We may receive a commission when you use our affiliate links. However, this does not impact our recommendations.
The Dutch Tool Chest from the October 2013 issue of Popular Woodworking Magazine has proven to be a popular project – I’ve been asked to teach classes on building this chest all over the world this year.
In that article, I provide plans for building two versions of the chest. The small chest has a single lower compartment for tools. The larger chest has two compartments for tools.
During the last year, I’ve been traveling with the small Dutch chest. It holds a lot of tools, but sometimes I need some extra capacity when I travel with fasteners, lots of moulding planes or unusual and bulky bits – such as the large Forstners I use for building workbenches.
So I decided to build a lower case for my tool chest that stacks below, much like a campaign chest. The regular chest will nest between some cleats on the top of the lower one, which will have casters to make it easy to move. The lower case uses the same sliding lock system and fall-front on the other Dutch chests I’ve examined.
The joinery on the lower case is much like the joinery on the upper one: dovetails at the corners with the shiplapped back and front bits screwed on.
I’ve never seen a Dutch chest with a second lower case like this, so if you’re looking for period accuracy, stop reading.
I’m going to build this chest this week while teaching a Dutch tool chest class at Roy Underhill’s The Woodwright’s School in Pittsboro, N.C. I’ll post videos and photos from the class so you can see how it goes together.
You can download my SketchUp drawings of the small Dutch chest and lower case using the link below. The files are compressed into a .zip file. You can uncompress them by double-clicking the file after it has downloaded. (The SketchUp 3D Warehouse is down today.)
Oh, and here’s the cutting list for the small lower case.
Item T W L
2 Sides 3/4” 11-1/4” 11”
2 Top/bottom 3/4” 11-1/4” 27”
1 Back 3/4” 11-1/2” 27”
2 Front lips 3/4” 1-1/2” 27”
2 Top cleats 1/2” 1-1/4” 11-1/4”
1 Fall front 3/4” 8-1/2” 27”
1 Sliding lock 1/4” 2” 11-1/8”
— Christopher Schwarz
Here are some supplies and tools we find essential in our everyday work around the shop. We may receive a commission from sales referred by our links; however, we have carefully selected these products for their usefulness and quality.


