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Woodworking Layout Lines | Which Ones To Use And When

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  • Опубликовано: 16 авг 2024
  • Layout Lines. Rob Cosman talks about the different type of layout lines and marking tools and when to use which ones.
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Комментарии • 89

  • @RobCosmanWoodworking
    @RobCosmanWoodworking  Год назад +2

    If you want to see more of Robs favorite woodworking books check out this video: ruclips.net/video/U_32J60tPs8/видео.html

  • @theajthomas
    @theajthomas Год назад +18

    The most shocking part of this whole video is that you are 61. I never would have guessed. I would have gone late 40's - mid 50's.

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  Год назад +4

      I am ancient

    • @porterrasi
      @porterrasi Год назад +1

      I’m with you there. Mid 40’s tops.

    • @manuzach
      @manuzach Год назад

      Staying curious and devoted to a purpose is the secret 😉

  • @timdoyon1964
    @timdoyon1964 Год назад

    I gotta tell you Rob, I have never watched one of your videos without learning SOMETHING. Thank you for that. I enjoy how you teach too. On a side note: I’m 58, and I can’t believe you are 61! 😳 I never would’ve guessed… I assumed you were mid forties. ☮️

  • @TheRunereaper
    @TheRunereaper Год назад

    Well Rob, it's a bit rich, lecturing us mere mortals on how to mark out. From what I recall of your many videos you're the man who can hardly ever find a pencil! All joking apart, I invested in one of those bench pencil sharpeners you see in an architect's office. With the vast size of your workshop you'd probably need about 4 but such are the fruits of well-deserved success. Thanks again for enriching us all with the treasure of your knowledge.

  • @lukasoldani2472
    @lukasoldani2472 Год назад +1

    Well explained and well done Rob! Even easier with a tool from Switzerland! ;) Greetings from Switzerland. Lukas

  • @1deerndingo
    @1deerndingo Год назад +1

    I really like that you have identified why, where and how to include precise accuracy. It's so important.

  • @jimfromri
    @jimfromri Год назад +2

    Great video. A line is no good if you can’t see it. That’s why I think your comments on a red pen etc are so useful. Also, a very helpful demonstration of shooting to a knifed line.

  • @jeffreyhalverson2611
    @jeffreyhalverson2611 Год назад

    I owe you a thousand thanks, Rob! Hope to visit one day:)

  • @bigal3189
    @bigal3189 Год назад

    Thanks for sharing all of the wisdom!

  • @coreygrua3271
    @coreygrua3271 Год назад

    Very interesting and very helpful. Here’s a mind that refines the minuscule. When you make a mark you always wonder. Now we don’t need to.

  • @ianpearse4480
    @ianpearse4480 Год назад +1

    Nice one. Thank you.

  • @TWC6724
    @TWC6724 Год назад +1

    This was excellent information Rob. I have had a lot of these questions in the past and you addressed them all. Also, on another subject, you are one of the few that I know of that say you can put finish on a planed surface without sanding it afterwards Gosh, praise God! A lot of people say you have to give it some tooth for the finish to grab but I have always wondered what is the purpose of planing a great surface if I have to turn around and sand it!!!?

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  Год назад +1

      I never sand to lay down a finish. There is an argument to sand to add a stain, but I do not stain wood

  • @rockekoreis3160
    @rockekoreis3160 Год назад

    Thank you Rob! Love everything you teach...

  • @andrewbrown8148
    @andrewbrown8148 Год назад

    Great tips from the master~! I always enjoy hearing (and re-hearing) about these techniques. Thanks for sharing them, Rob~!

  • @alanmckeown6462
    @alanmckeown6462 Год назад

    Very good Rob

  • @williamshaffer2562
    @williamshaffer2562 Год назад

    Great tips Professor Cos. Never saw my uncle use a pencil. Only a marking gage or a marking knife. When I told him it was hard to see, he told me to get stronger glasses.

  • @randypowell4799
    @randypowell4799 Год назад

    good information .Thanks

  • @magicworldbyjorg
    @magicworldbyjorg Год назад +1

    ,a cool video keep up the great content.. Thank you…..

  • @jeffk7017
    @jeffk7017 Год назад

    Rob, Great video. I buy those Pilot gel pens in multipacks and I’ve never had much use for the red ones they always toss in. It never occurred to me to use them for marking. Great tip!

  • @kentboys5017
    @kentboys5017 Год назад

    Great way to explain when to mark with the various tools. Thanks for sharing your thoughts and experience. Take care.

  • @TheSMEAC
    @TheSMEAC Год назад +1

    I spent months trying to force myself to using a marking knife in nearly all circumstances (admittedly, often colored with a line of pencil/colored pencil/pen). I finally discovered I was adding more work and stress that didn’t really need to be. Rather the pen, pencil, knife and I suppose marker too all have strengths and weaknesses; it’s using them at the most appropriate time and place that matters most. As it pertains to regular pencils and mechanical pencils, I personally love the Pentel GraphGear for my apron and actual use on parts (only 0.7-0.9 on timber, the 0.3-0.5 is great for plans/notes/writing) since the whole head retracts in to the barrel and there’s no worry of bending the guide at the tip which renders a mechanical pencil useless. Another idea is to buy the plastic disposable mechanical pencils in 0.7 or 0.9 made for school kids who lose things constantly; they’ve got a plastic guide which will bounce long before it will bend and you haven’t lost but a few cents if you break or lose one or a bunch. As for wooden pencils, I took an old electric pencil sharpener from my study and keep it on my station where my reading glasses, pens/pencils, notepad sit behind me while standing at the bench. That makes sharpening it even easier than stropping a chisel, so there’s no reason not to sharpen and sharpen and sharpen to my heart’s content and that way I keep a consistent width when using on timber. Long gone are the days where a pencil sharpener cost $60-75 dollars and only swingline or bostich were the only gig in town. Now a days you can get battery powered ones at dollar stores, amazon, Office Depot, etc for just a few bucks. Plus, now you can buy the top of the line Bostich Quietsharp Heavy Duty electric sharpener for $26 bucks before discounts on Amazon. I’ve still not gotten to the point where I broken out the marker, but as my vision gets worse, I can see where it may be a good alternative to a flat carpenters pencil when breaking down stock, ordering/setting the orientation of glue ups/milling. I keep them sharpened with a pocket knife and only resort to lumber crayon or chalk when dealing with really knarly stuff or green wood.

    • @gbwildlifeuk8269
      @gbwildlifeuk8269 Год назад

      Phew! Whatever happened to the pencil behind the ear? You'd wonder how those making all that elaborate furniture all those years ago ever managed.

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  Год назад +1

      I know Luther likes his pentels and sharpens them with that little orbiter sander that looks like and old film canister

    • @TheSMEAC
      @TheSMEAC Год назад

      @@gbwildlifeuk8269 they used knife, grease pen, pencil, chalk/ink line, soot… there’s been relatively little true discovery in the last 100 years, only technological advancement.

  • @alexanderkarolis5141
    @alexanderkarolis5141 Год назад +1

    Thanks Rob, another great video with some really useful instruction. Looking forward to using my dovetail marking knife which is arriving next week. Cheers

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  Год назад +1

      let me know how you like the dovetail marking knife

    • @alexanderkarolis5141
      @alexanderkarolis5141 Год назад

      Had the dovetail saw for three days now. Cut 10 dovetails and been getting good results since the first attempt. Saw is fantastic, thanks Rob. Highly recommend to anyone looking for an excellent dovetail saw!

  • @n8sot
    @n8sot Год назад

    This was a great video Rob!!! Thanks!!!! 61?????? maybe 41 years old. If you are 61.....I need to start drinking some Canadian beers!!!!!! Wow!!!!

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  Год назад

      bring in the Moosehead!

    • @darrylbrook5968
      @darrylbrook5968 Год назад +1

      we can look great in the camera... but I draw a line when looking in the mirror.. I know I am 62 but the head still thinks it is 22... see how the next cycle goes.. keep well guys..

  • @dpmeyer4867
    @dpmeyer4867 Год назад

    thanks

  • @bradleytuckwell4881
    @bradleytuckwell4881 Год назад

    All great tips especially the red pen which I don’t use until now so thanks

  • @murphymmc
    @murphymmc Год назад

    For drawing lines I use my mechanical pencils left over from the days when I took a drafting class in college. I still use them for drafting small projects for construction though now they are mostly used at my woodworking bench. It's very easy and fast to keep the point sharper than a .5mm pencil with the "stick it in and swirl" sharpeners designed for them.

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  Год назад

      Luther does the same thing. Always has his drafting mechanical pencils and that orbiter sharpener with him

  • @fayz44awad
    @fayz44awad Год назад

    Thanks👌

  • @HWCism
    @HWCism Год назад

    Again, nice explanation, thanks

  • @Sadowsky46
    @Sadowsky46 Год назад

    Great topic!

  • @rogerdudra178
    @rogerdudra178 Год назад +1

    Greetings from the BIG SKY. I'm viewing with 72.89 year old eyes.

  • @jaywood8296
    @jaywood8296 Год назад

    Then there is the sumi tsubo. Precise, easy to see lines, even on dark wood, that stay but are readily removed, and brush for identifying marks.

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  Год назад

      I have never tried the Japaneese "chaiulk line" I dont even use a western chailj line. I like my pens, marking knives, and marking gauges

  • @alpaca6920
    @alpaca6920 Год назад

    Lucky to have a pair of 61 year old eyes. I have only one 65 year old eye on the right hand side and I'm a left hander. Always have to tilt over to see the opposite side.

  • @vince55sanders
    @vince55sanders Год назад

    right on

  • @J.A.Smith2397
    @J.A.Smith2397 Год назад

    Making knife changed my life as a guy that piddles with wood

  • @theeddorian
    @theeddorian Год назад

    Just from curiousity, my grandfather was trained as boatwright in Carleton Place, Ontario, back before WW I. His maxim regarding marking lines was to leave "half a line." Effectively, I think it's the same as leaving the whole line and cutting on the waste side. Have you ever encountered that saying? It certainly offers a practice target goal.

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  Год назад +1

      Yes. Thats the traditional way to cut to a dovetail line....its very hard to do

    • @darrylbrook5968
      @darrylbrook5968 Год назад

      great aged advice, if you can tell when you have half a line... knife, and marking gauge for me, others have their preferred processes... happy shavings

    • @theeddorian
      @theeddorian Год назад

      @@RobCosmanWoodworking I wondered. I was pretty young at the time (7 yo?), watching him build a chest. He was interesting to watch at work.

    • @theeddorian
      @theeddorian Год назад

      @@darrylbrook5968 I use a marking gauge or the sheep's-foot blade on a stockman pocket knife for marking. And happy shavings to you as well.

  • @sturobertson7850
    @sturobertson7850 Год назад

    Hi I was wondering where do you get the small marking saw from???

  • @MMWoodworking
    @MMWoodworking Год назад +1

    If someone is inclined to use a pencil, and I personally do, Zebra makes a really nice .5mm lead version. It's incredibly thin, and you get the best of the thin pen + erasability. Some of us make some marking mistakes... well, a lot of mistakes, so pencil is a little more forgiving so it doesn't look like a bloodbath on the piece while we try to correct layouts.

  • @emersonassis7154
    @emersonassis7154 Год назад

    Hi Rob...I always have a lot to learn at every video class...about marking gauge I have one like yours and i t works on hi leve...but about traditional one I never did a correct job using it (my fault of course) but I can see Paul Sellers using only that type and works so fine (no comparsion in our skills too)...it is not for me...about marking knife I have one made in England ...Swann Morton brand but didn't leave that quality deep line like yours dovetail marking knife ...yours works only with your brand saw?...my dovetail saw are japanese pull saws
    Thank you

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  Год назад +1

      we have three different sizes of saw tooth blades for my marking knife now. However I don't think any of them will work with your Japanese style saw

    • @darrylbrook5968
      @darrylbrook5968 Год назад

      @@RobCosmanWoodworking for sure, as a lot of the good pull saws, are as fine as 0.2mm. stick to your preferred method and don't try and do all if you are getting results ... but! if not then there are other alternatives... like others, i have used the GOOD pull saws, but my saw rack is as big as Rob's now through trial and ERROR... enjoy the shavings and the peace....

  • @user-dy4xh8rf6w
    @user-dy4xh8rf6w Год назад

    👍👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @lewisway6811
    @lewisway6811 Год назад

    👍👌

  • @timlist4173
    @timlist4173 Год назад

    RobCosman it looks as if you dropped an "o" on your title thumbnail.

  • @andrewbrimmer1797
    @andrewbrimmer1797 Год назад

    You young pup lol be 69 in Jan here lol