WAIT TIL YOU SEE THE INSIDE OF THIS UGLY MAPLE LOG
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- Опубликовано: 22 ноя 2019
- starting your own sawmill business? please visit:
www.portablesawmilling.com wncrenovations.com/
Quickbooks for self-employed: fbuy.me/n92yj
Sarah’s sewing:
www.sarahclassicsewing.com/
/ sarahclassicsewing
/ sarahclassicsewing Хобби
if you are interested in a faster edit, lots of fun transitions, check out this video of a hickory slab ruclips.net/video/G7P7Zt-bi6E/видео.html
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I see the middle hollowed out is it a sick tree?? Should be round and ringed in the middle if healthy ,but I'm not a tree expert but I am a tree hugger .(..as a kid ) just hiked alot in my local area which is central Connecticut...Torys' Den , blue and red trails marked throughout. Miss them days .
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How wonderful you've found treasure in that old log! It's refreshing that folks like you save this lovely wood. If you sell it, or work it yourselves, I'd enjoy seeing the process and finished items. Please ask your buyers to record some of their processes. Well done, and not the least boring! ☺
I worked at a wood shop 30 years ago and we had a 36” wide belt sander . Back then it was $5.00 a pass if you brought your ruff cut or glued up boards for table tops . Some of that could be ripped and glued and it would be a amazing. We made all of the table tops for Pizza Hut USA,lab tables for Cornell . Loved the smell of the wood . Have a good day ,thanks for sharing this.
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We had a 52” where I worked.
I like watching anything like this cos you don’t get to see how it’s done otherwise, love it, thank you,
Русский Гройпер because RUclips recommends all kind of crap 😂 , just saying you don’t have to like, I don’t collect “Likes” 😜
This is therapy working with wood and I enjoyed watching. Got some great toys getting the job done. Thanks
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I love wood! Seeing what it looks like under the rough exterior. The grain, the knots and gnarls. It's like refinishing old furniture, when you get the black varnish stripped, it's always a surprise what's under it.
Pulseras keep up .z
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I too, waited, to see the inside of 'ugly schtick', but, I tell you what. It was good to hear you 2 chit chatting and having some fun. I love to hear couples enjoyin each others company, especially while working. Ya did good!
It’s good to see real people working together having fun and just remember happy wife happy like keep up the great work love your show Paul Australia Australia 🇦🇺
This is a beautiful & amazing machine!
Second & Third cut or slice, look good for a coffee table. Great job.
The quilted maple or flame which that piece had costs a fortune also spalted timbers have a huge up-charge when they are sold to guitar builders. When they are polished and lacquered the grain pattern 'pops' and looks amazing. Just a guitar neck blank can cost $350 if it is figured. Flame is the most beautiful when finished:)
How can we get a bit of this wood , even enough for lace bobbins
So what was inside the ugly log?
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I recently bought a spalted maple ukelele and it's beautiful!
That's beautiful work there my friend. People are doing that epoxy resin fill in the knots or in this case the rotten spots. I've got a buddy here in Alabama that has a sawmill, he cuts a lot of azobe wood. Talking about dulling a blade. He's in the biz of sharpening blades also. Highly recommend him for that.
I saw a table in a New York furniture store for $850.00. Said the blue epoxy resin filling was meant to represent Lake George. It was a pretty table, but for $850? Nah!
Thank you for sharing,,that was so relaxingly therapeutic.
Really enjoyed watching.
I would love a slither of that maple its so beautiful I loved watching
The product of the sawn wood is called plank considering the thickness n width.
I enjoyed watching too. Some have called "boring" I say relaxed,not in a hurry,sweet cooperation between two people in love.Very pleasant indeed. Sure beats all those Epic Fails and Try not to laugh videos!
My grandpa was a Sawyer. Had many mills set up as they moved. I love wood patterns. Love the forest faces hidden in the wood.
Thank you for sharing this video. You guys are adorable.
What a fantastic work! And what fantastic machines! Congratulations! Christian
Wow.. Charlie you sure know your way around that machine. Reminds me of my X with his backhoe. So exciting to see what each cut will bring. Like cutting into a rock with hidden gems inside. No two cuts are the same. You have the best slab cutter I have ever seen. The Cadillac of slab cutters (mill) if you will. Nice work!
This video is excellent! Charley and Sarah, with or without the theme of a quaint and peaceful everyday joint interest, it will lull you into a state of desire that everyone longs to have in a relationship! You can just feel it, as it reminds you of one of your own past relationships, or just a fleeting desire to obtain! Thank you for sharing a glimpse into your life! Stephen Church
those are nice beautiful pieces of wood cut logs for table making!!!
OMG I WOULD HAVE NEVER FIGURED THAT OUT. YOU ARE TRULY AMAZING AND I SERIOUSLY HAD NO IDEA THAT YOU COULD MAKE A TABLE TOP FROM THOSE CUTS.
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@@barbaraworthigton6166 what does 1EYGU mean?
Barbara Worthigton I would like to know what 1eygu means,too.
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She's still trying to figure it out what does 1EYGU mean🤔 I guess 😉
You know,I wonder after reading those snide comments why anyone could be so uncouth as to belittle a pair of young people who are at least trying! You two just keep on doing what you are doing.
Agree
They're uncouth because they can't do it.
Or if they can, they botch it up
They want others to be miserable just because they are
Thanks for sharing!
You said it, some like it, some don't, I loved it thanks for the video excellent camera work
I love watching craftsmen do their thing. You can tell when someone knows what they are doing. And this guy does. You can learn a lot from watching these guys work. Great video.
Absolutely ! That's how the old timers learned their craft !
Fiddle back is a name or curly soft maple used to make violin worked in a log yard for 25 years in the upper Michigan. Lots of birds eye and curly soft
Beautiful equipment lovely team you and your.wife .
So nice to hear a man's lady laughing out loud for a change xxx.
Instead of a cold ugly attitude .
Keep up the good work you two .
I have 5 grown daughters all over 21 , hearing them laughing and happy brings me instant joy .
I used to work in a very large saw mill / wood products plant. I was a lumber puller after the wood was dried and planed and trimmed. Those 2x 12x 20 ft'ers were hefty. It takes a man to work with lumber. Hardest job I ever had. Short stacker was the worst.
Did u ever spot the horde over there?
I enjoyed it. My grandfather had the old time back the day kind with belts and a giant saw blade. He made a many boards.
I made furniture with my dad when I was a young person. I love the smell of saw dust.
Me too
Treasure the wood as natures gift and how can you not treasure that young woman with that incredibly wonderful laugh. Thanks for sharing.
I really enjoyed watching this and learning something new. It must be fulfilling work.
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Videos like this help me respect and admire the skill and hard work of wood workers!
I love the kitty!!! The wood will make beautiful projects!!!
I would be so nervous to upload a video of myself working to Yourube... this guy did a fantastic job! Kudos to him for having the guts to show his work in action! I learned a lot from this video 👍👍 Thank you much
I watched it all. Waiting to see what each piece looked like. Living in Calif Im used to termites and thats what that debris looked like to me. I also like rocks and slicing them. Loved that cool machine
Watching from Philippines. I love this kind of Work.. I love it!! God Bless
wonders of sophisticated machinery. very interesting indeed.i enjoyed watching completely
Thanks for sharing I enjoy your videos never know what a log holds in side
I turned a 150+ year old black walnut from slab off friends family farm found mini ball from civil war in side a bowl I was turning from blank left it inside bowl !
how do you know it was from the civil war?
Sarah and Charlie thanks kindly for sharing your video I really enjoyed the watch relaxing and interesting 👍🏻keep on being happy
AMAZINGLY VERY VERY INTERESTING TOO WATCH THIS LOGGER/TREE SURGEON AT WORK. WHAT GREAT TOOLS HE'S USING TOO CUT THE WOOD PRECISELY. 🖒
I’m glad I found y’all ! I am learning about it ty
wow the imagination just runs thru your mind with every piece of wood u pick up & pile it away its like each cut is a new awsome creation i like it
That’s one hell of a saw. To cut without walking at a specific feed rate is key I would suspect. Nice!
You are dry efficient, and good sawyer. Years ago I operated a Wick mill, we sawed up a log, 12 ft by 24 long, with 2 circular blades, made 4x6 door materials,. You do a fine job with a bandsaw, Bry
very nice love see the wood after it cut. Great job on the cutting.
I love watching these. It's a peak into the gifts of nature that we might otherwise not get an opportunity to experience! So, thank you!
You missed “and watching beefy guys brake a sweat” lol
That young man is very strong! I’d be on the ground if I even tried to lift one of those logs!! Being a 76 yr. old grandma, it would be a bad thing to try.
I’m very impressed with his strength...
But I bet you are smarter than he is june cuz you don't have to do that ha ha ha
I haven't worked as a wood butcher for several years now. That is some beautiful wood though. We got a lot of our wood in Southern Missouri. Most of the wood we used was cedar we scavenged from the area around Table Rock Lake. That made some very fine pieces. I loved the aroma of the cedar while working it with the various tools .
Like your style - GO BIG -or go home. Great machine!
I grew up on a farm and love country lifestyle.
I was looking for a good bar.
Good one, you got me.
So fascinating, my dad use to cut slabs with a tractor, belt drive table circular saw. Was always scared around it but fascinated by how it was done. Wood smells good when being cut and all that slab wood to use in Woodstove
Thick doggone slabs. Would love to make a bench out of one of those. Beautiful wood. Thanks for the great video.
I'd love a counter top
Good work. Good machinery. Well filmed. Thank you. Subscribed.
I love work, I can watch it all day. Seriously it's interesting to watch a craftsman at work.
This is so satisfying to watch! Love it!
Thanks for sharing it was really relaxing to watch and there were some really nice pieces of wood too..
Nice set of toys you got there. Great Vid . Just to let you know , those wriggly lines at 29.13 on your maple board , are called "Flames".
Enjoyed it. Thanks for posting.
This is so interesting! Now, can those boards you have cut be cut thinner? There are some beautiful cuts that would look gorgeous finished, but I would think they need to be cut thinner than you have just cut. I guess it comes down to what purpose the wood is to be used for. Fascinating!!
I know this is old, but I was thinking the same thing. Most of them could probably have been cut in thirds. But you are right it depends on what they will be used for. I can't think of anything that would need to be that thick and heavy though.
Loved every moment. Great to see what goes on in your pert of the world. Loved the machinery. Wish I could see the End creation of the wood.
Beautiful wood and it’s very nice that you are doing this for a friend. Hopefully for a fee. That kabuka is not cheap as for the labour. Good job!
As Charlie is cutting the log into slabs my brain was busy thinking about all the wonderful ways to bring out the best wood grain in each slab. One of the things I would do with the pieces that have “holes” in the cut is put a clear appoxie in the holes to fill them & then, if it was going to be a dining room table, build a frame around the entire slab to make it the size that I would want to make it, once it was completely dry, I would then put lacquer on both sides of the table/coffee table & allowed to completely dry. Once that is all done, I would get it readied for the stand before I mounted the top for its first construction to the final product.
Once I have made sure that it is completed, I would then either deliver it whole to its new place or dismantle it to be re-assembled at the home. If it isn’t going to be dismantled before moving it, I would consider using silicone where the stand meets the table top so that the stand becomes more stable & less likely to come apart.
I ran a LT 40 HD super hydraulic electric, we had the WM sharpening package with tooth setter. This worked well for us. Grade hwd. For Basset furniture along with custom jobs.
Music Reine
A hundred years ago my uncles worked in a sawmill (until they saved enough money to go to Detroit and work in the auto plants). I don’t think the love of wood ever left them.
I'm one of the ones who watches this video and relaxes and love the look of the wood and can even smell it. If that's crazy than I'm at the wrong place. Glad I discovered this video. I n these crazy and dangerous times this is what I need and my dogs to rub their bellies while I am at home trying to stay away from the sickness. Thank you for the therapy Charley and Sarah.
ROSA agUIRRE really??
I felt that I could smell the wood too!!
I too could smell the wood through my screen but they smell a bit rotten.
You guys have way too much time on your hands..lol?
It's funny but that last partial piece he lifted off to put on the pile looked strangely like it was in the shape of New Hampshire! Turned upside down it would have resembled Vermont I guess! TY for the video. I found it both therapeutic as well as so relaxing I began falling asleep, Nice! [and I agree with those who thought pieces of that log would make very nice table tops!]
Beautiful coffee table and other things awesome.
This is gorgeous! Would love to see an acrylic topped table with this !!!
Blue acrylic
Now I see why my brother in law bought his own sawmill, I saw the patio and covers he built from the logs he collected from the California wild fire areas that allowed wood to be harvested. It looks like a very good way to pass the time and save a whole lot of money and make a few bucks selling wood to craftsman.
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Beautiful cuts for sculpted side tables and centre tables, also a big chair could have been carved from part of the log,congrats to cutter
I loved watching the video it was great to see the process.
I love hard work. I could watch it all day. Thanks for the video.
Not quilted, Quilted maple actually has the appearance of quilting pattern. What you have is worth much mores. It's spalted or highly figured maple, worth a considerable amount for furniture and musical instruments.
Another very decorative wood is called bird's-eye maple. I have only seen it once, but it is truly beautiful.
I swear I could smell it while watching this. I grew up with my parents home right next to the old fashioned saw mill that my grandpa ran. I loved knocking down the saw dust pile as a really little kid and as I got older I was the slab girl. I loved that saw mill!
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Awesome... my men would love to work with these machines.
Fascinating process. I can’t imagine doing all that cutting by hand.
Kind of interesting. Thats a real fine machine. I have always liked the many lives of wood. First life is a tree. Second life is an old TV cabinet. Third life as a book shelf being repurposed or like my fish tank stand. But the beauty of the wood lives on.
I just happen by and found it very entertaining. I remember my dad telling me, he had and ran a portable saw mill back in the Thirty's!
Very educational and cool to see how this process works
Beautiful maple! Nice video!
The title caught my eye and I watched with baited breath to see the big unveil............ still waiting, sorry I seem to have missed it.
*bated breath, a form of the word "abated"
Dang. I missed it also. Sure would have liked to see more than yhe one burled piece.
Craig Corson - pedants unite. 🙄
@@marylynne9104 I suppose you think that we should all just spell words any way that we like. How long do you think it would be before none of us could communicate with another of us? I don't want to live in that world - and really, neither do you.
Craig Corson - it’s OK, I’m another pedant, my bible is “Eats, Shoots and Leaves”. I have to try hard not to spellcheck and punctuate every comment I read, or I’d never get anything else done. 😆
Spalted, Spalted is the word.
I enjoyed the video.
Kopp by
I've always thought it was called, "burlwood?" I know that burlwood comes from parasites in the tree, causing the knots, twisting of the woodgrain over time, and it's very expensive, and sought after by many furniture, and cabinet makers alike. ✌😎
Very interesting job, lots of knowledge about wood
As a Arch Designer, I see pretty Dining tables, headboards, doors, etc. so pretty!
And kitchen counters with raw edges. If you take out the bad wood and you can fill the cavity with colored epoxy then coat everything with clear epoxy with the raw edge
My hubby did this with white oak down to planks, all new wooden floors my house
Wendy Vermette no way. I’d leave the holes, raw edges, “bad wood”(?)
I loved this video. My great grandfather use to make tobacco sticks that hung tobacco on back in the old days. He had a God given ability to put his arms around a tree and pace around it. By this he could tell how many tobacco sticks that tree would yield. He was well known and sought after for that. For those who do not know tobacco sticks were used to tie tobacco on that was harvested from the fields from which was made cigarettes, cigars, snuff, and chewing tobacco. etc.
That would make a nice bar top!
Some people cant live without finding something wrong with every thing. He did a good job
I work with two guys who gripe because the guy following them is 10 minutes late almost every day.
The guy that flows me just doesn't show up. That means I work 4 extra hours at least..
These guys gripe because they dont want to work 10inutes
Loved your video. I know those maples rot from the inside out. I've seen two huge maples go down in my neighborhood for that reason.
That was cool! Thank you for sharing!
So nice and relaxing. Watching you do all the work! 😂😂😂
It's videos like this that helped me get through the pandemic and home isolation.
This was really cool. Thanks for sharing.
that would make beautiful coffee table or picnic table
when you think about it the pioneers who came to this country did everything by hand they didn't have Machinery like today
That's an intelligent question .
Malcolm Canning I don't see a question!
@@craigdawson1749 it was a half enquiring mind
You forget, the pioneer had to deal with trees like this size with more frequency and likely more frustration
Yup, and JOBS
Wood is a wonderful material, full of surprises, full of life.
Off topic lol but I love how Charley still makes Sarah giggle like a school girl who has a crush on the cute boy and at times the way he looks at her. A great pair for sure! Nice work guys!
I thought I was being weird, but first thing I noticed is what a sweet smile he has.
You'll find that your blade will not wave up and down, if you'll keep the blade guide adjusted to within .75" from the log. Also, that 'ripple' you have is from a couple of teeth being out of adjustment, just take a flat file and hit each tooth, that should fix the blade and give a little long life between sharpenings.
Wish I'd had one of those when I was logging to pick up logs
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Beautiful stuff very interesting I like it
It's nice to watch it!
Was it just me or did anyone else want to see each slabs grain? Those slabs with the rotten places would look great filled with acrylic. Thanks for the video please show us more of the slabs grain 😎
K((m.j no
Towanda Thedriver + wow that's exactly what I wanted to know- what to do with the rotten places! What do you mean by filled with acrylic?
Impressive looking saw unit, you just need a machine to move and stack those cut slabs to save doing yourself an injury
Wow what a awesome work the beauty of a log bringing nature wonders back to life for people can see what a awesome job to have