A box finger joint features interlocking rectangular fingers, aligning two boards at a right angle. These elongated rectangles, resembling the segments of a box, maximize the gluing surface, providing a robust bond and enhanced stability. The joint's geometric design, while straightforward, ensures a tight fit and resistance against lateral forces.
Often seen in box constructions, drawer assemblies, and cabinetry, the box finger joint is both efficient in its design and reliable in its performance. It's an elegant solution to joinery, embodying a harmonious blend of aesthetics and structural strength, favored by woodworkers for its enduring reliability.
Box Finger Wood Joints have 4 to 9 joints widths and full joint depths. Wood joints are typically used in wood members with widths between .75”-1.5” (1.9-3.8 cm) and depths between of 1.5”-3.5” (3.8-8.9 cm).
A box finger joint features interlocking rectangular fingers, aligning two boards at a right angle. These elongated rectangles, resembling the segments of a box, maximize the gluing surface, providing a robust bond and enhanced stability. The joint's geometric design, while straightforward, ensures a tight fit and resistance against lateral forces.
Often seen in box constructions, drawer assemblies, and cabinetry, the box finger joint is both efficient in its design and reliable in its performance. It's an elegant solution to joinery, embodying a harmonious blend of aesthetics and structural strength, favored by woodworkers for its enduring reliability.
Box Finger Wood Joints have 4 to 9 joints widths and full joint depths. Wood joints are typically used in wood members with widths between .75”-1.5” (1.9-3.8 cm) and depths between of 1.5”-3.5” (3.8-8.9 cm).