How to make a BASKETWEAVE cuttingboard
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 17 авг 2019
- I re-edited this video to take out all the extra cutting and talking, and to make it easier to see. You can find the newer version here: • How to make a Basketwe...
In this video I walk you through all the steps I took to make an end grain basketweave cuttingboard.
/ brandonhartman
Some of the tools I use in my shop:
Full Disclosure: As an Amazon affiliate I may earn a commission from qualifying purchases.
Whiteside 1/4" Spiral Bit: geni.us/5kAg
Incra I-Box: geni.us/IBTI
Sweetheart Chisels: geni.us/GDI2
A-Line It Kit: geni.us/dHG4579
WoodRiver #4 Bench Plane: geni.us/N3pit
WoodRiver #7 Jointer Plane: geni.us/2UqjiJ
Porter Cable Router: geni.us/AemaL
DeWalt Palm Router: geni.us/KjWcY1
Whiteside Surfacing Bit: geni.us/0ibEA25
Freud 10" Crosscut Blade: geni.us/k15o
Freud 10" Rip Blade: amzn.to/396AqkI
Festool Vac: geni.us/TSNSAPu
Festool Track Saw: geni.us/TbKs1UT
Festool Plunge Router: geni.us/B4ro4
Festool Rotex Sander: geni.us/xMfj1o
LED Shop Light kit: geni.us/QoJmNa
More tools I use: kit.co/bhartman/tools-in-my-shop
Camera Gear Used: kit.co/bhartman/video-making-...
Wow. This brings back so many memories lol. I'm a full time woodworker and I've probably made close to 500-600 end grain cutting boards in my career.
I struggled and struggled to make quality end grain cutting boards. The binding on the table saw, squaring with the table saw, clamping with cauls, flattening with a router sled, sanding for 2 years with a Random Orbital Sander... This is exactly what I used to do lol. I kept saving from my project sales and I was able to upgrade my tools. A helical head planer is the biggest help in making these. Got a super nice quality dedicated rip blade from Skarpaz... I changed the way that I build cutting boards, and I got a Rotex sander. Now I can legitimately make 1 high quality end grain cutting board from beginning to end in about an hour and 15 minutes. Not counting glue drying times.
You did a great job man. You are showing people you don't need 10k in tools to make a beautiful product, and that's a message I hope the world knows about woodworking. I'm passionate about that message
I make high quality end grain boards from tools I bought off of facebook marketplace.
$75 for an 80s craftsman table saw, $150 for a 1960s craftsman jointer, $300 planer, a Walmart hand sander. I do have access to any tool at my work, because I work at a woodshop, but I rarely have to. You don't need the best of the best to make good stuff. As long as your tools can cut square and straight, and the cutters are sharp, you can do just about anything
Nice job, man. It is very refreshing to see woodworkers on RUclips that don't have all the high end fancy tools that most others seem to have. It is very encouraging to woodworkers like myself who can somehow manage to make quality products while not having the high end tools. Keep up the good work!
I had to run an extension cord to my garage because I kept tripping the breaker as well. I was able to add a dedicated 20 amp circuit for the table saw without doing an entire panel in the shop. I like that you showed some problems and problem solving - it helps to know other people run into issues and not just me.
Great video to show the importance of having the right tools and materials for the job to avoid extra work and frustration.
Hi, Brandon. As a Weaver, I was delighted to see "plain-weave fabric" as the design for your cutting board! Thank you for sharing. Best wishes from Kate in Olympia, WA.
I enjoyed your wit as much as the build.
It's very inspiring and is on my bucket list of new projects to try.
I am pretty new to woodworking. Made this board as a gift to my brother and sister, they came out beautiful. Thank you!
Brandon, beautiful work, a true craftsman. Thank you for sharing this build with us. I love how you managed to stand next to yourself and narrate the process. You are part magician as well.
I'm number 414! Nice build with mere mortal tools that look the ones in my "unsponsored" shop. Really cool design..
Thanks for watching! Would you like to see me try (try being the operative word) tackling any other board designs?
How about a chevron style board?
Hi I don't want to seem rude but Tite Bond 3 is better than 2 because 3 is food safe and water resistant while 2 is only water resistant.
Edit: I recently found out that TB3 is weather proof and TB2 is water proof. And like he said all of them are good safe
@@aidanfordsword6954 Per Titebond specs "All of our Titebond wood glues are safe to use and produce no harmful fumes. They meet the requirements of ASTM D4236 for safe use with arts and crafts. Titebond III Ultimate Wood Glue and Titebond II Premium Wood Glue have both been approved for indirect food contact. For this reason, it is the glue that we recommend for making cutting boards."
@@ryanivester5042 Ok thank you I did not know that.
@@aidanfordsword6954 No problem. Always glad to help. I use both. Just depends on what I have on hand and how long I need to work with it. If memory serves, TB3 has a longer working time before it sets up.
I had the same exact saw. When I got my powermatic 66 5hp I never had that problem anymore. Awesome board.
I've found that moving to a thin kerf blade on my underpowered table saw did wonders for cuts like that... I've also found that when the saw just isn't doing it's job, doing a rough cut on the bandsaw then a cleanup pass on the table saw gets the job done (or send it thru the thickness planer) I had to do this with some 8/4 cherry slabs that burned just looking at my table saw
THAT is an excellent build! And, you've got some great woodworking skills. I've never built a Basket Weave pattern cutting board before. I think I'll try now. Thanks!
Thanks James! That means a lot coming from you!
i dont mean to be off topic but does any of you know of a tool to get back into an instagram account..?
I was stupid lost my login password. I love any assistance you can offer me!
@Stefan Davion instablaster =)
@Maison Heath i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site on google and Im in the hacking process now.
Takes a while so I will reply here later with my results.
@Maison Heath it did the trick and I now got access to my account again. I am so happy:D
Thanks so much, you saved my ass :D
Yeah, I had the same problem with the breaker and I got tired of running down to the basement to reset the breaker so I finally got a sub panel installed into the garage. What a difference! I haven't tripped a breaker since the install and even if I do, the box is only a few feet away to reset it. Such an improvement!
You have a good sense of humor and a terrific voice. I love the final product. Thank you for this very useful video.
Thanks for the detailed walkthrough of this process. I wish you a happy new year and a new Sawstop (maybe even a bandsaw?) for your shop!
Awesome! I really like that pattern! Great job!
Absolutely beautiful
Beautiful!
You’re hardcore dude. Nice work using what you had to work with. Glad to see your perseverance and dedication to make it happen.
Awesome design. It turned out great. Im going to give this one a try.
Thanks! Let me know how it turns out.
That's a beautiful board! I have never seen that type of design on a cutting board, and it looks easier than I expected. I may have to give that a try sometime. Thanks for the idea!!
It really is pretty simple once you break down the steps. Thanks for watching!
Looks great. Love it 👍👍
Excelente Trabajo.Me gusto murcho!
Gracias por compartirlo
Amazing. Great job.
Well done
Stunning board 👍
Loved it! 🤩👍
Nice tip on the clamps along the seam to force into alignment.
Used your video to make my own. 2nd one i made is perfect. Thank you! for the instruction 🙂
Nice! It’s cool how the lines look curved even though they aren’t.
It's amazing the optical illusions you can pull off with just some blocks of wood!
WOW do I lkie this design. Excellent balnce between simplisty and complexity. I'm going to make a few of these as a high end items. Also excellent presentation. One that makes the viewer want to pay attention
Thanks!
I loved the 3D effect you got plus the wood's shades were awesome after the polishing, nice work.
Thanks!
Awesome video and cutting board!! I didn’t even fast forward once while watching it!
You got me at "Anything Worth Doing Is Worth Seriously Overthinking" Story of my life! Subbed
at first I thought oh no a 34 minute video I don't know if I can do it , but man you know very good job dude and I'm glad I stayed for the lesson . First time I seen one of your videos had fun and subscribed look forward to the next one 😁 and to all you thumb downers you guys are crazy
cool very good your work shows all the details
Brandon, great instructions for a great build, built a router sled that took some tweaking to get the cuts to be level with a 1 1/2 inch surfacing bit, but once dialed in, a really nice system for both edge surfacing and end grain. Your video is very clear and easy to understand, well done.
I appreciate the kind words! Glad it helped.
Good job 👍🏼 beautiful cutting board
Coolest looking cutting board I’ve seen!
Thanks!
Obra de arte pura 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
Great video and awesome looking board. Thanks.
Thank you!
Nice work. Thank-you for sharing.
Thanks for watching!
WOW !!! Amazing job man.
Thank you!
Hey, great job!
Very nice indeed.
very nice, i like the cutting board and the video.
Great board, and i enjoyed the in-depth description of what and how you did it... Subscribed.. Paul in the UK
WOWZERS! This is a complicated project to make, but the end result sure does look good!
Thanks!
Good looking board👍
Nice work
Great job ! keep being you and what you do ...the subs will come. you got me as a sub when the piece almost fell and you kept your cool and was able to save it from dropping LOL ! and of course the glue remark about James from Kings fine woodworking, i'm an old guy that loves woodworking and you have brightened my day God Bless & keep makin dust.
Loved you video THANKS. I'm trying to make one we will see what happens.
Nice work!
Thank you!
i love that you also have a small workshop/shed/garage to work from. you have the added advantage of electricity my shed does not have so i have to run extension cords out to mine for my power tools. i still get the job done. i also had to make my own table saw (since they are super expensive here in Australia) made my own table top and mounted my skill saw to the underside. its not pretty and not always accurate but i manage with it. sadly even the least expensive table saw i can find over here costs between $500 - $600. that is the Ryobi RTS1825RG 1800w motor with 10" blade. guess i should make and sell lots of cutting boards to pay for it. however the different species of lumber you have access to is also very expensive to buy over here. so maybe.
Just created mine off of this video. Maple and Purpleheart. Thanks Brandon!
I'll bet that looks good! Glad you found it helpful.
Great trick to use clamps to align while glueing.
You are very easy to understand. I would like to see more projects from you.
Thank you!
Excellent job in the end. Use small wood wedges to keep the cuts slightly open on the table saw and use Diablo blades. Every time you run something past a blade, you take a little more of your hard work away no matter how hard you try to prevent it.
Brandon great job with the basket weave cutting board
Thanks!
Very nice build!
Thanks!
Very nice job
Thanks!
Beautiful!! I make cutting boards and chopping blocks and I'm always looking for a new design! I think I am going to use Poplar (green) and Sugar Maple (white) for mine! I love yours!
Great video Brandon...sub added. Hope I can take your expertise to my bench! Awesome cutting board!
That’s awesome. Thank you for sharing. New sub. I glue 2x4 s to the ends of my cutting boards and they run through the planer without issue.
I've does that too, and it worked great. Once I get a helical head planer I'll probably do it that way with all of them like MTM does. I'm just a little leery of showing that method on a video lest the safely police issue a warrant for my arrest 😅
Great video. Very nice board. I’m not big on the 3D boards and illusion patterns, but I like this, I think I’ll make one. Thanks for sharing. I have a RUclips video on a few boards I’ve made. You can see the styles I’ve come up with that I like. I’ve only made a handful of boards. If you feel inclined to check them out, if so let me know what you think. Thanks
.
Very nice.
This is really beautiful. The only thing I might do differently is to add a dark border. I KNOW what a pain end-grain borders are, but the open ends of the weave along the edges just bother me somehow. But WOW! Watching it go into the oil is just breathtaking!
Nice job. You are right, a rip blade would make your life easier. I had a 1.75HP craftsman and was easily able to rip 8-¼ maple.
Great presentation, Brandon! You make the project look simple enough for even me to try. A suggestion, make yourself a portable swamp cooler to use in the shop. There is always somebody getting rid of stuff, keep an eye out on Craig's list or the other sites, or even habitat for humanity re-use shops. Building a rolling base for the cooler might make an interesting video for your channel. We made one out of scrap steel and wheelchair wheels that I hauled out of a dumpster. Hooked up to a hose and positioned at the side door to our garage, it cools our garage shop at least 20 deg F. I could send a picture if you need an jdea.
Swamp coolers work well in dry environments...not so well in humid environments. Nice suggestion.
I realize this is an older video, but I wanted to let you know that I really like this pattern. So much so that I am making one as a wedding gift for my son.
Having said that, it was sooo painful to watch you struggle to rip that maple up. A dedicated rip blade will save time and effort. Nice video!
I'm glad you like it!
Well done. Enjoyed your video and the design of the board. If Saw Stop doesn't hear you, it's their loss. Good luck,,I subbed and look forward to more from you.
I went to a grizzly 3hp. I had a pm 3hp in my cabinet shop, they are made by jet. The grizz is a great saw and holds a 13/16 dado. I have the 240v with the cast iron router table ext wing. Much cheaper than the rest and performs the best.
You might want to consider (if you haven’t done so already) to wax the table saw surface, when it’s not slippery enough we end up pushing harder which skews the wood a bit and causes the blade to bend and not cut properly and gets jammed
It’s been the case for me
I liked your project so much that I spent the last few days making one. Mine came out pretty good but not as good as yours. My biggest problem was keeping the dimensions the same (on the strips) after the second glue up. Your precision must be much better than mine. Thank you for the inspiration and instruction.
Cool video. Having equipment problems is very relatable. Successful completion of complex projects... not so much! 😫
Subscribed!!!
I've watched your video twice.... Hopefully get the courage to start on it sooner...
I have a powermatic my buddy has a saw stop as far as I concerned there both good
was jealous when I saw his tablesaw at first but my old craftsman would go through that in one pass.
Mine does now that I got a rip blade.
Very, very nice cutting board! You have the best beard on RUclips as well! Just found your channel and like it!
Awesome design, I’m definitely going to give it a try. Any chance you might post plans with dimensions? Sorry, I’m a newbie trying to wrap my head around it. Great presentation and sense of humor!
Beautiful
Thanks!
This is seriously awesome! Thank you for sharing.
What a great board and an excellent video presentation! Good job showing your process and sharing your tips along the way. Subscribed off the first video I watched...and I don't usually subscribe that quickly! Well done! :) PS - Dropping that board in the oil was such a great money shot! Stunning!
Thanks!
I managed to get a deal several years ago on a Powermatic 3 hp cabinet saw. I love it but then again it’s not a saw stop. But I can’t see where I can justify the cost of a new saw at my age and game. That was a beautiful build. I really enjoyed the video.
Adding a couple of inexpensive shop lights would do wonders for your videos. Using manual exposure settings would help too, as I think your automatic settings are picking up the white wall behind you, and leaving you way too dark. Also, speeding up the video during some of the longer steps (flattening, routing the edge, etc.) or just cutting from the start to the end of that process would help the pace of the vid, and shorten it overall.
The woodworking is great. Most of us struggle with tools that are the best we can afford, but not as nice as we would wish. You achieved a nice result. I'll keep watching!
I agree about the video tips, there's a lot of great info here but this video doesn't need to 34 minutes long, it could easily be 15, probably 10. The first 5 or 6 minutes could almost entirely be cut out. The router sled scene could be a good minute or 2 shorter, any milling that is not unique to this project (and there is some that was important) could be basically eliminated. A large amount of people will not bother to look at a video over 10 to 15 minutes unless it is very complicated from creator they know well. Again, this is really informative and I enjoyed it but i found myself fast forwarding a lot. This same video at 10 or 11 minutes would probably have 100K views already (at 27K as of this writing) I'd love to see how a re-edit of this would perform. Anyway, keep at it!
Funny your had the same issue I had. Every time I ripped a board, I would trip the breaker. I had an electrician friend help me run a 20 amp circuit for my saw and other tools.
Love your antique table saw. I also have and use old tools. That saw should be able to cut that Maple better than it does I would think. If your saw is 220v capable, convert it and make a dedicated plug. If you're not sure, take the motor off and into a local electric motor repair shop and they can tell you straight off. They can also rewire it for you.They may also have a motor laying around that can go 220v if yours won't. It will make a world of difference. It also sounds like your fence may not be perfectly square to the blade, might want to check that with a dial indicator. And lastly, get rid of that cheap blade. Im not saying go spend a paycheck on a forrest blade, but Tenyru is a great blade at half the cost. About $60 on Amazon for a 50 tooth combo and they make cuts like butter. I use the SL-25550C. I started using them on my job site table saw that was way under powered.
Anyway, love the board. can you post the dimensions of the blocks you made to make this? The audio is not the best and I could not hear them. Thanks
Cutting thick woods with a table saw stick a shim into the end of the cut. That should help out a lot.
You can use a circular saw ripping blade they are the same size arbor and have a thinner kerf
When you are cutting your 1/4" strips you might find it easier to cut joint the egde and cut one strip off. Then joint the saw cut off your wide piece and cut another strip. This will give you strips with one edge already flat and smooth and ready for the thickness planer. I foundthis easier than trying to joint a 1/4" thick piece.
Very nice..👍..greets from Germany Berlin
Danke!
nice!
thank you for sharing this build i am going to try this. what is the length of the `2 inch square pieces
Beautiful build. Also, I'm a vet tech of 18 years. And the shirt is right - you don't know when she'll be home.
Try starting the cut, then as the piece clears the back of the table, shut the saw down and put a wedge or a shim in the kerf to keep it open.
Great job! I'm new to this so it all seems way over my head. Can you supply dimensions like how thick your boards were to start, stuff like that? It was a little confusing to me. Do you have step by step instructions available that I could print out? Thank you for showing this build!
The exact tutorial I was looking for! - Fairly easy process but looks extremly impressive!
Great video and build My Friend! I just subbed you Brother👍
Thanks!
Forrest thin kerf blades cut hard maple like butter.
I picked up one of the Freud rip blades and it's working great. I wish I hadn't waited so long, haha.
Beautiful 👍
Thanks!
Brandon Hartman - Woodworking so could this be made without the sander/planer/thickness ing machine thingymajig? asi don’t have one. Thanks
@@michaellionart4841 If you're reeeeeally good with a hand plane maybe. If you don't get the pieces dead flat and square you'll end up with a bunch of gaps in the finished board.
Brandon Hartman - Woodworking hmmm so can I justify a planet machine . . . .
In my opinion, a planer (thicknesser for my overseas friends) is one of the essentials for a power tool workshop.
I like the European demonstrations because they shut the camera off during repetitive cuts or operations. You don’t watch Mundane movements over and over.