A vintage-style craft infographic presents mortise and tenon wood joints in a clean 6-panel catalog layout with labeled diagrams, exploded views, tool icons, and safety reminders. Bold red, blue, and yellow accents on a cream paper background give this beginner-friendly woodworking guide a classic magazine feel, while supporting pinata tutorial search visibility.
Re-render this exact infographic with every label, heading and caption translated. We re-use all the original attributes (topic, style, palette, …) and only swap the language. Currently in English.
Craft / DIY infographic titled "Mortise and Tenon Wood Joints". WOOD JOINT TYPES catalog archetype. Vintage pattern book style, bold primary palette, craft-magazine instructional illustration, beginner-friendly woodworking layout. Show 6 numbered visual panels in a clean catalog grid with labeled technical diagrams, exploded views, wood grain detail, cutaway sections, and anatomically correct hand positions where hands appear. Include simple tool icons in each panel, no tool brand logos, and a relevant safety reminder for sharp tools or power tools where appropriate. Panel 1: "What Is a Mortise and Tenon?" — basic overview diagram showing one mortise slot and one matching tenon tongue before assembly; one-line caption explaining that the tenon fits tightly into the mortise to form a strong right-angle joint; tool icons: try square, pencil, ruler. Panel 2: "Mark the Joint" — step-by-step marking layout on two wood pieces with gauge lines, shoulder lines, and face-side marks; one-line caption about measuring carefully and marking from reference faces for accuracy; tool icons: marking gauge, square, pencil. Panel 3: "Cut the Mortise" — technique diagram of chopping or routing the mortise with clear depth indication and safe hand placement; one-line caption explaining to remove material in stages and keep the walls straight; tool icons: chisel, mallet, drill or router; include a small safety note about securing the workpiece and keeping hands clear of cutting edges. Panel 4: "Cut the Tenon" — diagram showing saw cuts at cheeks and shoulders, then trimming to fit; one-line caption explaining to cut just outside the line and refine slowly for a snug fit; tool icons: backsaw, chisel, bench vise. Panel 5: "Test Fit and Adjust" — visual comparison of too tight, too loose, and correct fit, with the correct fit highlighted; one-line caption explaining that the joint should slide together firmly without splitting the wood; tool icons: shoulder plane or chisel, clamp. Panel 6: "Assemble the Joint" — final assembled mortise and tenon shown in perspective and cutaway, with optional glue application and clamping; one-line caption explaining that glue and clamping create a durable finished connection; tool icons: glue bottle, clamp, brush; include a small safety note about wiping excess glue and clamping securely. Overall composition should feel like a classic woodworking reference page, with bold red, blue, and yellow accents, cream paper background, clean black outlines, subtle aging texture, and clear instructional hierarchy. Include a small visual legend of common mortise-and-tenon variants as mini diagrams: through tenon, blind tenon, haunched tenon, wedged tenon. Keep all text concise and readable. All text MUST be written in English (array). Every heading, label, caption, legend and metric name in the image must be in English — not English. Spell each English word correctly using English characters and diacritics. Numbers stay as digits, no watermarks Anatomically correct hand positions. No tool brand logos. Safety tip for power tools / sharp implements where relevant.
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