Outdoor sofa to replace our falling-apart fake-plastic-wicker one, reusing the same cushions.

sofa with cushions

It’s roughly following Wilker Do’s Outdoor Sofa plans, however I adjusted the size, changed from a two-layer construction to lap joints / mortise-and-tenon joints, and filled in some missing details.

First time hand-cutting mortise and tenons, for the arm rest supports:

mortise and tenon

First time making half-lap joints, for the side frames; very happy with my new Infinity Tools Dadonator:

dado blade

half lap joints

After some attempts at CAD, I ended up just cutting out scale paper parts and then measuring angles/lengths to fit them together. It mostly worked, but some lengths didn’t work out in wood.

plans

I used western red cedar for rot resistance, since this will sit unsheltered. I haven’t finished it yet, I’m considering poly, boiled linseed, or Thompson’s water seal (glad for recommendations). First time working with cedar, it’s very soft and scratch prone, smells great, and is noticeably lighter than pine. Also pricey; one thing I didn’t like about this design is it is fairly overbuilt.

side view

top view

  • pageflight@lemmy.worldOP
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    5 hours ago

    Hah, yeah we have one of those couches that swallow you. This is quite firm now, I’m considering taking the center support out from under the seat slats to give it a little spring but I’m not sure which I’d prefer.

    • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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      5 hours ago

      Could you shave the support and add a rubber compressible gasket. Gives you some play, but backup if somebody sits down heavy.

      My kids sat hard on an IKEA one before and went through it