Stollentruhe

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  • Опубликовано: 28 дек 2024

Комментарии • 37

  • @urmelausdemeis3495
    @urmelausdemeis3495 3 года назад +7

    Unglaublich !
    Danke für dieses Filmdokument !
    Was für eine Handwerkskunst ..
    Es gebricht mir an passenden Worten meine Bewunderung für diesen Mann und meine Ehrerbietung für seine Fähigkeiten auszudrücken

  • @ChrisBrown-qg4xo
    @ChrisBrown-qg4xo 2 года назад +3

    I’m absolutely gobsmacked at the groove cutting tool used! That reversible(?) pick-like hook knife is intriguing and feels like a wonderful challenge to make!!

    • @talkin-ape
      @talkin-ape 10 месяцев назад

      google: Twybil, or morticing axe. They are still made too.

  • @JoachimEngelland
    @JoachimEngelland Год назад

    Vielen Dank für diese faszinierende Dokumentation. Am meisten beeindruckt druckt mich der übersichtliche Werkzeugsatz, der dem Meister genügt. Ich nehme mir vor, den Film wieder anzusehen, wenn ich mich beim Windowshopping bei Dictum, Veritas und Feinewerkzeuge ertappe!

  • @treffnix26
    @treffnix26 2 года назад +4

    Unglaublich,Hochachtung vor diesem Handwerker!!

  • @CleaveMountaineering
    @CleaveMountaineering 4 года назад +2

    Is this video running at faster than normal speed or did the workman just have a lot of coffee?
    Incredible skill and craftsmanship.
    Great to see the twybil in use as well.

  • @patrickbrett66
    @patrickbrett66 9 лет назад +3

    That was amazing, didn't understand a word of what was said and I didn't know what was being made until the very end of the film but cutting all those grooves by eye, the work of a true craftsman :D

    • @frischesholz1020
      @frischesholz1020  9 лет назад +1

      :-)
      I updated the description, thanks for watching.

    • @patrickbrett66
      @patrickbrett66 9 лет назад

      +frischesholz Thank you, hope to see more of this kind of work when you find it :D

  • @flx4813
    @flx4813 9 лет назад +5

    Wow!
    I'll bet this guy really knew how to sharpen steel!
    Imagine the hours put into that project, and what the craftsman would have to charge for that piece today to make a living.
    Shows the value of electricity, division of labor, and modern tools.
    We've come a long way in a short time.

    • @frischesholz1020
      @frischesholz1020  9 лет назад +1

      According to the narrator it took 6 days to build that chest.

    • @CheisYang
      @CheisYang 8 лет назад +6

      Its sad but todays prices ale low in my country (eastern Europe). Craftsman work is only highly-payed in western countries,where people making crafting as an art and pays more for the feeling of geting something hand-made. On the east, those are typicall workers and anybode here owns hand-maded furniture and this is nothing fancy - just simple and used daily things...

  • @Aimsmallmiss
    @Aimsmallmiss 11 месяцев назад

    Unbelievable it’s absolutely Amazing

  • @youngtoonfish6891
    @youngtoonfish6891 10 месяцев назад

    Manchmal liebe ich automatisch erzeugte Untertitel: „die rote Farbe wurde früher aus armen Kinder Aufguss hergestellt“ 😂
    Trotzdem beeindruckend zu sehen, wie man ohne maschinelle Hilfsmittel sowas herstellen konnte/kann. Das ist wirklich beeindruckend und erfordert viel Übung/Können.

  • @bustednuckles2
    @bustednuckles2 7 лет назад +9

    Absolutely incredible. You have to know all those tools were hand forged.
    The eye on that guy too!
    No measuring tools except a stick and a pencil,gouging those tongue and groove pieces by hand without any kind of jig or marks to go by, AFTER making the boards by hand.
    Then after all that back breaking work all day long, he goes in the house to listen to his wife and probably has a bowl of beet soup and half a loaf of rye bread, maybe tamps down a bowl of tobacco and enjoys a smoke before falling down and going to sleep so that he can wake up before the chickens to take care of all the chores before starting in again.
    I would bet money that someone somewhere still has that chest though.

    • @robroy5729
      @robroy5729 6 лет назад +4

      Bad ass isnt it. Exactly how things should still be made today. I would sooner give my money to this man instead of the big company producing junk.

  • @marksmith9295
    @marksmith9295 9 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing skills and with a wife that can beat on a froe and wedge like that I bet he was a good listener too.

  • @waldtricki
    @waldtricki 9 лет назад +2

    Talk about creative work-holding devices! This video makes me want to hew some wood. Thank you for this highly educational video.

  • @Aimsmallmiss
    @Aimsmallmiss 11 месяцев назад

    This is the definition of they found a way

  • @tangle70
    @tangle70 9 лет назад +4

    What is the T shaped tool he uses to cut the grooves with?

    • @frischesholz1020
      @frischesholz1020  9 лет назад +4

      +Tom Angle; This tool seems to be similar to a twybill with a U - shaped end for cutting the groove.
      As soon as I know more I will have a update on my blog.

    • @JacobChancery
      @JacobChancery 5 лет назад +3

      acsoltlada.hu/images/04keszitesL/GyTkonyv_SZUSZEKszerszamok_.jpg

  • @wormpie4932
    @wormpie4932 4 года назад

    Amazing.

  • @franmo662
    @franmo662 Месяц назад

    stRollentruhe oder stollentruhe?

  • @rickschuman2926
    @rickschuman2926 3 года назад +2

    For those of you who anxiously await the latest tool catalog so you can find something to inspire you to wood working greatness.

  • @franmo662
    @franmo662 Месяц назад

    der hammer (auch der hammer das er für finition, ein normales hammer nutz, ich hatte erst gedacht nur sein Frau konnte richtig schlagen )

  • @tidalwavestudio
    @tidalwavestudio 4 года назад

    amazing :)

  • @karlnewman2829
    @karlnewman2829 4 года назад

    I would like to know what he's saying... the Narrator.

  • @fouramhq
    @fouramhq 8 лет назад

    What kind of cabinet was the finished piece?

    • @frischesholz1020
      @frischesholz1020  8 лет назад

      it was a chest.
      search for Tamás Gyenes. He´s making chests like this.

  • @baa-austria
    @baa-austria 8 лет назад

    Servus - sag - gibt es eine genauere Beschreibung von diesem "Nuthobel/Nuteisen" Wir würden dieses Werkzeug gern nachschmieden. Ausserdem interessiert uns, wie alt diese Techniken der Truhenherstellung sind... viele liebe Grüße, Gerhard

    • @frischesholz1020
      @frischesholz1020  8 лет назад

      +Gerhard Rehak
      Moin Gerhard,
      in diesem Blog habe ich etwas dazu geschrieben:
      frischesholz.wordpress.com/2015/12/13/stollentruhen-aus-ungarn/
      Ansonsten wüsste ich aktuell nur die Möglichkeit bei Tilman Greiner nach zu fragen. Er baut selber Truhen nach dieser Vorgehensweise.
      Grüsse

  • @stefanbraun5977
    @stefanbraun5977 5 лет назад

    Repeckt keiner kann sowas heute ,die Werkzeuge gibt es auch nicht mehr

  • @claud108
    @claud108 6 лет назад

    What is the T shaped tool he uses to cut the grooves with?

    • @OABrown
      @OABrown 4 года назад

      a Twybil www.ashleyilestoolstore.co.uk/green-woodworking/twybil

    • @talkin-ape
      @talkin-ape 10 месяцев назад

      a Twybil

    • @claud108
      @claud108 10 месяцев назад

      @@talkin-ape Thanks!