Illustration: Holder for the Wagon Tongue to Keep It in a Vertical Position When Not in Use] Gluing Small Mitered Frames The mechanic who attempts to fasten a mitered frame in the home workshop usually comes to grief.
Illustration: Square and Mitered Lap Joints for Making Rigid Picture Frames in Natural or Stained Woods (Fig.
Illustration: Clamp for Holding the Corner of a Frame While Gluing and Fastening the Mitered Joint] When a joint is ready to be glued, a piece of paper is placed on the block under the joint to keep it from sticking.
Many ladies of the royal line have retired to Las Huelgas, the nuns brought their dowries, and the mitered abbess held the rank of Princess-Palatine, with the power of capital punishment.
There nothing any more to be ashamed of; the passions are good, and if the herd would eat freely, its first care must be to trample under its wooden shoes the mitered and crowned animals who keep it in the fold for their own advantage.
Finish the corners of the binding with the square or mitered corner.
A cover for a pin cushion affords a good application for the mitered corner.
Two hems crossing at right angles may be finished either with the square or the mitered corner.
Trim for a mitered corner on the glass side and cut a narrow strip the thickness of the glass, and stick it down along the other edge.
There is a triangular depression represented in each of the four corners by horizontally lined ground and shade lines, and mitered at the angles.
The rails are not to be squared on the ends but are to be mitered each in turn.
The frame has miteredcorners and the inside of the frame must be even with the inside of the rails.
Care should be taken to make the mitered joints a tight fit.
For example, in a mitered picture-frame it may be convenient to plane up two pieces, each one long enough to make one long side and one short side.
The edges of the boards are also mitered right thru for a short distance so that when finished the dovetails are invisible.
Insert nails in the holes, apply the glue to both mitered surfaces, place the glued surfaces together, letting Y project about 1/8" beyond X.
Mitered joints are the only kind suitable for molded frames.
In gluing together long mitered joints, in six or eight sided taborets or columns, in which the members meet edgewise, one method is to wrap a few turns of bale wire around the parts and drive in wedges under the wire to obtain pressure, Fig.
The Way a Mitered Joint Opens on Account of Shrinkage.
For gluing together at once all the members of a mitered frame, the device shown in Fig.
For gluing mitered frames, the most convenient way is with the aid of the picture-frame-vise, Fig.
Mitered joints are the easiest to make, for the joints can be cut in a miter-box, Fig.
The principle disadvantage of a mitered joint is that, if the wood shrinks at all, it opens at the inside corners, as in Fig.
This has a good appearance if the sides are mitered and ledged but not if the sides are butted or dadoed, because then the groove for the top shows.
It is practicable, if a rabbet or mitered joint is used in the sides, but if the side pieces are butted or dadoed, the rabbet for the bottom shows.
The corners are mitered and the backs rabbeted to receive the panels.
The mirror is put in a frame, which is made to fit the back opening and has the corners mitered and the back rabbeted to receive the mirror.
The door frame is mitered at the corners and rabbeted on the inner edge to take the panel.
This moulding should have mitered corners as shown in the bottom view.
These sides are nextmitered to the top and bottom frames and made fast on the under sides with copper strips, glue being used on the edges of the wood.
The four sides are mitered together at their edges and reinforced by covering the joint with copper.
It was deemed advisable that the mitered joint should occur on the abutment, or fixed span, instead of at the opening at the end of the draw.
Mitered rails are used, with sufficient opening between the ends to prevent binding at times of expansion.
The wood pieces should be well soaked in hot paraffin, and themitered corners well glued and nailed.
Two of each of these pieces are made with mitered ends.
For him, not for lords, or millionnaires, or mitered priests, but for him was this august world created.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "mitered" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.