THE HANDMADE DOOR
Three ways to build one
BY jeff Taylor
Of all the exquisite moments that pass
unnoticed in daily life, coming home to your own front door
is the second best. Behind you, a day's work and hard
knocks in the smelly, stony world; ahead, a portal leading
to warmth, soft sounds, familiar smells, slippers and a
gathering of spouse, children and/or pets into your arms.
The very best moment? Closing that door behind you, hearing
the blessed latch bolt slide along the striker plate and
click into its mortise. Psychologically, you're home at
last only when you have a solid door between you and the
outside world.
If you've never built a door before, perhaps you've been
intimidated by one word: rustic. Contaminated by the
science of real estate, its close synonyms are shoddy and
ugly, which is regrettable, because a useful handmade door
can be owner-built strong and sturdy, using one of three
classic patterns: batten, layered or joined. All are well
within the range of average skills and abilities, and can
be as beautiful as any panel door without being as
difficult to make. If you have an odd-sized opening, you
can make a custom-fit door for less money than a mill
charges. You'll need only a flat, wide workbench and fairly
unremarkable tools.
Another nice feature of handmade doors is that you can
build them slightly larger than their intended openings,
and plane them to a perfect fit. In fact, you should. And
after they're mounted in place, you can easily take them
off the hinges to slather every square inch—top,
bottom and sides—with paint or spar varnish. In fact,
you must. Water intrusion is the number one killer of
doors; don't let it murder yours.
Another caveat: Acquire the intended lockset before you
build any handmade door. Some of these doors are thicker
than the standard width of just under 2", and may need
special hardware or modifications to the latch-bolt area.
For a barn or outbuilding that doesn't need to be
burglarproof, you can invent a latch of your own design;
but a house or garage door should have key locks. When
you're ready to install the lockset, use a holesaw to cut
the lock hole, a drill to make the latch-bolt hole, and a
sharp chisel to flush-mortise the latch bolt.
Installation of any door goes a lot easier if you mount the
hinges on the door first, rather than on the jamb. Hinges
usually go 8" from the door's top, 9" from the bottom, and
at the exact midpoint. Set the door in place with blocks
underneath, to raise it to a proper top reveal (spacing of
t/8"; a steel flatbar works admirably to jockey it around
and avoid finger-pinching.
In most cases you'll need three heavy-duty loose-pin butt
hinges. Mark the placement of hinges on the jamb, and take
out the hinge piers, Now you can install half the hinge on
the jamb, and slip the door into place. Bang the pins back
in, and perform fine-tuning with a plane. The door should
swing easily without binding, be square to the jamb and
meet all jamb stops evenly.
Don't forget, these will be heavy, rock-solid doors built
lovingly with labor and sweat; you won't want them (or you
to get dinged or damaged. Have a husky helper at hand.
And what will you have built? "Just" a door? A friend of
mine recalls a door, handmade a century ago, on which he
remembers a flurry of incremental lines in pencil, tracing
the growth of a hundred years' worth of one family's
children. It bore nail marks from wreaths of Christmases
past and the scratches of dogs who once chased horses in
the street. And long ago it closed every night behind
Father, home from a rough day at the Industrial Revolution.
Just a handmade door indeed.
The Batten Door
THE BATTEN DESIGN on page 29 is most often found on barn
doors—one row of parallel boards held together by
perpendicular and diagonal battens. By choosing tongue and
groove or shiplap, these can be built quite weathertight.
Where batten-door builders err most often is by using
adhesives for additional strength: If the edge joints are
glued, the boards will expand and contract at different
rates than the battens, and the door soon warps to the
point of skewed rusticity.
Another pitfall is fastener length: Make sure your nails
and screws are just long enough to go through board and
batten without projecting. The polite nomenclature for what
happens if you don't is ruined, with obscene variations.
Cut pine or cedar boards to fill the opening as measured
side to side, ripping them into equal widths so you don't
have a thin oddball on the edge. Assemble the boards,
leaving them slightly longer than the finished height of
the doorway. With a framing square and pencil, lay out the
exact vertical measurements of the finished door, and nail
or screw the horizontal battens securely to each board.
Nail or screw on the vertical battens. Trim the excess at
top and bottom, and check for square again.
Now you're ready to apply the diagonal braces. The first
brace will be contiguous, from one comer to the other. The
second one is cut to fit closely. When done, carefully turn
the door over and nail into the battens, two or three nails
per; it's wise to draw faint pencil lines to keep the nail
or screw heads pleasingly straight.
For optional strength, you can duplicate the batten pattern
on the blank side. Remember, however, that this will add to
the finished weight; are your hinges large enough to carry
it? Check the dimensions one final time, bevel all outer
edges slightly, and hang the door. If you've built double
doors, affix an astragal on the one you'll be closing last,
to seal off the meeting point
The Layered Door
A LAYERED DOOR (see drawing above, with three full
thicknesses of wood, is much stronger than a batten door,
but it's also heavier. Advantages include incredible
rigidity and resistance to warping, and the ability to
incorporate artistic flourishes such as diagonal outer
layers. Unlike a batten door, a layered door can have a
window.
However, this door will not only be heavier than a cow, it
will also be thicker than standard. And unless you make
other arrangements, the plywood end-grain will show on the
edges, uglifying it. You'll either have to extend the outer
layers beyond the core and employ a fillet, or place a
covering band around the entire perimeter. With such a
band, all three layers of the rough door must measure 3/4"
smaller in height and width than the finished opening.
Cut the plywood to fit the opening, minus the 3/4" (or
fillet width, and apply the first outer layer of boards.
Here you can use glue, preferably waterproof construction
adhesive in tubes. And you won't have to worry so much
about nail length; in fact, you want the nail points to
come through about half an inch, because you'll clinch them
over. When you affix the exterior layer to the other side,
the nail points won't project. If you don't want any nails
to show, blind-nail them: Drive the nails at an angle into
the tongue and countersink slightly. The groove of the next
board will hide the nails. Glue and clamp the fillets into
place; or nail on a covering band.
After the glue has set, mark out a window opening if
desired. Install it, and you're ready to hang this door.
The Joined Door
WHEN PROPERLY BUILT, a joined door (see drawing above
constructed of 2" nominal-size lumber fastened internally
by threaded rods looks the least homemade. It's
particularly suited to openings in stone or concrete, the
kind you find in a castle or dungeon. But this type
requires more advanced tools and skills; unless you're a
genius with a plane and hand drill, you'll need a joiner to
dress the edges and a drill press to bore the holes through
which the threaded rods will pass. You'll also need four
bar clamps.
Lay the boards side by side, and mark out the rough door
with a framing square (leave it a little wide; joining and
clamping will reduce the width. Draw four faint pencil
marks across the face, equidistantly spaced (see drawing,
to locate the bore holes. Next, tun each board through the
joiner to dress both edges.
Now for the fun part. Drill countersunk holes in the outer
boards only, to hide the nuts and washers; and then run
each board through the drill press to make the axis holes.
You can make the holes a little larger than the diameter of
the 1/2" threaded rods, but take care to place them exactly
in line with the pencil marks.
Glue time. Use either construction adhesive in tubes to
place a thin line of glue down the center of each edge, or
a brush to paint both edges with slow-setting wood glue.
Use the bar clamps to clamp the boards together, but not so
tight that the door cups.
Now run the threaded rods down their channels and snug them
up, ever so gently, top and bottom rods first. Don't torque
any single nut to maximum; alternate from nut to nut,
taking out the slack as you go and wiping excess glue as it
squeezes out of the cracks. Glue in wood plugs. Allow all
glue to set overnight.
In the morning, your door will be ready for final trimming,
edge beveling and sanding to remove any glue that remains.
After that, you're ready to hinge and hang.