This is a chest I built for a military client. I call it a Campaign Chest and it's loosely based off of one I sw at the museum at the Wilson's Creek Civil War Battlefield. It's made of Walnut and Sycamore. I started off with rough lumber, face jointing, edge jointing, and planing to the approximate thickness I wanted. I then resawed the stock in order to book match the walnut. I wanted a continuous grain all the way around the chest, so I very carefully cut the components (sides, front, back) out of the bookmatched stock. I was able to just barely get all four sides. I used my Leigh jig to mill the dovetails. The lid was made with Sycamore trim around bookmatched walnut. I sawed the lid off on my tablesaw. The walnut plugs in the top were made with a plug cutter and my Goldie SS. I inlaid the challenge coins using several templates, a plunge router, and template guide. It just figures that not one of the coins was the same dimension, so I had a lot of fun using the SS and a circle cutter (MANY times) to get the templates to match the diameter of each coin. The finish is four coats of tung oil (each coat dried one day and was wet sanded with 400g wet/dry paper and mineral spirits). The final coat is a personal blend of tung oil, beeswax from a neighbor's hives, and mineral spirits; buffed out with a lint free cloth. From start to finish, about two weeks' worth of work, with the longest stretch being the finishing process.



