Very appealing to look at and super practical, perfect combination of great design and aesthetic! Had to laugh when you put the small runner type pieces through your enormous sander, lol.
Good design! I really like the inside bevel on the drawer. The back frame for the French clear and the cord port on the back panel are also excellent ideas.
Beautiful material and an excellent choice of finish so as not to take away from it. I'm sure you could do a limited production run of these or offer as an a la carte item and they'd sell well. They're great. One design point though, which I only mention because of the level you're working at; I think the design would lend itself to flushed sides. As in flush to the drawer carcass with the lower shelf housed at the rear into the side panel, flushing up where it floats at the front. Just think that would elevate your already clean design approach. Please don't read this as a nit-pick though mate. It is excellent work.
Cheers BBB, I needed a way to stand this pair off the wall so it has room for easy cable run there are a couple of other ways this could be done but I felt the rear edge helped with the thickness need for the amount of stand off needed from the wall
With all the different types of trees your using timber from how do you identify the different species? Is this just down to experience or did you learn this somewhere? I'm in the process of setting up a small kiln outside my workshop, similar to yours but smaller in length, any advice would be greatly appreciated. As always, fantastic work 👌
Hi Andy. When fitting the runners are you using spacers inside the box to ensure the correct placement? I'm about to use oak runners and like the look of this method but would like know how you ensure the runners are placed exactly to ensure the correct gap around the drawer? Cheers
Very nice project. I was wondering why yu chose to use biscuits over Domino's to reinforce the 45 degree bevels. I use shortened 5mm Domino's to reinforce 1/2" thick material with 45 degree bevels for small boxes.
I have the same drill press dust extraction as you. The flexi hose is not strong enough. I see you use somekind of strenght bar. Where did you get this?
It looks great and the technique is amazing but unfortunately I don't have the space and the money to build a shop like this one with all the top notch machines worth of 100k$ and more...
My friend, there is nothing here that can't be done with some basic power tools. Replace Domino's with dowels, use a circular saw or mitre saw to cut materials etc. Don't be put off by his amazing kit, which he has worked incredibly hard to pay for. You can achieve results like this, it just might take you a little longer. 👍
+Moran Guy The guy that runs this channel is doing it as a business so that he has to have good output to make money that means using higher end equipment that produces good results. You can do all of this with just a hand saw, chisels, hand plane and few other little cheap tools if you desire. There are plenty of channels that give demonstrations and teach how to start out with this. To be honest in the modern world if you wanted to learn to do traditional carpentry with just hand tools you need to learn it yourself as there are very few apprenticeships like this now. I was very lucky to learn from my grandfather before he died and now I am teaching my Sons and Daughters. Hand Saws, Chisels and Hand Plane are the way to go. It is cheap and easy to acquire and you can learn from the internet.
@@michaelkilner5031 I would say half a million in skills learned. A career today can cost that much in learning alone. All that effort time and lots of mistakes. Average carpenter hourly rate in UK is £12 p/h so that at a 40 hour week for 20 years is £499200. So in 20 years time that rate adjusted for inflation will probably be £820,000. The physical equipment probably is only a fraction of that.
Very appealing to look at and super practical, perfect combination of great design and aesthetic! Had to laugh when you put the small runner type pieces through your enormous sander, lol.
Really nice design and job well done. Your 24” jointer and sanding drum is probably worth more than my entire workshop…
what a shop. designs are special.
Now I know what a 1/4 million worth of equipment and tools can produce! I'm jealous. Nice designs too.
Lol. its not that much mate 2nd hand ebay most of it :)
I like the fact that you didn't feel the need to add any annoying music. The tables are simply beautiful!
Nicely done.
Oh my gosh these bedside tables are absolutely stunning!! 👏🏻✨
Good design! I really like the inside bevel on the drawer. The back frame for the French clear and the cord port on the back panel are also excellent ideas.
I dig it.
Man that is a big-ass jointer.
Great design and work! I am super jealous (in a good way) of that workshop and the skills.
Beautiful craftsmanship! Your shop... wow!
this is a great design and a great project. I personally like the combination of mitre joint and bevelled front.
that chestnut is so gorgeous!!!
Top quality mate, top quality can't really say any more than that. Loved the video, no gimmicks, no music, just pure woodwork 👍👍👍👍
Cheers :)
Pure heaven on a Sunday night, I can almost smell the chestnut.....👃 thanks for sharing......
You are an inspiration to a novice woodworker just getting back into furniture building. Your craftsmanship and designs they are stunning.
A desk in that style would be nice
Top notch craftsmanship, mate👍😎👍
That was a bloody good idea, the way you mounted the draw runner, tricky. 👍😋
All i can say is that these look .... AWSOME!!!!!
amazing work. excellent job!
Great watch thanks, will set the bed off perfectly.
Lovely job
мастер
прекрасный цех,отличная оснастка.
Beautiful material and an excellent choice of finish so as not to take away from it. I'm sure you could do a limited production run of these or offer as an a la carte item and they'd sell well. They're great. One design point though, which I only mention because of the level you're working at; I think the design would lend itself to flushed sides. As in flush to the drawer carcass with the lower shelf housed at the rear into the side panel, flushing up where it floats at the front. Just think that would elevate your already clean design approach. Please don't read this as a nit-pick though mate. It is excellent work.
Cheers BBB, I needed a way to stand this pair off the wall so it has room for easy cable run there are a couple of other ways this could be done but I felt the rear edge helped with the thickness need for the amount of stand off needed from the wall
Great design
Beautiful! This video had a feel of Ishitani - a great Japanese woodworker. You should check him out if you haven’t.
That’s is a very nice compliment! Thank you
Fantastic just amazing👍👍👍👍
so nice setup
what kind of compressor do u use for the fw sander?
great Job..
With all the different types of trees your using timber from how do you identify the different species? Is this just down to experience or did you learn this somewhere? I'm in the process of setting up a small kiln outside my workshop, similar to yours but smaller in length, any advice would be greatly appreciated. As always, fantastic work 👌
you learn the grain and the smell .. in the UK there are only a small number of tree types I use anyway
Hi Andy. When fitting the runners are you using spacers inside the box to ensure the correct placement? I'm about to use oak runners and like the look of this method but would like know how you ensure the runners are placed exactly to ensure the correct gap around the drawer? Cheers
These drawers are very small so the fit was good enough to line up the runners
I really don’t know why you so rarely see chestnut in the lumber yards, it really is as good as oak, nice job, and it’s everywhere up here in Scotland
I love chestnut and feel it my mission to use it :)
Chestnut in the modern world is very rare as there are no forests and only sourced wood.
Real nice.
Hi Andy
What is the bright green hose you use with the domino - not festool?
Great video btw
Cheers , just a green cover I bought for my old teens vac
Very nice project. I was wondering why yu chose to use biscuits over Domino's to reinforce the 45 degree bevels. I use shortened 5mm Domino's to reinforce 1/2" thick material with 45 degree bevels for small boxes.
Simple no clamps needed!! , it’s a lamello clamex not a biscuit
@@ManorWood AH! Got it.
I have the same drill press dust extraction as you. The flexi hose is not strong enough. I see you use somekind of strenght bar. Where did you get this?
Beautiful furniture. What was the purpose of the holes in the vertical uprights in the back? Maybe I missed it.
Cable can runs behind , also 2x holes for air when you close the drawer
@@ManorWood Thanks.
Manor Wood my tolerances are so bad, I have plenty of room for the air to escape as it is! 🤣
The xyz you applied with the gun to glue it to the back... was that construction adhesive?
It’s a new d4. I have a video on it - ruclips.net/video/I69kyotFOXA/видео.html
Great video. I did think u were going to cut your arm acouple times though🤦🏽♀️😂
oh dear
It looks great and the technique is amazing but unfortunately I don't have the space and the money to build a shop like this one with all the top notch machines worth of 100k$ and more...
My friend, there is nothing here that can't be done with some basic power tools. Replace Domino's with dowels, use a circular saw or mitre saw to cut materials etc. Don't be put off by his amazing kit, which he has worked incredibly hard to pay for. You can achieve results like this, it just might take you a little longer. 👍
Spot on, hand power tools and buy your wood machined from the wood yard also helps ..
+Moran Guy
The guy that runs this channel is doing it as a business so that he has to have good output to make money that means using higher end equipment that produces good results.
You can do all of this with just a hand saw, chisels, hand plane and few other little cheap tools if you desire.
There are plenty of channels that give demonstrations and teach how to start out with this. To be honest in the modern world if you wanted to learn to do traditional carpentry with just hand tools you need to learn it yourself as there are very few apprenticeships like this now. I was very lucky to learn from my grandfather before he died and now I am teaching my Sons and Daughters.
Hand Saws, Chisels and Hand Plane are the way to go. It is cheap and easy to acquire and you can learn from the internet.
Me and a few mates have been trying to guess how much it cost to set up your workshop, whats the damage? Best regards Mick.
2nd hand and Ebay not as much as you may think :)
@@ManorWood Ah, still no wiser.
@@michaelkilner5031
I would say half a million in skills learned. A career today can cost that much in learning alone. All that effort time and lots of mistakes.
Average carpenter hourly rate in UK is £12 p/h so that at a 40 hour week for 20 years is £499200.
So in 20 years time that rate adjusted for inflation will probably be £820,000. The physical equipment probably is only a fraction of that.
What is the model number of the Lamello biscuit cutter that you use that cuts the wider gap at the perimeter of the cut and how does it do that?
Never mind, I found it.
Ishi.
:)
I was enjoying the video, until I realized that your shop tools cost more than my house did.
All i can say is that these look .... AWSOME!!!!!
Great watch thanks, will set the bed off perfectly.