Ailby Ash Holt
Ailby Ash Holt
  • Видео 5
  • Просмотров 55 429
Recreating an 18th century Windsor chair with traditional hand tools
Rob Ley using a bottoming adze and flat carpenters adze to recreate an early example of a Windsor chair, using traditional hand tools of the time.
Thanks to William Sergeant of the Lincolnshire Chair Museum for the loan of the original chair and The Regional Furniture Society for providing information.
Просмотров: 19 739

Видео

Rob Ley axe throw
Просмотров 8926 лет назад
Lunch break fun!
Hewing an Oak log with a traditional Lincolnshire side axe
Просмотров 3,7 тыс.6 лет назад
Rob Ley converting an Oak log into a post using a vintage French felling axe and a traditional Lincolnshire pattern side axe. The side axe dates back to the Victorian era and was made by James Howarth of Sheffield. The post will be used in a traditional Lincolnshire Mud and Stud building similar to the one in the background of the video. Thanks for watching, we hope you enjoy the video.
Internal Mud and Stud wall
Просмотров 1,9 тыс.8 лет назад
Internal Mud and Stud wall
Cleaving with a Froe
Просмотров 29 тыс.9 лет назад
Short demonstration by Rob Ley, cleaving/Riving some Ash wood with a Froe

Комментарии

  • @marizapaula8310
    @marizapaula8310 12 дней назад

    Obrigado por ensinar. 👏👏👏👏🇧🇷

  • @jimbo2629
    @jimbo2629 5 месяцев назад

    Hard work adding dry wood😀

  • @smolboyi
    @smolboyi 8 месяцев назад

    Great content

  • @smolboyi
    @smolboyi 8 месяцев назад

    So this was for a chair? Inspiring 👏

  • @timpiglia
    @timpiglia Год назад

    Still looking forward to part 2!

  • @mr__sins
    @mr__sins Год назад

    Great work rob! love the work big fan :)

  • @mr__sins
    @mr__sins Год назад

    I love the technique... Amazing work.

  • @mr__sins
    @mr__sins Год назад

    need to get uploading again love your work!

  • @E.F.Woodturning
    @E.F.Woodturning Год назад

    Brilliant! How wide is the seat?

  • @7Cherubim
    @7Cherubim 2 года назад

    Good shot!

  • @7Cherubim
    @7Cherubim 2 года назад

    Really superb to watch you show us the traditional wood crafting.

  • @stuarttaylor4990
    @stuarttaylor4990 2 года назад

    Love watching artists who work with hand tools. I'm going to save up and go on a course on making a Windsor chair. I've subbed. 👌👍

  • @acanadianwoodworker
    @acanadianwoodworker 2 года назад

    1:14 - "All forts of Winfor chairs" - why are the S's replaced with F's ?

    • @regionalfurnituresociety
      @regionalfurnituresociety 2 года назад

      Old style long 's' that looked very like an f. Went out of fashion in the mid 18th century.

    • @acanadianwoodworker
      @acanadianwoodworker 2 года назад

      @@regionalfurnituresociety interesting, thanks for the insight ! You learn something new every day

    • @regionalfurnituresociety
      @regionalfurnituresociety 2 года назад

      @@acanadianwoodworker it was never used if the ‘s’ was the last letter of the word- only beginning and middle.

  • @MACLADILLY
    @MACLADILLY 2 года назад

    great video, Thanks. Love to see part 2.....

  • @behonestwithyourself3718
    @behonestwithyourself3718 2 года назад

    Your very skilled with the adze. I didn't know you could get that detail with it. I don't have an adze so I use a draw knife and scorp. Well done.

  • @ianjones7266
    @ianjones7266 2 года назад

    Ow!I felt that!

  • @stephenlefley8089
    @stephenlefley8089 3 года назад

    Have been lucky enough to meet Rob this week while walking in the Wolds past his location lovely place and his work is outstanding Stephen & Edward

  • @JVSwailesBoudicca
    @JVSwailesBoudicca 3 года назад

    Blimey Mr. Ley......that Lincs Side Axe looks like it could do you some damage if it hits your shin ! Saw your link on a reTweet your wife did this morning. (I'm L_AQUARELLISTE, origially from Lincoln.) I shall enjoy watching you on here.

  • @timhull8664
    @timhull8664 3 года назад

    This isn’t a dig, but I watch these guys making stuff the way it used to be done, and think to myself, if you could bring those old guys into a modern workshop, I know they would choose the, DeWalt thicknesser or Makita mitre saw.. etc. They wouldnt give half a farthing for a flat adz!

    • @fishhuntadventure
      @fishhuntadventure Год назад

      You arrive at that conclusion because you don’t understand how to build things I suspect. There’s been many a jobsite I’ve walked on with my basic carpentry tools and other than the power miter saw and table saw- if even needed- I’m at work with two or three trips inside with my box and a bucket of traditional tools. On the big jobs all the other workmen are still wheeling in with their folding saw stands and once they finally get going I’ve been already working for some time. And while they re-cut and calculate their angles and fitment and try to biscuit stuff, me and my hand planes, old-fashioned scribes, chisels, and wooden-handled hammer usually can do 125% to 150% their productivity at the same quality expectation. Building a Windsor is a tedious process yet it’s both easy and accurate without any power tools needed. Few if any ‘mistakes’ occur and those that do most often are absorbed by body english and simply the organic process of constructing the chair. Add power tools to the mix and you might do some tasks faster in the process but you will have more unrecoverable mistakes- never mind losing the esthetics of the workman and the productivity losses of compounding error. Too much accuracy applied to an art is visually “colder” and has an institutional, uninviting tactile presence. Not understanding that tactile and esthetic elements are not features but rather revelations bequeathed as a gift to the end user is common- don’t feel too badly. Lots of folks look at handcraft and in their laziness think, “that’s too much work” and so they employ machinery to ease their discomfiture- spending much time sanding afterwards to cover up their tool marks and errors. There’s little, very little, benefits to many modern and post-modern ideologies when applied to handcrafted chairs or even the leather-wrapped interior door pull of a Maserati or Rolls-Royce where the felt but not seen heavy stitching cords are intentional- specified to communicate to the user an esthetic through a tactile-only sensory exposure. Newer methods are not always better. Not understanding that the consequential byproduct of these sensory tool methods is an essential part of the value of the finished chair is an unfortunate consequence of the societal trend of the current generation’s swallowing the koolaid- everything ‘old’ is inferior or inefficient. A chair is not just a chair- it can be much more than a chair.

    • @timhull8664
      @timhull8664 Год назад

      @@fishhuntadventure actually you know all, I am well aware of how to make stuff and if you think a sawyer in a saw pit was happy getting covered in crap then you are unfortunately living in la la land.. like Any trades person, its all about quality in the quickest time so they can move to the next job.

  • @njoysuccessnow
    @njoysuccessnow 3 года назад

    Very good. This man is in superior physical condition.

  • @copperspartan1643
    @copperspartan1643 3 года назад

    You should keep making videos. Fascinating. I would love to make a cottage like that here in the US, but it would have to be adapted somewhat to the harsher weather in most regions.

    • @ailbyashholt3532
      @ailbyashholt3532 3 года назад

      Thanks I do intend to but I’m often on my own when I’m working these days.i have got people that will help me with it.

  • @stuartosborne6263
    @stuartosborne6263 3 года назад

    That’s brilliant, can’t wait to see part 2.

    • @aryanares965
      @aryanares965 2 года назад

      You prolly dont care at all but does someone know of a way to log back into an Instagram account?? I somehow lost the account password. I love any tricks you can give me.

    • @judahdario7179
      @judahdario7179 2 года назад

      @Aryan Ares Instablaster :)

    • @aryanares965
      @aryanares965 2 года назад

      @Judah Dario I really appreciate your reply. I found the site on google and I'm in the hacking process now. Takes quite some time so I will reply here later with my results.

    • @aryanares965
      @aryanares965 2 года назад

      @Judah Dario It worked and I actually got access to my account again. Im so happy:D Thanks so much you saved my ass :D

    • @judahdario7179
      @judahdario7179 2 года назад

      @Aryan Ares Glad I could help =)

  • @catherineturner3732
    @catherineturner3732 3 года назад

    Awesome 😍

  • @stuartosborne6263
    @stuartosborne6263 3 года назад

    Great work, thankyou for sharing.

    • @ailbyashholt3532
      @ailbyashholt3532 3 года назад

      Thanks Stuart

    • @stuartosborne6263
      @stuartosborne6263 3 года назад

      Ailby Ash Holt about 10 years ago I did a BTCV course at agricultural college, whilst doing come coppicing I was able to fell a silver birch with a 2 man crosscut saw and then hew a square beam out of it. Very satisfying, the beam still sits in my garage.

  • @Kunfucious577
    @Kunfucious577 4 года назад

    That does not look easy.

    • @ailbyashholt3532
      @ailbyashholt3532 3 года назад

      Hi Kun, I bought my first adze nearly 50 years ago and have been using them regularly ever since. It is still physically hard work though.

    • @Kunfucious577
      @Kunfucious577 3 года назад

      @@ailbyashholt3532 thats awesome man. I just started wood working and i try to do as much as possible with hand tools. Its harder and more time consuming, but i get more satisfaction out of it. Its just a hobby so im in no rush to finish my projects.

  • @Will-Parr
    @Will-Parr 4 года назад

    My 6G grandfather lived in North Carolina in the mid 1700’s. He died in 1795. In his will, he left a drawing knife, froe, and iron wedge to his grandson. His valued possessions passed along. Excellent video. Thank you.

    • @ailbyashholt3532
      @ailbyashholt3532 4 года назад

      Thank you. That’s a good bit of family history to have passed on.

  • @OisinMiliano
    @OisinMiliano 4 года назад

    This was great to watch. Any idea when the next video will be released? Cannot wait to see the rest of the techniques you will use!

    • @ailbyashholt3532
      @ailbyashholt3532 3 года назад

      Thanks Oisin. I will try and get something sorted soon. I’m a bit disorganised as far as filming is concerned.

  • @Mark-xl8gg
    @Mark-xl8gg 4 года назад

    Super adze work Looking forward to the ongoing story

  • @EnglishCountryLife
    @EnglishCountryLife 4 года назад

    Nice bit of cleaving there Rob!

    • @ailbyashholt3532
      @ailbyashholt3532 4 года назад

      Thanks I do a lot of that. All the components for the chair were converted like this. Except for the seat I sawed the boards for that.

    • @EnglishCountryLife
      @EnglishCountryLife 4 года назад

      @@ailbyashholt3532 I've always wanted to have s crack at a proper riven fence!

  • @johnamriding6862
    @johnamriding6862 4 года назад

    Mesmerizing: thank you.

  • @EnglishCountryLife
    @EnglishCountryLife 4 года назад

    Thoroughly enjoyed that Rob, thanks!

  • @toonybrain
    @toonybrain 4 года назад

    Do you know the wood of the original part of the chair? (The video mentioned elm and ash in the replacement parts, but I’m curious to know the original wood species.)

    • @ailbyashholt3532
      @ailbyashholt3532 4 года назад

      The original chair seat is made from ash. I didn’t have any ash that big but I do have elm which is a good seat wood. I’ll fell a big ash after these gales blow over and convert it for future use.

  • @EldradWolfsbane
    @EldradWolfsbane 4 года назад

    Awesome!

  • @johnmutton799
    @johnmutton799 4 года назад

    Dangerous! Looks like a French axe!

  • @grahamnewton9032
    @grahamnewton9032 4 года назад

    Glad I have found Rob, I am going to need his help in the repair of my Mud and Stud thatched cottage.

  • @jhjparker
    @jhjparker 5 лет назад

    Fantastic. More please!

    • @robertley1822
      @robertley1822 5 лет назад

      Thanks Julian. That was part one. We’ll get another done in the next couple of weeks.

  • @leoncohen9416
    @leoncohen9416 5 лет назад

    Rob, YOU are a real master in your craft, amazing skill and ability, young man, you deserve full recognition

    • @robertley1822
      @robertley1822 5 лет назад

      Thanks Leon. I love my time in the woods making things with old hand tools.

    • @leoncohen9416
      @leoncohen9416 5 лет назад

      Rob, you make it seem so easy and natural

    • @robertley1822
      @robertley1822 5 лет назад

      Leon Cohen I remember when I first started making windsor chairs in the early eighties. My ached like hell. Not any more.

    • @robertley1822
      @robertley1822 5 лет назад

      It was my back that ached by the way.

  • @wilser777
    @wilser777 5 лет назад

    That's brilliant, Rob; thanks for organising the recording of you at work; this is Lincolnshire vernacular furniture from 300 years ago brought back to life.

    • @robertley1822
      @robertley1822 5 лет назад

      Thanks William. It’s what I like to do.

  • @MrSirDrew
    @MrSirDrew 5 лет назад

    Marvelously skillful

    • @robertley1822
      @robertley1822 5 лет назад

      Thanks Andrew. I’ll have another open day soon and maybe you’ll be able to visit again.

  • @bigpete1986
    @bigpete1986 6 лет назад

    Nice video... is that set up as a right handed or left handed axe? Looks to me like that would be left? I’m just about to hand a brades side axe....

    • @ailbyashholt3532
      @ailbyashholt3532 5 лет назад

      Hi there, sorry for the slow response! With this log I am mainly using a right handed side axe, I change to my left handed axe for certain areas because the grain direction changes. Thanks for your interest!

  • @JanColdwater
    @JanColdwater 6 лет назад

    I had seen someone use some sort of wood stripping blade that had handles for both hands that you pull towards yourself as you run it along the trunk. Very fast with less effort. Love your home!

    • @robertley1822
      @robertley1822 6 лет назад

      J Alien Coldwater That would be a draw knife. Good tools but not really appropriate for using on uneven English oak. The axe is definitely the tool for this job. Thanks for the input.

  • @PaulNaybour
    @PaulNaybour 6 лет назад

    Nice to meet you today, I hope you had a good trip home, and thanks for the woodworking tips.

  • @trouts4444
    @trouts4444 6 лет назад

    These must be the "splits" from a prior video. Never saw this type of construction before. Very interesting.

  • @wilser777
    @wilser777 9 лет назад

    Great video clip - can we have some more please , Rob ???

  • @TheInfoworks
    @TheInfoworks 9 лет назад

    Great low key conversation with the camera operator, Cheers