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Travel Humidor
A pull-apart box with a
silky-smooth fit.
By Suwat Phruksawan
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I've had a lot of fun over the years building boxes of I like working on small-scale projects. Materials are easy |
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I sized this humidor to fit three Corona cigars.
If you aren’t a cigar person, just eliminate the humidifier
and Spanish cedar. Then,modify the box dimensions to fit
eyeglasses, pens and pencils, jewelry—anything that needs
to be contained while bouncing around in a backpack,
purse or suitcase.
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Build the outer box from a single piece of Brazilian rosewood |
Click any image to view a larger version.
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Custom-fit the inner box by using the outer box as a form. Wax |
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Remove the inner box from the outer box and line it with |
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Drill air-escape holes in the end of the inner box.These holes |
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Build a Plexiglas humidifier to keep the cigars fresh. |
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Place wood blocks wrapped in wax paper inside the box.The |
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Lay out the inlays on the box after the lid is glued on.The |
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Cut the grooves for the inlays.The groove in the top is extra deep |
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Install the inlays. Start with the top piece, then add the side |
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Lay out the curve on the top with a piece of flexible steel.Hold the |
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Plane and sand the gentle curve on the top. |
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Cut the box open with a single pass on the tablesaw. |
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Extract the support blocks by drilling a hole at a slight |
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Cut the recesses for the buttons with a brad point bit |
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To access the humidifier for recharging, pull the short This story originally appeared in American Woodworker April/May 2009, issue #141. |
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