Now for the fun part: fielding the panels. Growing up I remember wondering how the bevel was but on panels before electric routers were around. Heres how:
After fielding one side, I raised the other. This is simply a matter of putting a shallow rabbet around the edges. For this I used another new toy: a Sweetheart-era Stanley 78.
src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiT0kY6wwgm9X07FuxhLiHf53NC-WWmCiOzhsG33Rblw4ZxQLDjy89rHVGz6-nAi6cYvbyuRnaVaS0iZf6HxcxgdWcts4SPZbjsSqHfSLm5dxjm1JT-wpeIFOGJSyTHIsgl-AIwm_LCzE4H/s400/DSC04523.JPG" width="400">I got it off eBay in immaculate condition...I was really pleased. Yes, the skew rabbet plane wouldve also worked for this, but that wouldve meant taking it all apart and losing all my setting on it. Its nice to be able to set the fence only one time per tool per project.
And thats that:
The 78 has a depth stop too so its pretty nice for raising panels where you have intersecting rabbets that need to come together at the same height.
Then I just slid the panel into the frame:
...and repeated the whole process:
So thats two down, three to go. The last three are going to be made assembly-line style with me doing each step for all three doors at the same time.
Then its drawer time.
PS: Heres the bookcase in situ:

And thats that:
Then I just slid the panel into the frame:
Then its drawer time.
PS: Heres the bookcase in situ:
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