the template and 
tape it to the other half of 
the rail. Rout the opposite 
opening. Sand the cutouts, 
both faces of the rails, test 
piece F and spacer G.
 
  
Build an auxiliary bandsaw table 
The extra-large half-lap 
joints and bridle joints in 
this table are safe and easy to 
cut on a bandsaw.You’ll need 
a fence on your bandsaw, 
however. If you don’t have a 
fence,we’ve devised a simple 
way to turn your tablesaw 
miter gauge into a fence by 
building a no-fuss auxiliary 
table for your bandsaw. It’s generously sized to support 
the large pieces of this 
project (see Versatile 
Bandsaw Table, below).
 
  
Perfect half-lap joints 
Making perfect-fitting halflap 
joints often requires a lot 
of trial-and-error cutting, 
but we’ve devised a simple 
method to eliminate that 
extra work. Set the fence for 
drift with a 3/4-in.oak board 
(see Adjust the Fence, 
opposite page).
 
1.Make two shims equal to 
the width of your bandsaw 
blade’s kerf (Photo 3). Tape 
the shims together in a 
package.
 
2. Lay out the half-lap joints 
on both rails (Fig.C,page 61).
 
3.Mark one notch anywhere 
on test piece F.Cut the notch 
as described in Steps 4 
through 7 and test the fit 
with an uncut rail.
 
4.Tape the shims to the end 
of the rail so they slide along 
with it.Be sure the shims are 
snugged up against the 
fence. Make the right-hand 
cut all the way to the bottom 
of the notch (Photo 4). 
Remove the shims and insert 
spacer G.
 
5. Make the left-hand cut 
(Photo 5).When cutting the 
actual pieces, repeat steps 4 
and 5 with the second rail.
 
6.Move the fence away from 
the blade and clean out the 
waste between the saw cuts 
(Photo 6).
 
7.Test fit the notch on piece 
F. If the joint is too loose, 
add another paper shim. If 
the joint is too tight, reduce 
the thickness of both shims. 
When satisfied, cut the real 
joints.  
8. Cut the bottom of the 
notch by nibbling away at it 
with your saw blade (Photo 
7). Reset the angle on the 
fence so it is parallel to the 
blade, but don’t clamp the 
fence in place.With the saw 
turned off, advance the rail 
into the saw blade so the 
blade comes right to the 
bottom of the notch.Clamp 
a stop block to the fence 
against the top of the rail. 
Now, back the rail out a bit, 
turn on the saw, and nibble 
off the bottom of the notch 
by moving the fence from 
right to left. Make very 
shallow cuts. After a few 
passes, you’ll have a perfectly 
square bottom. You could 
finish off the notch with a 
chisel or file, but nibbling 
with a bandsaw goes much 
faster.
 
  
Make the legs 
Select the wood for the legs 
(see Choosing Wood for the 
Legs).
 
1. Plane the legs (B) to 
thickness, saw to full width 
and crosscut to length. 
Attach a taller fence board 
to the miter gauge. Set the 
bandsaw for drift with a 
scrap piece that’s the same 
width as the legs.
 
2. Draw the bridle joint 
notches (Fig. B). 
Each notch must be dead 
center, but its precise width 
isn’t critical.The surefire way 
to center the cut is to saw the 
notch from both sides of the 
legs, without moving the 
fence (Photo 8). Clamp a 
stop block to the fence so 
the cut stops at the bottom of 
the notch. Saw the outside 
cuts, then remove most of 
the waste, as you did with 
the rails above.
 
3.Take the drift angle out of the fence. Unclamp the fence 
and square the bottom of the 
notches by sliding the fence 
right to left.
 
4. Trace a curve on the legs 
with a jig (Photo 9 and Fig. 
E). Align the 
straight side of the jig with 
the edge of the leg. Saw the 
legs on the bandsaw and 
smooth the curve with a 
sander, rasp or hand plane.
 
  
Fit the upper rails 
1. Plane the upper rails (C) 
to fit the leg notches (Photo 
10).Cut spacer H from a 12- 
in.-long board planed to the 
same thickness as the rails.
 
2. Layout notches on both 
rails (Fig. D). Cut 
the notches by a similar 
spacing system as above. 
This time you don’t need the 
auxiliary table, however. 
First, tape a shim to the right 
end of the rail and line up 
the blade with the left 
marking line. Clamp a stop 
block against the shim and 
make the cut. Stop at the 
bottom of the cut and clamp 
a second stop block to the 
table. Remove the shim, 
insert spacer H and make the right-hand cut (Photo 
11). Remove the waste and 
clean out the bottom by 
sliding the rail right to left 
along the fence.
 
3.Angle the ends of each rail 
(Fig.D).
 
4. Drill shallow holes in the 
upper and lower rails (Figs.C 
and D) for figureeight 
desktop fasteners (see 
Sources). Install all 
the fasteners.
 
  
Construct the shelf and top
 
1.Glue up the shelf blank (D). 
Lay out the notches and 
circular edge (Fig.G,page 61).
 
2. Cut the notches on the 
bandsaw (Photo 12).You can 
simply reset the fence to cut 
both sides of each notch, 
rather than use shims and 
spacers, because the exact fit 
isn’t critical.
 
3.Cut the shelf’s circular edge 
using a brad as a pivot pin. 
Set the brad 7-1/2 in. 
perpendicular from the front 
of the bandsaw blade and 
snip off the head (see 
Versatile Bandsaw Table).Mark dead center on the 
underside of the shelf and 
drill a 1/16-in. hole for the 
pivot pin. Set the shelf on top 
of the pin, placing the blade 
within one of the notches 
(Photo 13). Rotate the shelf 
on the pin, and you’ll cut a 
perfect circle (Photo 14).
 
4. Glue up the top (A). 
Bandsaw its circular edge 
freehand.
 
5. Round over the edges of 
all the pieces except the upper 
rails. Use a 1/8-in. radius bit 
in a hand-held router or a 
router table. Round over the 
inside corners of the shelf ’s 
notches with a chisel or file. 
Sand all the parts to 220 grit.  
  
Join the legs 
and lower rails 
1. Cut biscuit slots for the 
lower rails and legs (Photo 
15). Be sure the slots are 
exactly centered.
 
2. Glue two legs to a lower 
rail (Photo 16). Make sure 
the ends of the legs, a spacer 
and the rail all fit tight 
against a straight board 
clamped to your bench.Glue 
the other rail and the second 
set of legs, too.
 
  
Assemble the table 
1. Glue together the lower 
rail and leg assemblies on a 
flat surface (Photo 17). 
2. Slide the shelf down on 
top of the rails (Photo 18). If the shelf is too 
tight, trim the notches with a 
chisel or on the bandsaw. 
Screw the shelf to the 
fasteners.
 
3. Test the fit of both upper 
rails without glue. Glue the 
rail that has the notch facing 
up first (Photo 19). 
Once it’s positioned,glue the 
other rail. Sand the bottom 
edges of both rails.  
4.Center the top and attach 
it to the fasteners.  
  
Finish 
Many commercial stains 
look good on oak, but we 
went a step further. We 
colored the raw wood with 
golden oak dye, sealed it 
with shellac and applied a 
glaze made of equal parts of 
raw sienna and raw umber 
pigments. 
Finally, we brushed on 
two coats of varnish. 
Sources
(Note: Product availability and costs are subject to change since original publication date.) 
Woodcraft Supply, woodcraft.com, 800-225-1153, 
1/2" 4 tpi bandsaw blades, various 
lengths; 
1" Forstner bit, #125935; 
1-1/4" Forstner bit, #125937.
 
West Penn Hardwoods, westpennhardwoods.com, 888-636-9663, Quartersawn White Oak, 4/4.
 
Woodworker’s Hardware, wwhardware.com, 800-383-0130, Desktop fasteners and screws 
KV1547.
 
*** Blick Art Materials, dickblick.com, 800-828-4548, Raw Sienna artist’s oil, 
#00461-8063; Raw Umber artist’s oil, 
#00461-8073; Liquin glazing medium 
#00445-1004.
 
Woodworker’s Supply, woodworker.com, 800-645-9292, 
W1100 Light golden oak dye. 
Cutting List
  
Fig. A: Exploded View
  
Fig. B: Leg Layout
  
Fig. C: Lower Rail Layout
  
Fig. D: Upper Rails
  
Fig. E: Jig for Drawing Curve on Leg
  
Fig. F: Lower Rail Template
  
Fig. G: Shelf Layout
  
This story originally appeared in American Woodworker September 2003, issue #102. 
  
September 2003, issue #102 
Purchase this back issue. 
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 Click any image to view a larger version. 
  
1. Rough cut 
the openings in 
the lower rails. Drill 
large holes in the 
corners, then 
connect the holes. 
Stay 1/16-in. off 
the line. 
  
2. Cut the rail’s 
final shape with 
a template and 
router table. Fasten 
the template to the 
rail with doublefaced 
tape.Move 
the rail and template 
counterclockwise 
around the 
router bit. 
  
3. To prepare for 
cutting the half-lap 
joints, make shims that 
fit exactly into the kerf of 
your bandsaw blade.The 
width of a kerf varies from 
blade to blade.This one equals 
three playing cards and one sheet 
of paper. 
  
4. Saw the right side of 
the half-lap joint using 
the bandsaw table. Tape the 
playing-card shims to the 
end of the rail. Position and 
clamp the fence so the 
blade lines up with the 
right-hand marking line. 
  
5. Saw the left side. 
Replace the shims with 
a spacer that’s the same 
thickness as the rail you’re 
sawing.Without moving the 
fence, you’ve made a 
perfectly fitting half-lap 
notch.The space between 
the cuts is exactly the 
thickness of the rail. 
  
6. Remove the waste 
with several diagonal 
cuts. Unclamp and slide the 
fence out of the way. Keep 
cutting until all that’s left is 
1/16 in. of wood above the 
bottom of the notch. 
  
7. Trim the 
bottom of the 
notch by cutting 
sideways. Remove the 
clamp from the fence. 
The miter-gauge can 
now slide in its slot, so 
you can move the 
fence and rail as a unit. 
Nibble off about 1/64- 
in. per pass (see inset). 
The result is a 
perfectly straight and 
square bottom. 
  
8. Saw bridle joints 
in the top of the 
legs with the bandsaw 
table and fence.To 
center the notch, saw 
one side first, then flip 
over the leg and saw 
the other side. Clean 
out the waste and trim 
the bottom the same 
way you did for the 
rails above. 
  
9. Draw the 
curve on each 
leg with a bent-stick 
jig.Tape holds the 
bent stick to the jig, 
freeing your hands to 
draw a smooth curve 
(Fig. E). 
  
10. Test fit the 
upper rails to 
the legs. Plane each rail 
until it’s one sheet of 
paper thinner than the 
notch in the leg. If the 
fit is too tight, you’ll 
have a hard time 
pushing the rail down 
into the notch at glueup 
time. 
  
11. Cut notches in 
the upper rails. 
The cutting process is 
identical to making the 
joints on the lower 
rails, using the same 
shims but a new 
spacer.This time you 
use the miter gauge in 
the standard slot on 
the bandsaw table. 
Choosing Wood for the Legs
  
  
12. Saw the shelf 
notches while the 
shelf blank is still square. 
Back on the bandsaw 
table, cut all the right 
sides with one fence 
setting.Then move the 
fence and cut all the left 
sides. Nibble the bottoms 
square. 
  
13. Position the 
shelf on a pivot 
pin. It’s just a brad driven 
into the bandsaw table. 
Snip off the head of the 
brad and align it with a 
small hole drilled in the 
center of the shelf. 
  
14. Rotate the 
shelf on the 
pivot pin to cut an 
exact circle. Start the 
cut inside one of the 
notches. 
  
15. Cut biscuit slots 
in the legs. If you 
don’t have a plate joiner, 
you could use 3/8-in. 
dowels or make 1/4-in.- 
thick loose mortise-andtenon 
joints. 
  
16. Glue together the lower rail and legs. Clamp a 1-1/2-in.-wide spacer between the rail 
and a long, straight board to align the joints. Check for flatness to ensure that the 
upper rails will fit across both notches. 
Oops!
  
  
17. Slide one half of the table down 
over the other to glue them 
together. Clamping is not necessary. 
  
18. Drop the shelf down onto the rails. 
The notches are slightly oversize to 
make this easier. Screw the shelf to the rails 
with desktop fasteners to stiffen the whole 
assembly. 
  
19. Glue one rail at a time.Apply glue 
to the rail that has the notch facing 
up and set it in the legs. Before clamping, 
insert the other rail without glue.This 
ensures the first rail is properly aligned. 
Versatile Bandsaw Table
  
In less than an hour, 
you can upgrade your 
bandsaw with a larger 
work surface, a rip 
fence and a circlecutting 
jig.All it takes 
is three pieces of 
wood. 
  
Make the Table
  
This is really easy. Cut a piece of MDF or plywood to size. Use a router or 
tablesaw to dado one groove on the top and one on the bottom. Glue a 
runner into the bottom groove (you can use an offcut from the top).Turn 
on your bandsaw and slide the table into the blade, stopping about in the 
center. Install two screws under the runner to act as stops, keeping the 
table from moving.To remove the table, tilt up the far end and pull back. 
  
Adjust the Fence
  
Attach any straight board to the face of your 
miter gauge, and you’re set to go.The fence has to 
be angled a little bit to compensate for the “drift” 
of the blade, and that angle varies with each blade 
and thickness of wood you’re cutting. 
To adjust the miter gauge fence for drift, draw a 
straight line on a board parallel to one edge. Saw 
freehand, angling the board to stay on the line. 
Stop halfway, turn off the saw and clamp the 
board. Loosen the miter gauge and push the fence 
up against the board.Tighten the miter gauge, 
remove the board and you’re ready to saw. 
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