...further investigation I've done informs me Tage believed in making the pins before the tails, while most people on the internet seem to like to do the tails first.
Pins first, tails first--both sequences have their practitioners. Same result. Mostly it has to do with where you learned and who taught you. There are a lot of other variations too: angles, spacings, widths. And we won't go into the various methods involving machines, will we?
David,
Back in the early to mid 70's, I saw quite a few 18th and early 19th dovetailed wood boxes in the Antique Shops around Fredericksburg, Va. (The dating of the boxes came from the hardware on them and some construction details.) Only a small number had attached locks and the construction was often somewhat crude. I was surprised at how "large" the tails and especially the pins were in the boxes (with no locks) compared to other period furniture. I was informed they were low cost boxes made for shipping or even storage in the homes of the less affluent. Maybe they originally were shipping/transport boxes and then used in some homes for storage and that's why they survived? Have you ever seen/ heard anything like that?
In a very large almost warehouse sized Antique store between Fredericksburg and Richmond, they had a bunch of chests and boxes and some dated back to the 17th century, when I visited it in the 1980s. (This place carried more higher end Antiques than most of the shops in Fredericksburg.) The boxes there that had 18th century features and hardware were much more uniform spacing and the tails and pins were not nearly as large as on the ones mentioned in the paragraph above - though it was easy to see they were hand cut. Some of these were definitely tool boxes/chests.
I am planning a pine 18th tool chest that is not as large as a Cabinet Maker's chest, though I will be carrying a lot of steel or iron tools in it. I'm thinking of using 3/4 " pine. So, yes, I am interested in what size dovetails and pins should be used to make a stronger box.
Gus