Your only chance would be a joinery co to knock up a few doors -only poss if the cutters are availableDoes anyone know where i can get these rail and stile bits brand new or worst case, buy second hand. Its for a kitchen extension and need to make the extra few doors needed.
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Your only chance would be a joinery co to knock up a few doors -only poss if the cutters are available
Why does it matter?? Must be missing something but you're only gonna see the front on the doors ??
Trend do a combination bevel set which is vaguely similar, but to my mind it isn't close enough. Fortunately the profile isn't that complex and the panel appears to be a plain. flat panel so it might be possible to just make up a basic door with a T&G set (fundamentally two groovers, an arbor, bearings and spacers such as these) then apply either a bought-in beading (if you can find one to match in the right species) or rout your own beading (it looks like it could be produced using a non-bearing chamfer cutter). The back detail will look slightly different, but that's probably a lot less significant). All this pre-supposes that you can dimension the stock to start with and that you have a router (you can make a basic router table from a piece of plywood and a lump of 2 x 2in PSE softwood if you don't have one)
Edit: Thinking about it you are looking for a set which resembles a T&GV cutter set, such as these by Infinity. If you can't find anything here you might be as well off looking at US suppliers such as Whiteside, MLCS, Eagle America, Amana, etc.
The safest way is to make-up your moulded section on the edge of a wider board then rip saw it off on a table sawHaving a look at the trend bits, i might go with them and add a small think piece of squared timber along the bottom of the slope however ive never cut anything so thin.
But, but, but... the first picture doesn't relate to how the front of the door looks (2nd picture) or at least it doesn't have to. in other words you're only trying to replicate the top bit of the profile, not the whole lot.
The safest way is to make-up your moulded section on the edge of a wider board then rip saw it off on a table saw
how?
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