At Helix Charter High School, senior projects were a mandatory assignment that students needed to complete in order to graduate. A senior project was basically any sort of service, program, art, or structure that required 20+ hours of work to complete and was impactful to the client. Taking advantage of the situation, I chose to do something completely out of my comfort zone. I chose to build a custom wooden desk from scratch. I reached out to a mentor and he allowed me to use his wood shop for the whole project. The whole project ended up taking 50+ hours spanning over half a year. I received a 100% on it, which was pretty rare for senior projects.
I am grateful that I did this project instead of my many other project ideas. It taught me many soft skills, such as, independence, communication, patience, and confidence, in addition to the physical skills associated to woodworking.
In addition, to prevent overbuying and to acknowledge what materials I would be using, I determined the materials, their cost, and eventually bought them at Strata and Home Depot with my mentor. (Does not include all the materials used and what was given to me by my mentor, which includes nails, sand paper, etc.)
There were four parts in terms of assembly: the drawers, tabletop, shelf, and drawer boxes. All parts required measuring, cutting, glueing, nailing with a nail gun, clamping, applying wood putty, and sanding with 180 and 220 grit sandpaper using a disc sander. I first started off with the drawers, or in other words, the "legs" of the desk. In addition to the usual steps, I installed drawer slides using a consistent wood piece as an aligned measurement jig and screwed them in. For the tabletop, I performed the usual steps. For the shelf, I performed the usual steps, but also crafted a Knock Down (KD) fitting, which is a corner block joint, to join the inner platform of the shelf to the rest of the shelf. For the drawer boxes, I performed the usual steps, except I only had to sand the face frames. I also used the drill press to make the holes for where the drawer knobs would go.
When the stain was dry, I moved onto applying polyurethane. This part was the hardest for me because of my lack of skill in application. I had to put on 3 coats to get it perfectly coated because I kept brushing streaks onto my finish, as well as, dust was getting on the surface. Between each coat, I had to sand the surfaces to remove the bumps and dust particles.