Disclaimer: I would never claim to be any kind of authority on woodworking. As with any type of building there are many different ways to do things. What works well for one person might not work at all for another. I have a lot of experience with this sort of thing, but I'm self taught and all of the Norm Abrams' of the world might not agree with how I do things. I will say my methods have served me well and have given me great results.
The night stands I built are a copy of a Bob Timberlake design. My wife and I already have some matching bedroom furniture and Lesley was wanting these nightstands for the bedroom. Already having the material to build them from and enjoying a new challenge, I told her I would just build them. We went to a furniture store in Blowing Rock, NC and looked at them and I did some mental measuring. I then went home and made a scale drawing. I use this simple drawing as a reference and to make sure everything looks right. I don't bother with a lot of detail. As I build the project, I'm always thinking a couple of steps ahead as to how I think I want to do things. Notice I said "think". I often change my ideas as I go along. Kind of flying by the seat of my pants. I will say I can't ever recall making any kind of major mistake that screwed things up badly. In fact, I'd say that not having a definite plan has enabled me to build better projects, because I can often see better how to do things as the project takes shape.
Bob Timberlake ad (with nighstand in photo)
Side view
Front view
I always buy rough sawn lumber (in this case cherry, but I already had it) and surface it myself. I do this because I will do a much better job at it than the lumber supplier will. I carefully sort my boards into piles by length, and straightness of each piece (meaning if the board is crowned or bowed in some way). Boards that are straight are put into one pile. If a board is partially straight and partially bowed, I cut the straight piece out and put it in the straight pile. The bowed piece is put into the bowed pile. The bowed wood gets special attention. A piece that looks really twisted can have the twist planed out of it and be a very usable and beautiful piece. I do this by simply screwing rails to the sides of the board. These rails simulate a flat bottom for the board. I run it through the planer, lowering the cutter head each time, untill I have one flat side. I then put it in the pile to be run through with the straight boards. Some times this results in a board that ends up thinner than the 13/16's that I usually plane to. I use these boards for drawer sides, thinner panels, or anywhere I don't need a full thickness board. In the pic I have only put two screws in each side just for this picture, but I normally put them about every six inches.
The holes left by the screws are ripped off when I run the boards through the table saw to put a straight edge on them. This is time consuming, but the results are worth it. I end up with 95% of my boards being as straight and true as you can possibly get. Of course some pieces are hopeless and I don't bother with them. Once all of the crooked boards have been planed flat on one side, I run all of the boards through togther untill I get the desired thickness, in most cases 13/16's. I do this because it allows me to glue up large panels out of multiple boards and still have an 11/16's thickness after sanding. I try to make the last pass on each side as shallow as possible in order to get the smoothest finish and I usually put a fresh set of blades on the planer for this. As you can see from the very last pic, I'm just using a portable Dewalt planer. This has been a good tool and has planed several thousand board feet of lumber with no problems. In the future I plan to upgrade to a bigger planer, although one that is still portable.
Once all of the lumber is planed, it's time to start building.
Just a little more about tools:
The most important tool you can learn how to use is a router. The number of things it can do is amazing, and you (at least I can't) really can't do good work without one. The very first time you make a cool profile or shape with this tool you'll be hooked. I use them for all kinds of things, and they are the one tool I use more than any other doing this kind of work.
Here are the routers I currently use along with some of the bits (with an orbital sander in the background).
And the table in which some of them mount. Three of them I only use in the table, and the other two I use for free hand work.
If anybody is still interseted after all of this, tomorrow I'll post some more pics about the tools I use and how I actually built these nightstands.
If this is just way too much detail :shock: let me know and I'll tone it down a few notches.