Mistakes with Wood Can Cause Your DIY Furniture to Crack

We build our DIY furniture projects with wood, but do we really understand how wood works? If we build without taking into consideration the seasonal movement of wood, our projects will crack and split.

Piece of wood with a crack running down the center

If we build using proper techniques, our projects will become family heirlooms. Today I’m sharing how you can be a better builder, prevent your wood furniture from cracking and ensure your projects will last a lifetime.

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A few weeks ago, I shared my 9 Pocket Hole Mistakes You Don’t Want to Make. I received lots of feedback that the information was helpful. By the way, thank you for the feedback – I love hearing from you!

In addition to discussing possible pocket hole mistakes, I also touched on wood is a living thing and that seasonal changes cause movement. From the feedback, I could tell I needed to dive a little deeper into the movement of wood, what causes wood to crack, and share some DIY furniture construction tips.

Wood is a Living Thing

Wood is a living thing. Wait, did I just say wood is a living thing?! Well, not exactly living, but it is hygroscopic. Wait, did I just say hygroscopic – what’s that? Simply put, hygroscopic means it absorbs moisture from the air.

Wood is constantly absorbing and releasing moisture, just as it did when it was a tree growing in the ground.

The grain or fibers of wood run the length of a board. Before a tree becomes a piece of lumber, the tree’s roots would drink water, and that water traveled through these fibers.

The best way to think of those wood fibers is like a box of drinking straws. When the tree becomes a piece of lumber, it still “drinks” water. Instead of drinking water through the roots, moisture is absorbed by all exposed surfaces of the wood into those drinking straws or wood fibers.

When it’s more humid, the drinking straws, ummm wood fibers, absorb moisture, so the wood swells and gets bigger. When it’s less humid, the wood releases moisture, so it shrinks and gets smaller.

If you build a furniture project when it’s humid, you may notice when the air is drier that some of the joints don’t fit as well as they did when there was more moisture in the air.

Why Wood Cracks

The continuous swelling and shrinking movement of wood can cause some issues. When it’s more humid, the moisture in the air is absorbed by those drinking straws or wood fibers, and the wood swells.

The swelling occurs the most across the width of a board and actually has enough force to pull joints apart. Worse yet, if the wood is joined improperly, it can cause the wood to crack and split.

Check out these building tips about how to prevent your DIY wood furniture from cracking - wood expands across its width when moisture is absorbed

When it’s less humid, moisture is released by those drinking straws or wood fibers, and the wood shrinks. The shrinking occurs the most across the board’s width and actually has enough force to pull joints apart. Worse yet, if the wood is joined improperly, it can cause the wood to crack and split.

Check out these building tips about how to prevent your DIY wood furniture from cracking - wood shrinks across its width when moisture is released

Understanding Wood

As DIYers, we need to understand and account for this persistent swelling and shrinking movement of wood to create furniture projects that will last. Accounting for that movement means understanding some ground rules when working with wood.

  1. We cannot stop wood from moving. As I mentioned earlier, instead of drinking water through the roots, moisture is absorbed by those drinking straws or wood fibers. There is no way to stop this process. It’s a fact that we have to understand and accept.
  2. We cannot limit the movement of wood. Trying to limit or prevent the wood from moving will make the wood CRACK! Let’s say you make a frame from 2×4s and a panel to fit within that frame from 1×4s. To attach the panel to the frame, you use your Kreg Jig to drill pocket holes around the edges of the panel. You apply glue to the edges of the panel, insert it into the frame and attach it to the frame. This sounds OK, right? Wrong! This assembly limits or prevents the panel from moving.

Let’s take a closer look at our example from above. The panel described above is “trapped” within the frame and doesn’t allow for the wood’s normal swelling and shrinking movement.

Remember, as the panel absorbs moisture, the 1×4s of the panel will expand side to side. Because the panel is attached to the frame with pocket screws, the sideways expansion could crack the panel. It could also push the frame’s joints apart, leaving a gap between the rails and stiles.

We’ll look at some alternatives for installing panels a bit later in this article.

Check out these building tips about how to prevent your DIY wood furniture from cracking - a panel can crack within a frame

Finishing Wood

To help the wood absorb and release moisture more evenly, it’s a good idea to apply a finish to all surfaces including, the outside, inside, and underside of your project.

Just imagine sealing one side of a board but not the other. The raw side of the board would absorb and release moisture more quickly than the sealed side. Absorbing and releasing moisture at different rates could cause the board to crack over time.

Before I apply any finish, I properly prepare the project by smoothing the surface of the wood with sandpaper.

Related: 11 Secrets for Sanding Wood Projects Like a Pro

Next, I inspect the piece and fill any nail holes, gaps, or cracks with wood filler.

Related: Does Stainable Wood Filler Work? (Here’s the Answer)

If I’m going to use an oil-based wood stain, first, I apply a homemade wood conditioner like black tea. Using tea helps prevent blotchiness and gives my DIY furniture projects a rich, uniform color when the wood stain is applied.

Related: What I Use Instead of Wood Conditioner

Other times, I’ll stain my projects with a natural wood stain such as coffee or black walnut hulls.

Related: How to Stain Wood With Coffee

When the stain is dry, I’ll top coat my project with a sealer like polyurethane, Polycrylic, or a polyurethane alternative.

Related: Polycrylic vs Polyurethane: Are They The Same?

Joints Prone to Cracking

Now that we understand wood movement and why wood cracks, it’s important to recognize the types of joints prone to cracking when building or designing DIY furniture. Here are four popular joints that could crack over time.

Cross-Grain

A cross-grain joint is where pieces of wood are attached perpendicular to each other.

Here’s an example. To mount drawer slides in this nightstand, I needed to attach a brace front to back on the side panels.

Related: How to Build DIY Drawers

If I were to glue and screw a 1×4 brace on the side panel, the assembly would move in different directions. The side would move side to side while the brace would move top to bottom. This dissimilar movement could crack the wood over time.

Check out these building tips about how to prevent your DIY wood furniture from cracking - cross-grain joints can crack

It’s best to avoid a cross-grain joint, but if you can’t, don’t glue the joint. This will at least allow for a bit of movement.

For my nightstand project, I glued up a brace from several pieces of wood to match the direction of the wood on the side panels. It’s a little more time-consuming, but this way, the side and the brace will move in the same direction.

Check out these building tips about how to prevent your DIY wood furniture from cracking - wood moving in the same direction is less likely to crack

Panels

Earlier in this article, we attached a panel made of 1×4s to a frame made from 2×4s with pocket hole screws. We saw how the frame prevented the panel from moving with seasonal changes, which could cause the wood to split or crack.

A better method for building an assembly like this is with frame-and-panel construction.

Cabinets and furniture are often constructed using frame-and-panel a construction, which involves a wooden frame with a wood panel in the center.

The panel floats in a groove cut into the frame, allowing it to expand and contract with seasonal changes. This is a common construction technique used in Shaker-style cabinet doors.

Related: How to Build DIY Shaker Cabinet Doors

Let’s think about our 2×4 frame and 1×4 panel example again. This time we’ll assume you don’t have a router to make a groove for the panel. In this case, you could use a plywood panel instead.

Related: How to Use a Router Table for Beginners

Plywood is made using many thin layers of wood glued together in a cross-grain pattern. Earlier, we covered how cross-grain joints are prone to cracking, but moisture absorption isn’t much of an issue because the plywood sheets are so thin. Compared to solid wood, plywood hardly moves with seasonal changes.

To reduce the chances of cracking, you could swap the 1×4 panel with a plywood panel. Plywood would virtually eliminate side-to-side movement caused by the panel. The parts of the frame, on the other hand, would continue to move, so while this assembly has a decreased risk of cracking, it is still a possibility.

Table Tops

One of the common mistakes DIYers make is to attach a table top in a way that prevents it from moving with seasonal changes. I’ve never had a table top crack, but I am guilty of attaching tops incorrectly.

Let’s look at how I attached the top to this step stool incorrectly. When I first built the stool, I drilled pocket holes through the aprons and used pocket hole screws to attach the top of the stool.

Table aprons are pieces of wood that run perpendicular to the table top and connect the legs of a table. Aprons help strengthen the table and provide support for attaching the tabletop to the legs.

Attaching a table top to the aprons with pocket hole screws is incorrect because it prevents the top from shrinking and swelling along with changes in humidity and temperature.

The top of the table may crack with time, or the top might have enough force to push or pull the base’s joints apart.

Check out these building tips about how to prevent your DIY wood furniture from cracking - furniture bases screwed to table tops don't allow for movement and can crack

A better option for attaching table tops to aprons is with table top fasteners. Table top fasteners attach to the underside of a table top and the aprons and allow the top to expand and contract.

Figure 8, “Z” fastener clips, and expansion braces are just a few of the table top fasteners available.

Related: How to Attach a Table Top to a Base (The Right Way)

You can also make your own table top fasteners using a biscuit joiner. First, cut a biscuit slot into a piece of wood like a 1×3, drill a countersink hole, and cut the piece to length.

Related: How to Use a Countersink Bit

📝 NOTE: The image below is just a demonstration. It’s actually easier to cut several biscuit slots in the side of the board (rather than the end), drill a countersink hole behind each slot, and then cut into individual pieces.

Check out these building tips about how to prevent your DIY wood furniture from cracking - DIY table top fastener

Cut several biscuit slots into the aprons. Then slide a biscuit into the apron, place a DIY table top fastener over the biscuit and attach it to the table top with a screw.

If it’s not possible to attach your table top to the aprons, as was the case with this wine cabinet and apothecary cabinet, try this. I drilled oversized holes in the top braces. Then through the holes, I attached the top with washers and screws. The large holes allow the top to move freely while the washers keep the screws from falling into the holes.

Breadboard Ends

Breadboard ends are a beautiful way to finish a table top, but they create a cross-grain situation which we’ve learned is prone to cracking. When breadboard ends are attached to a table top with pocket hole screws, it’s usually just a matter of time before the wood splits.

I collaborated with my buddy Mike from Kreg Tool to create a simple solution for do-it-yourselfers who want to attach breadboard ends with pocket hole joinery. OK, I’ll confess, except for a couple of ideas, the design was mostly his!

Related: DIY Farmhouse Table Top Plans (with Breadboard Ends)

Final Thoughts

It’s critical to understand how wood works and consider the seasonal movement of wood for us to be better DIYers. Building with proper techniques will reduce the chances of our furniture cracking and ensure our projects will last a lifetime.

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Do you have a DIY furniture project that is cracking? From coffee tables to cutting boards, seasonal changes can cause wood to crack. I'm sharing building tips about how to prevent your wood furniture from cracking.

20 Comments

  1. Thank you for this article. I recently made a beautiful bar but a few days after it was in place both side panels cracked. I did all the wrong techniques you described here. The more I learn the more I move towards the tried and true techniques and away from the short cuts.

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