I went out and got the 2 books Steve referenced and will have to take some time out to build me some luthiery tools some day... I think I'll build a hand router plane while I'm at it. Saw one on ebay, but got outbid on it.
Meanwhile a little catching up to do on this build.
Here I'm gluing in the neck and tail blocks.
Then I got a little skimpy on the pictures, but I basically used a handplane and the radius dish with sandpaper to contour the front of the rim, then glued the kerfing in. With Maple I like to use mahogany kerfing and cedar back braces for the contrast. First couple of times I had a hard time getting the kerfing in without breaking it, but now I spray water on the solid side of the kerfing and let it soak in a bit and then prebend the kerfing around the tight areas. Went on like a champ. I used traditional kerfing on the top and reverse kerfing on the back, just because I like the look of the reverse kerfing and you can't see the top...

flipped it over and repeated on the back side.
While the kerfing was drying, I laminated the neck.
Debbie wants a soundport so the next step was to reinforce that area of the upper bout. I used a thin veneer of ebony, maple, ebony, and the inside most layer was a piece off the side I scorched during that time I don't talk about...
I ended the rim by gluing in side braces of cedar. You may also see a couple of places where I installed reinforcements arond the side to cover various cracking issues.
Now I'm ready to move on to bracing the top and back.
Raymond