Garage Workshop [AI HD] | S12 E1 & 2

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 387

  • @kuehnel16
    @kuehnel16 Год назад +47

    The man himself. I can remember watching The New Yankee Workshop every Saturday with Good ole Dad 😊

    • @mrwest5552
      @mrwest5552 7 месяцев назад

      @kuehnel16 - ah, the therapeutic and healing woodworking videos of Norm Abram's.

  • @JD-lx3zq
    @JD-lx3zq Год назад +46

    I used to love the trifecta when i was a kid, watching this old house, new yankee workshop, and hometime

    • @toddhershberger
      @toddhershberger 9 месяцев назад +2

      Me too 😀

    • @chris_dahlen
      @chris_dahlen 8 месяцев назад +2

      That was great tv back then.

    • @Tonyrd3000
      @Tonyrd3000 3 месяца назад

      I remember when the Air Force started combining engineering career fields in the 90s (carpenters, metal workers, painters as one career field; interior electric and power linemen as one; etc) some of the fields had to watch Hometime videos as part of their training.

    • @PUBHEAD1
      @PUBHEAD1 2 месяца назад

      Yep, was a weekend tradition for me

  • @derrickwalker538
    @derrickwalker538 10 месяцев назад +13

    I watched him as a kid and still am watching him!!

  • @jameswortner6135
    @jameswortner6135 Год назад +15

    Ahhhhhhh the old Delta stationary and hand Porter Cable power tools circa late 1990s/early 2000s BEFORE these brands were sold out. NOTHING was better than green/grey and gray back then. I bought most of my powered woodworking shop based on Norm's tool selections at the time. ALL of my 1990s power tools are still working and used in 2023. My grandfather always said buy the best tool you can and take care of it - it will last a life time. These older Delta and Porter Cable tools are a testimony to quality made. Unfortunately, not any more after these brands were bought out. Thanks Norm and crew for the memories and putting these videos on RUclips for us to remember and a new generation to learn from and enjoy!

  • @kieranleopold9115
    @kieranleopold9115 Год назад +46

    Can we talk for a minute about how excellent the camera work was on this show? Targeted close shots on exactly what you need to see. Everything in focus. Incredibly well done work.

    • @emo65170.
      @emo65170. 10 месяцев назад +2

      Love the no nonsense straightforward way he describes each step.

    • @TracyJammeh
      @TracyJammeh 8 месяцев назад

      Are you aware this show first aired as a network tv show, not as a RUclips channel? Norm had 2 network home improvement shows long before HGTV 😊

    • @ccoder4953
      @ccoder4953 2 месяца назад

      There's some RUclipsrs who do a great job also. Like Frank Howarth. His camera work and editing are amazing - no idea how he doesn't have a TV show. Matthias Wandel's also great. Not nearly as fancy as Frank, but reminds me a bit of Norm - alot of the same frugality (probably more, actually) and he even sells measured drawings!

  • @costarich8029
    @costarich8029 Год назад +244

    Many thanks for remastering these episodes and providing on RUclips. Norm had a huge impact on my enjoyment of woodworking as a hobby.

    • @deepooluepressleetree3337
      @deepooluepressleetree3337 Год назад

      I was ripping rough sawn nail ridden Barn lumber about 5 years ago on a 1960s radial arm saw when I hit a nail without wearing safety glasses. Heard a big thunk, saw a particle of silver jettison past my left eye. I've had this happened several times most of the time with safety glasses. Don't f*** around wear nice safety goggles not just glasses dumbass

    • @michaeldrennan2828
      @michaeldrennan2828 Год назад +12

      I wish I had appreciated watching NYW as a kid with my dad...Norm is the best...

    • @MinifigNewsguy
      @MinifigNewsguy Год назад

      @Phillip Banes I like ENG/EFP videography myself. So the picture is restricted to 480, so what?! They had to move with the times to videotape.

    • @davemarleymusic9153
      @davemarleymusic9153 Год назад

      ​@@michaeldrennan2828 i used to as well. Great memory of my childhood. The harmonica in the intro brought me back to that time too

    • @ericcaires6715
      @ericcaires6715 Год назад

      @Phillip Banes you do know this show was public television right of course it was cheap production it public television duh and why you even watching so if you're just going to run your mouth about the ratio of the picture and sound and by the way they show was filmed on video same with this Old House they even used to sell the series on video tapes any more nonsense is going to come out your mouth cuz it seems like your mouth is like my ass nothing good ever comes out of it

  • @raymondjackson6069
    @raymondjackson6069 Год назад +51

    Norm would fill my Saturday mornings for what seems like decades. Can't say I reached his craftsmanship, but he inspires me to give any project my best, and to go that extra step to perfection. Thanks Norm, love you!

  • @NLind
    @NLind Год назад +6

    This show, TOH, ATOH and Hometime were how I spent my Saturday afternoons for years.

  • @Wolfeboy212
    @Wolfeboy212 Год назад +3

    I grew up.with my dad watching NYW on PBS every weekend, and i came to love New England icon Nahm Abram. He is to woodworking what Julia Child is to food, truly.

  • @MintStiles
    @MintStiles Год назад +8

    This man made me fall in love with woodworking. He is the patron saint of woodworking!!!

  • @kuehnel16
    @kuehnel16 Год назад +7

    If Norm starts a new show im watching.

  • @valuedhumanoid6574
    @valuedhumanoid6574 Год назад +6

    This guy was my hero. His show came on every Sunday morning and it was must watch TV. Before the internet, we were all slaves to the TV schedule. He inspired me to attempt some great projects.

    • @funtyes1970
      @funtyes1970 Год назад

      i remember days no internet sometimes i wish there was internet i think it would be better for kids so they would go outside to play instead staying inside house , and i think no internet world would be a better place , i think 70's-80's and early 90's was best decades ever , there weren't many robot machines taking people jobs like how it is now

    • @valuedhumanoid6574
      @valuedhumanoid6574 Год назад

      @@funtyes1970 Yeah, I kind of agree with that. I don't want to be that "it was better in my day" guy, but sometimes I see how the world operates and it really upsets me. My boys are both internet junkies. I keep trying to tell them that the world is not in that phone. Leave it and go take a hike. Ride a bike. But a snowball in hell has a better chance than that happening! lol

  • @RedRoyce
    @RedRoyce Год назад +4

    I miss this show. Norm was a craftsman and a gentle soul. He would make it seem like anyone could do it and really you can if you try and have some tools. Today we have so many more new things to make jobs easier. Thanks for letting these go up on RUclips. Takes us back to a better time then the crazy world of today.

  • @frankhenderson3005
    @frankhenderson3005 Год назад +8

    Love this! The New Yankee workshop, This Old House, and Bob Ross The Joy of Painting. That was my Saturday back in the day. Great!!!!

  • @DergEnterprises
    @DergEnterprises Год назад +87

    About 20 yrs ago, I once didn't use safety glasses, used a circular saw, and a splinter ended up scratching the cornea of my eye. I was basically bed ridden for 3 days, then I healed up completely. I should've listened to Norm.

    • @philshock3805
      @philshock3805 Год назад +5

      Did the same thing as a kid. Wasn't using any tools - just playing on the jungle gym at school and got some of the sawdust that covered the ground in my eye. A scratched cornea is some pure misery! (Imagine something in your eye that doesn't leave for a few days.) Sadly, Norm wasn't around then to tell me to stop rubbing my eyes. lol

    • @davidt8438
      @davidt8438 Год назад +9

      Yes sir, probably the best advice ever given in the history of TV has been Norm’s advise and cautionary rule of safety glasses. I’ll bet he’s saved thousands of people from going blind through the years. God bless Norm for this.

    • @jinto_reedwine
      @jinto_reedwine Год назад +2

      Been there myself with the scratched cornea, Norm definitely was right!

    • @funtyes1970
      @funtyes1970 Год назад

      i used a air cut off wheel i got a some metal in one eye i have to go to eye doctor have it remove, i was dumb and young still didn't learn i did it 3 more times after that and finely start wearing safety glasses 👓

    • @spewmister
      @spewmister Год назад +2

      @@funtyes1970 the safety squint wasn’t done properly lol

  • @joec8079
    @joec8079 13 дней назад

    Thank God for PBS, I've learned so much from their programs over the years.

  • @Scrapla1
    @Scrapla1 Год назад +4

    Grew up watching this with my dad.

  • @MoosesWorkshop
    @MoosesWorkshop Год назад +40

    The two most asked about episodes ever! I still have my VHS version recorded off of Iowa PBS from the first airing!
    Norm is awesome!

  • @reaper060670
    @reaper060670 Год назад +19

    If there is any chance that Norm is reading these comments then I would like to take this opportunity to say thanks for many years of great workmanship and helpful advice when it comes to his craft.
    Norm u are a legend in this game. U are an inspiration to so many of us out here trying to be better woodworkers.
    U have always had this open and honest energy that shone through our TV screens and I'm very thankful that I found these videos on the medium of RUclips. U inspire my attempts at becoming a better woodworker my friend. If u ever come to Ireland I would wish u a Cead Mile Failte.. That means a thousand Welcomes..I think that is what it means anyways. It's been a long time since I was in school so my Irish language is very rusty.. I was reading that u retired from this game a year or so ago. Happy retirement old friend and take care of yourself Norm. U will never be forgotten as long as young ppl can find these videos and also find their love for woodworking/Carpentry..
    Thanks for posting these sets of videos. They mean so much to so many of us out here..

    • @newyankeeworkshop
      @newyankeeworkshop  Год назад +13

      We do gather comments like these and show them to Norm when he stops by. Glad you enjoy the show!

    • @chrisunderhill8853
      @chrisunderhill8853 Год назад +2

      i 100% agree. As a young man, I learned so much from norm. To this day I use a ton of the tips and tricks that norm has passed on so priceless. thanks for so many years of being a genuine guy and some one that just over all cares, it so hard to find the kind of soul any more. :)

  • @jobeta22
    @jobeta22 Год назад +6

    Thanks again for bringing back these shows. I have an admiration for craftsmen like Norm and Tom Silva. And these shows are a time capsule on how the woodworking tools and procedures have evolved from the first season thru the last. Keep up the great work and please, keep bringing these wonderful shows.

  • @hippiehillape
    @hippiehillape Год назад +2

    Every weekend as a kid, breakfast, this old house, and new Yankee workshop

  • @howardgelles9812
    @howardgelles9812 Месяц назад

    I miss the show ! Watched the show all through the eighties. Norm was my teacher and have enjoyed building projects for decades. Thanks Norm.

  • @krmould
    @krmould Год назад +20

    I must have missed these episodes when they came out. What an awesome opportunity to get a brand new episode (to me!). Thanks Norm and the whole team at New Yankee Workshop for such great ideas, advice, and inspiration. Episodes like this are just as relevant and useful today as they were when they were first filmed.

  • @dwarden3
    @dwarden3 Год назад +2

    The days before all the safety crap, except glasses of course. Thanks Norm!

  • @debandmike3380
    @debandmike3380 Год назад +3

    it's as if he's still young and here teaching today. The original inspiration of the home work shop. some interesting things to note, no wearing a mask no dust collection. reminds me of when all parents used to smoke in the 50s and 60s because they didnt know any better. fortunately most people are taking more seriously their health in their workshops today

  • @PeopleAlreadyDidThis
    @PeopleAlreadyDidThis 7 месяцев назад +2

    I’d hate to be one of the fatalists who have appeared in numbers in this particular comment section. Too elaborate, too expensive, too beige, time better spent riding a bike, “error” this and “error” that, outdated safety practices, my garage isn’t that big, wood costs too much, I don’t have those tools, it’s all unnecessary…on and on go the complainers.
    Did it occur to you that the people who made this series 20-30 years ago weren’t aiming to please future RUclips viewers? Lots of people didn’t have NYW’s means back then either, but they didn’t whine about it. The show was aspirational, inspirational. It was about what you could do if you tried. People saved over time to buy tools and build facilities. Even NYW started out without all the big machines. Don’t think it was easier for people to drop a few thousand bucks on tools in 1990 than it is today.
    So much bitterness out there.

  • @johnvrabec9747
    @johnvrabec9747 Год назад +3

    Nice to watch these again! Norm was the reason I purchased Porter Cable tools, back when they were the gold standard of woodworking. I still use some of his techniques and ideas. My garage shop is only half of a typical 2 car garage, and after I'm done with a project, it looks like a tornado went through lol I have a table saw, a small router table, miter saw, chisel and hand plane sharpening station, drill press station, and woodworking vises. Plus, my air compressor, nailer, and assorted drills, sanders and jig saw. Plus, A portable work/assembly table. I learned woodworking in junior high and TNYW led me to better skills and ideas. Thanks Norm, you are the best!

  • @ianbertenshaw4350
    @ianbertenshaw4350 Год назад +1

    Jeez that bought back some great memories ! I used to love that show along with this old house .

  • @SeventeenSeventySix
    @SeventeenSeventySix 11 месяцев назад +2

    I'm not a woodworker, but I always watched Norm.

  • @peter2814
    @peter2814 Год назад +1

    Watched Norm religiously many years back, but haven’t watched him in a few years now, he’s still the genius he always was and churns out impeccable work with the consummate ease of the master professional craftsman. What a joy to watch. More power than your elbow, Norm. Those who cannot emulate you salute you!

  • @kenmandelin7812
    @kenmandelin7812 4 месяца назад

    I’ve built my wood shop loosely based on the new yankee shop. Norm, you have been the inspiration for all of my woodworking. Youve taught me to be patient and methodical. Sir I thank you.

  • @Rubbernecker
    @Rubbernecker Год назад +14

    What memories watching this!! I'm glad I built these cabinets back when these episodes first came out! Couldn't afford it today, in my area, a sheet of 3/4" MDO is $175!!!

    • @barcodenosebleed5485
      @barcodenosebleed5485 Год назад +2

      Was sitting here wondering what a sheet of MDO went for back when this first aired. I'm only 36, but it seems like a DIY project of this magnitude would have been perfectly accessible to someone in the lower middle class back then. Can't imagine that being the case today.

  • @fidgetshouse
    @fidgetshouse Год назад +3

    Always listen to Norm! Thank you for making these episodes available again.

  • @davidbryanwoodworksandmore
    @davidbryanwoodworksandmore Год назад +5

    Norm taught me so much as I was learning the trade. I’ve got all these videos but it’s nice to see these in RUclips. I really love reading the comments. Many of us share the same memories of the weekend waiting and hoping pbs wouldn’t do a telethon all weekend and disrupt the episode of tnyw.

  • @edd2771
    @edd2771 Год назад +34

    Norm Abram is the Bob Ross of woodworking.

    • @debandmike3380
      @debandmike3380 Год назад +9

      You mean Bob Ross is the Norm Abram of painting

    • @edd2771
      @edd2771 Год назад

      @@debandmike3380 yes I considered working it that way, but I do think Bob was before NYWS

    • @thejunkman
      @thejunkman Год назад +5

      Don't forget Roy Underhill. Honestly the things that guy makes/made with no electric tools is amazing.

    • @edd2771
      @edd2771 Год назад +2

      @@thejunkman yep he was there at the beginning. Very talented, but I don’t put him in the Bob and Norm category of a calming/zen-like presentation. His were more like breathless sprints to make sure he got the project done before time ran out. If I recall he did those shoes in one unedited take, and the anxiety was palpable.

    • @thejunkman
      @thejunkman Год назад +2

      @@edd2771 That is a good way of describing his style. I always wondered why they did such minimal editing in those two shows (Bob and Woodwrights) I know the budgets were low, but TV production was pretty mature by this time. Like Mr Rodgers was pretty low budget but it was highly edited obviously.

  • @IndianaGuy100
    @IndianaGuy100 Год назад +2

    I just love being able to relive my childhood watching NYW episodes and also still learning from Norm.

  • @yelworb
    @yelworb Год назад +2

    Thanks for posting all my favorites, I love seeing all these video's again

  • @flashpiratewoodbutcher8295
    @flashpiratewoodbutcher8295 Год назад +3

    thank you !!!!!!!!!!!! thought id lost norm forever , norms quite literally the reason im a carpenter

  • @mntroket11
    @mntroket11 Год назад +42

    This is by far the best channel I've seen on RUclips in a while. Thanks for uploading all these episodes. It's incredible to see what Norm does with brad nails, glue and biscuits; not a single domino in sight!

  • @danf4616
    @danf4616 Год назад +2

    Amazing how Norm could knock these projects out in a couple days, and probably all the while doing personal appearance things, filming This Old House, etc! Thanks Norm and Russell for bringing these classic shows back! 👍👍

    • @newyankeeworkshop
      @newyankeeworkshop  Год назад +2

      Norm would film part one on Monday, film TOH on Tuesday, then finish NYW on Wednesday. Of course, this project was two episodes so it took him four days :)

  • @hdjg1
    @hdjg1 Год назад +1

    Good old Norm! As rough as they come but a heart of gold. Site work at it's finest.

    • @wrstew1272
      @wrstew1272 Год назад

      Rough? I believe that Norm set the standards for home improvement long before it was trendy. His years of personal experience compressed into- was it around 24 minute episodes?- taught thousands if not hundreds of thousands of wannabe wood butchers how to keep their fingers intact. Rough? Na, the shirt doesn’t make the craftsmanship, it’s just everyday wear for some of us.

  • @carkey351
    @carkey351 Год назад +1

    love this episode. some of us don't have the money to make a workshop in today's economy, and this just highlights how a fella or fellette can build their own space to work. i've learned so much watching this old house and the new yankee workshop.

  • @jefferykeeper9034
    @jefferykeeper9034 Год назад +1

    I sure do miss this show!!!

  • @DylansPen
    @DylansPen Год назад +4

    I watched this show every week. He was big on using biscuits and he did some incredible work.

  • @davidemmerich9058
    @davidemmerich9058 3 месяца назад

    Is this as effortless and intuitive as he makes it look? jeeeeeeezzzz!

  • @tclynn10
    @tclynn10 Год назад +10

    I learned so much from Norm back in the 80's and 90's He as my high school shop teacher (Jack Kendall) made me the woodworker I am today. Thank you Mr Abram and good luck in your retirement!

  • @TimmyTechTV
    @TimmyTechTV Год назад +7

    This was my favorite episode out of all of them. I had it recorded on TiVo for years and watched it all the time when I needed shop motivation.

  • @alannorthcarolina1776
    @alannorthcarolina1776 Год назад +2

    Full of many Saturday mornings. Back when it wasn’t political, I watched gobs of pbs as a kid. Learned tons!

  • @kuehnel16
    @kuehnel16 Год назад +2

    I miss Norm and the New Yankee. I watched a recent interview that hes talks about building a boat 🚢 . I'll watch.

  • @ThomasSmith-fz6wq
    @ThomasSmith-fz6wq Год назад +7

    Finally after over 30 years I am about to build my first garage work shop! Thanks for the inspiration Norm!

  • @jackbriscoe1504
    @jackbriscoe1504 Год назад +6

    I built this setup in my garage several years ago and its been great.

  • @rorromorro3839
    @rorromorro3839 Год назад +1

    I grew up watching Norm working his amazing master carpenter skills. Loved how everything always fell into place perfectly. Amazing and impressive indeed.

  • @w96725
    @w96725 Год назад +2

    What a great workshop. I sure enjoyed watching Norm build this fine shop.

  • @onetakeadventureswithjoeld4679
    @onetakeadventureswithjoeld4679 Год назад +1

    No one is better than Norm ! Fan for many years! Joel in Florida

  • @colleenscottcarmello5103
    @colleenscottcarmello5103 Год назад +2

    ** Norm,, yes yes yes.. I am so happy to find this video.. I also have put my tools on rolling tables due to space limitations. My biggest challenge is storing wood I have collected over time or left over from a project. I walked through home improvement stores to find ways to copy how they store wood, and thinking how to scale it down to home diy type of storage. And also, I really enjoyed you all these years. You are the reason I got excited about building things. There is a fire inside me that just wants to create thngs. yay! So On to watching the video now.. So Excited, thank you for sharing. =D

  • @alexfrederick9019
    @alexfrederick9019 Год назад +1

    Loved watching TNYW back in the day. Awesome to see it put online.

  • @kuehnel16
    @kuehnel16 Год назад +1

    My all time favorite show. Thanks Norm 🫵😎☝️

  • @philwilliams5779
    @philwilliams5779 Год назад +2

    My hero, in action. So daggum awesome.

  • @steenfraosterbro3268
    @steenfraosterbro3268 Год назад

    Nice walk down memory lane. Much has happened since, especially when regards to safety and dust collection.

  • @apowell389
    @apowell389 Год назад +1

    The OG...Norm is the standard we all strive to live up to. I fall severely short of his mastery, but every carpenter I watch is measured by his skill.

  • @Flyforawhiteguy1982
    @Flyforawhiteguy1982 Год назад

    Grew up watching Norm and many other shows like this. Kids today dont have this on tv at grandmas house no more. They will never know how much these shows mean.

  • @lizzapaolia959
    @lizzapaolia959 Год назад

    I can only wish my husband or I could build anything like you do. We're limited in our abilities, simple to medium.....
    Your a very gifted craftsman. God bless 🙏

  • @Johnbro8
    @Johnbro8 Год назад +1

    Never knew this episode existed, thanks for sharing. Always loved the New Yankee Workshop, I still have Norms signed photo in my workshop, giving me inspiration. Pity I didn’t see this episode before making my workshop in my garage. Best wishes to Norm if he ever sees this.👍👍

  • @iancrossley6637
    @iancrossley6637 Год назад +2

    I set up my workshop over thirty years ago and wish I had incorporated some of the designs he shows in these episodes. For you younger guys out there take his advice. You won't regret it.

  • @elsdp-4560
    @elsdp-4560 Год назад +1

    Thank you for sharing.👍

  • @mjay4700
    @mjay4700 Год назад

    I remember watching these episodes as a kid, being about 10-11 years old and getting really enthused with woodworking and crafting things. These episodes helped me and inspired me to make a workbench of my own design and I happily used that for years.
    Never could find, or afford, that MDO plywood. Not many home centers carried it at the time. You had to find a wood specialist shop locally and pay I believe $40-60 a sheet back in those days, when regular plywood was maybe $15-20 a sheet? I remember Marine Plywood was about $40/sheet too. Those were the days!

  • @arthurmiller8336
    @arthurmiller8336 Год назад +1

    I remember watching you tv years ago you are so do awesome a great woodworker I hope someday I can be as good as you Norm

  • @rootman28
    @rootman28 Год назад +2

    Made this one and it has served me well. Even moved it to three different houses.

  • @alswoodworkingbits6082
    @alswoodworkingbits6082 Год назад +4

    This is definitely one of my favourite NYW projects so it's nice to see it receive the upscale treatment.

  • @charlesthompson6180
    @charlesthompson6180 Год назад

    i wish this show was still on tv. i liked to watch it when it was on👍

  • @LivingWaterEternal
    @LivingWaterEternal Год назад

    A true craftsman that understands wood craftsmanship and always builds with perfection. Thank you for teaching me so much over the years. Your show is always so enjoyable.

  • @woodfather
    @woodfather Год назад +21

    Absolutely love these AI enhanced episodes, amazing to watch with such clarity 👍

  • @whatmakesyourday
    @whatmakesyourday Год назад +1

    Perfect.
    Bought a house with a tiny shop. This helps so much and gives me so many ideas.

  • @MARKLOCKWOOD2012
    @MARKLOCKWOOD2012 Год назад +6

    I still think now even retired Norm could still be doing projects improving on older stuff still teaching. and still playing in the saw dust.

  • @truckerdaddy-akajohninqueb4793
    @truckerdaddy-akajohninqueb4793 Год назад +1

    I always liked the editing process. You can appreciate how much voice-over there is not.

  • @stuartkorte1642
    @stuartkorte1642 Год назад +1

    Very nice. I like the flip up with integrated router base.

  • @stevehogg
    @stevehogg Год назад

    Very enjoyable watching Norm work.

  • @cityhomestead40
    @cityhomestead40 Год назад +2

    The New Yankee Workshop was 1 of my favorite shows as a kid!! How the heck did I get unsubscribed?? Glad to be back YT is screwy sometimes??? Greetings Friends From Paducah, Kentucky🙂🙃🙂💯💥🤙👍👍✌

  • @131dyana
    @131dyana Год назад +1

    Thank you very much.

  • @Homebrew58
    @Homebrew58 Год назад +3

    I used some of the ideas and methods to build my garage shop many years ago. The counter top and cabinets are still in use even though health issues forced me to stop woodworking and I've since sold all my tools.

  • @sed6
    @sed6 Год назад +1

    It was a real treat today to find Norm in my suggested playlist!

  • @tbc210
    @tbc210 Год назад

    Good old Norm. He’s the best.

  • @stephenbrady9903
    @stephenbrady9903 7 месяцев назад

    Norm is a home improvement God. His saw is cleaner than my kitchen stove, and that workshop looks better than my living room!

  • @SaldosInc
    @SaldosInc Год назад +1

    Always glad to see you teaching us something new. Thanks

  • @hugolafhugolaf
    @hugolafhugolaf Год назад

    Even my dad, who could barely use a hammer, watched this show with me (I was around 10 years old when we started watching it in the 80s). It was that good, for anyone. PBS in the 80s was on another level.

  • @dondwyer3679
    @dondwyer3679 Год назад +2

    I always wanted to see the next episode of New Yankee Workshop. Norm is a master craftsman and I aspired (and failed to some extent) to be able to build and use the techniques that Norm used and taught. Always fun to watch. Oh, and the tools that he would introduce...wow, couldn't wait to see and envy these. Was a great show.

  • @Myrddraalfade
    @Myrddraalfade Год назад

    My Mum and I avidly watched this on Cable TV when it was first released over here in England. Along with This Old House, & Holmes on Homes.

  • @jimholmes2555
    @jimholmes2555 Год назад +1

    NYW was a great show. I loved every episode.

  • @pmdinaz
    @pmdinaz Год назад +1

    Hard to believe it's been over 20 years since I watched this. I believe I watched it on PBS (lot's of stuff happens in 20+ years haha)

  • @patrickwhelan5703
    @patrickwhelan5703 Год назад +1

    I used to watch "This Old House" and Bob Villa......I like Norm better as he is a real carpenter. I loved the show and to this day use Norm's techniques.. Great Show.

  • @albertlamar5938
    @albertlamar5938 Месяц назад +2

    Saturday mornings as a child, I watched these instead of cartoons.

  • @robertkerby2581
    @robertkerby2581 Год назад +1

    I really enjoyed watching this episode, again..I loved your genious ideas, especially the upper and lower shop cabinets with drawers and pull-outs!
    Well done, Norm!

  • @Lumber_Jack
    @Lumber_Jack Год назад +1

    This episode is gold for anyone looking to setup a shop, and the production quality of these old shows really raises the bar for RUclips. I am so glad to see you guys on RUclips after many years of watching on TV. I owe so much of my ability to watching Norm.
    I'll add one suggestion -- when I build work benches, the top is a lamination. I start with a layer of 3/4" MDF (the heavy dense brown stuff) then glue/screw down 3/4" plywood with a finished side up. Due to its weight and density, the MDF will make the top very beefy and solid, and also make it quiet when you're working away.For even more beef, use two layers of MDF on the bottom. It will feel like a butcher block top when you're done.
    Like Norm, I use 1/4" masonite as the top layer, not fastened down, to serve as a sacrificial work surface. You can beat it up pretty good for a few years, flip it once to start with a fresh new side, then replace as needed.

  • @davidbowles4457
    @davidbowles4457 Год назад

    Glad to see you sharing your knowledge again
    Watch older shows. Because of you I was able to make all my interior trim for my home when we remodeled the house 18 years ago

  • @TheBourneBlogger
    @TheBourneBlogger 7 месяцев назад

    He's such a skilled cabinet maker.

  • @davemanley8700
    @davemanley8700 Год назад

    I have built several of his projects and enjoyed every one of them and still have them, what an inspiration I love this guy!

  • @christopherbutler-mh2kk
    @christopherbutler-mh2kk Год назад +1

    Thanks for posting

  • @Mr0001jack
    @Mr0001jack Год назад +1

    Fantastic - warmed my heart to watch this 😊 Amazing how tools and hardware have changed from those days: track saws, PPE, torx head screws, drawer slides - but they haven’t been able to improve on dado stacks and European hinges 🤪 Thanks for making these video’s available - I’ll be watching more 😊

    • @barcodenosebleed5485
      @barcodenosebleed5485 Год назад

      Actually I just replaced my dado stack with a new proton flux wheel. Uses microwaves to burn a nice, smooth rabbet. It was $12,000, but that's understandable considering the liquid CO2 cooler that keeps the wood from lighting on fire.

  • @JustAnotherDayToday
    @JustAnotherDayToday Год назад +2

    The Bob Ross of wood working.

  • @djsi38t
    @djsi38t Год назад

    I remember the ads on WGBH Boston for the Brand new show...This old House!..I was a kid watching 321 contact and Dr who and was interested.I watched all the first season and went on to Building trades vocational school and then did 30 years in the manufactured home business....all because of Norm Abram and Bob Vila..