"Your children won't starve. That's a win..." and "Go make a thing it'll be great." Now those are words to live by. Thanks Rex. I really enjoy watching you do your thing on here....
Rex, I've been lurking this channel a bit and I have to say; As a fellow woodworker and as a caprenter with 20 years experience, I think this channel is GOLDEN for amateurs and professionals alike. Two thumbs up!
I just like this guy! "Go make something, it'll be great!" is such a great sentiment to end the video on, especially on a video that's basically "let's bang out something really simple really quick". It serves to remind people that what makes the thing great is the fact that they built it, not that it's flawless or that the piece is extremely complicated or requires extreme skill or tools.
Japan was trading with Europe since 1609, thanks to the efforts of William Adams who got the Dutch extensive trading rights and set up a Dutch East India Company trading outpost at Hirado. The company dealt mostly in Asian goods such as spices, textiles, porcelain, and silk, but also exported pretty much everything else, including tools and weapons. You can thank this guy for starting the "Asia is exotic!" meme that is so prevalent in the west these days. SO yeah, Europe and the US did in fact have access to Japanese stuff in "the olden times". It would have been entirly possible for a woodworker on the East Coast of the US to have a Japanese style saw, though likely very unusual. HOWEAVER, you can't tell me that some smith in Europe wasn't like "Hey, my clients really like them expensive Asian saws. I recon I can make them myself and sell them for way less than the Dutch."
Abraham was a ships carpenter, before he retired to wood working. He traveled around the world. Spent some time on shore leave. Knew a good thing when he saw it. Brought a few home, handle less. Folks in the US, misunderstood & mounted the handles on the wrong end.
I think this is one of your better videos as far as content, but then I think all your how-to videos have been great. Thank you for showing everyone who watches how simple inexpensive woodworking can produce amazing items that may become family heirlooms.This simple box looks like something my grandmother might have had in her house for many years.
Thanks for leaving that blotched part in their. We had a warm, rainy day today so I figured I'd go out and try to work on my planing skills and make a simple shelf. I couldn't plane it correctly and messed up numerous times and thought to myself, "Self, you know, everytime you watch one of Rex's videos it looks so easy you feel you can do it. Then you go into the real world and fudge the entire project up. Maybe you shouldn't be doing this." Then i saw you mess up and it was kinda a sigh of relief.
We used to make pencil boxes as part of our assessment in woodwork class back when I was in high school using similar skills and methods. I can attest to how much of a hammering things constructed like this can take. I agree wholeheartedly on the feeling of accomplishment attained in the end result too. This video dug up some long buried memories and feelings for me and as much as I love the convenience of power tools, this way of building has a certain tactileness that is sadly fading away in this modern world. I too have a love for using our brains and hands to create in ways our ancestors did (as well as with said modern powered conveniences) rather than just purchase something which is subpar and feel it is important to not let these skills die out so thank you for sharing yours.
yeah i made a box for wood scraps on wheels using rabbets and brad nails plus wood glue using some cabinet ready plywood in 15 minutes and put to use on the spot. After the glue fully cured 24 hrs later that thing is insanely strong.
Took nearly a year, but you did build that blanket chest! After watching this I built tool boxes with just nailed rabbet joins, though I did use more nails and a bit of glue. A year later and after banging about the back of my van, my garage and the garden shed, they're still going perfectly well!
I think nails are often forgotten in making boxes but they are very strong when the box is assembled. Thanks for sharing this helpful tutorial. It was great.
I remember this type joinery on stuff my grandad made. He was a do it all, born in 1901. I still have a trunk he made, with very similar joints. Thanks for the reminder on "good enough".
I ran into this recently, I needed some wood to make shelves for my kitchen well i had a old storage cabinet in the basement that was left here by.....well not sure but I took it apart with a 3 pound hammer , this cabinet was put together entirely with lap joints and just nails , let me tell you WOW that thing was Very hard to disassemble, but I saved 98% of the wood and well it's free wood so bonus!!!! , anyway I can testify to the rabbit joint and just nails Its super strong . -CJ
Hey Rex, I just want to thank you. I have been working with wood for years and even I have learned a few things from you. Keep making great content and have a great holiday season.
I really enjoy your content. You are down to earth and practical. I notice you are always pulling out wood that you've managed to salvage from somewhere. I am always doing that. I just built a pretty elaborate drafting desk with hand cut dovetail drawers and an inclining top. I made it from and old beat up dresser, a wooden frame for a twin bed, and a strip of leather from an old cowboy boot as a drawer pull. Plus some scrap plywood. A Frankenstein drawing desk made of pine, maple, poplar, birch, red oak and mahogany. The only stuff I bought was a dowel rod, two exterior door hinges and paint. Many other RUclips woodworkers seem to mainly be marketers where essentially I am watching a commercial with other commercials interrupting the commercial I am watching. Your approach is educational and refreshing.
I used to pull out a router and guide for all my rabbet joints. Until I tried it with hand tools and wow it is truly faster. Put away the routers guys, this is the way to do it!
The book provides clear illustrations ruclips.net/user/postUgkxbnOKZBE4evMO5V2vroHeCjq6d_MV6wJO diagrams that cover many of the essential topics. The projects at the end of the book are valuable for enhancing your skills and creating your own furniture. A digital platform linked to the book that could offer the plans for other woodworking projects with the cut sheets would have been a nice addition, but overall, the book is excellent.
Rex Krueger You'll be the first to see it........ but my workbench and workshop have a few issues to resolve before I can start. Meantime have a wonderful Christmas and New Year!🎄
This has to be one of my favorite RUclips videos. I love history and I love woodworking, especially with hand tools. This Rex Krueger is amazing in a dozen different ways. How sweet it is!
Ha, yes sir, the kids not starving is always a perk for the wood worker. hehehe. Love your stories sir, keep up the fun videos. Very cool build. i love it. Takes me back to when I was a kid, we didnt have wood glue as a norm, or at least, we didnt have any in our garage when I was a kid, (it was probably around, just dad didnt have it laying around,) I build a lot of little boxes like this, not in this detail but nailed together, kinda fun to see it made with nails for a change of pace in lue of screws and glue etc. Thank you sir and have a blessed week. Dale
Just wanted to say I really appreciate how you did the rabbet two ways. So many tutorials just skip over the methods with fewer tools, or give flat out bad advice. Even a college teacher did that to us, and gave us terrible advice (that only makes sense if the only hand tool you own is a screwdriver...)
Also and more importantly thank you x 1000 again for making the Woodwork For Humans series. I had to rewatch the spokeshave episode twice, it was really good! All your projects are approachable to weekend woodworkers and it's cool to see your thought process come out too. I actually bought one of those garbage $6 spokeshaves you junked hoping the blade would fit a 151 I found (it doesn't) and now I have a use for the blade! :)
Man thanks. Its very refreshing to hear something else than dovetails. I do love them. But I need to make boxes fast. So this fits perfect. So good content. Keep up the very good work! I really appreciate it!
Rex, as to your simple approach, it is greatly needed. I’ve gotten too few projects done over the years, in part due to machines complicating things up. I built a Joiners bench (modified down in length) and am delighted that I’m back in the shop again. Better to build a simple project followed by a better version than never building any version at all!
Rex you have given me so much confidence in my work i made my first pair of winding sticks with a mystery hardwood i found on the side of the road. (most definitely popler) sharpened my first plane iron and had the most satisfying feeling of a perfect shaving. I wish i could be a patron but i’m keeping myself afloat. But every time i do one of these projects i’m gonna buy the plans. keep it up dude!
I've disliked this video, because "fast shelf" tooks nearly 3 hours. Why bother with handtools when you can make good shelf with power tools in 8-10 minutes? The shelf looks awful, front piece is MDF while he tells us that it is pine. Nah
@@Eto_Kusay then don't watch the "hand tools" video's? lol. The video is to demonstrate the form, function, and viability of a nailed rabbet joint (with hand tools) which i think Rex did a phenomenal job at.
@@Eto_Kusay Why watch a video about handtools when then if you prefer powertools? The front piece is pine, not mdf? Please upload the video where you make a better looking shelf in 8-10 min. Idiot.
to play devil's advocate here, nowhere does it say "hand tools" in the title or the thumbnail or even description. someone unfamiliar with the channel will see the video title and expect power tools or at least a sub 1 hour build since it has the word "ultra-fast" leading to dislikes. but in reality it doesnt matter, youtube algorithm has been shown to not discriminate between likes and dislikes it uses a combination of both to determine how much people "engaged" with the content. plus im sure rex knows how much people enjoy his content even if he had the like/dislike turned off.
This kind of stuff is why I also like Rag'n'Bone Keith's videos. Using reclaimed materials effectively, to create something useful. Making a "rainbow riverbed live edge charred dining room table" is really exciting right up until you get to the tool, material and time investment.
I like woodworking that doesn't dis SPF. Here in Poland in big box shops, we only have SPF. Nailed rabbet? SPF? I love your channel more and more Rex. Oh and dont forget the smell that boiled linseed oil adds, when its fresh people seem to love the wood more - happy customer.
reminds me of a quote of my grandfather who was a cabinet maker who always asked this question when he wanted to know what sort of finished product the customer wanted, "and would you like that dovetailed or neatly bradded"
I've got to say Rex, the box turned out awesome! I really like the lines and curves of it, and the nails don't detract from the project at all. Thanks for the tip, I will consider using nail more often in the future.
I was thinking that you could show people how to make hide glue. I made some and love it! Strong and super easy to fix mistakes (water). Boil a bunch of rawhide bones for a few hours and let it dry out to the point you want. Boom, you got glue. It's what everyone used forever. I recained a chair from the 1890's and it's still working with lots of use.
@@RexKrueger The neighbor's dog isn't. You're just taking collagen out of it. Then give it back to the dog after the rawhide has dried out again . No wasted anything.
I made a tool tote similar to one you made in a previous video, and I used glue and nails. The sides on mine were pretty short, so movement was not as much of an issue, but it was cross grain. In that case the nails are clamps, and also insurance in case the glue fails.
Jeez I just spent 8 minutes racking my brain for the term used by cabinetmaking teacher 25 years ago. It's not like I haven't used it since. I must be getting old. "Rebate" is what it's called in British English.
Thanks for the videos! I used this design to make a dog bed box; added length&width, but bsicly the same! keep it up bro. In these covid days, somebody is going to make money to eat, and feed their fam. Wood is free eerywhere; even planed flat 2x12's around housing projects. I found a plank 21/2"x 16"x16 feet! sitting right in the dumpster(free fer the takin'). I could barely handle it, and had to leave it in the end, but wood is out there, for free!
Nice Rex. It looks great and I like your "non-power" tool method. I have been buying tools for some time now with no cords. Great looking box and nice gift idea as well..
high end furniture in my country always include nails in their work.. if you see screws holding your piece mainly, it is done by someone looking only to mass produce and have quick turnaround. real carpentry is done using hand tools only and that is highly sought after.
Great story to go with the build. Great build as well. I have been looking at the 1/4 1/4 1/4 or 1/2 1/2 1/2 technique for building drawers and trays and am now wondering about combining that process with what you have shown here. Thanks
In the time period, you’d have been extra unmussed about being only almost done when what’s his name got back, as then you’d get a chance to properly catch up and swap stories as you invite him to have a beer with you while you work and then you also get to show of how it looked just before finishing and how well you turn it into the final product, impressing him as well.
When i finish stuff, i use raw linseed. It does take a few days to dry, but its worth it for me because it gives a really hard finish. I just discovered your channel today, and i like it. Keep it up!
Also you use primarily non power tools, So many on here have a Norm Abrahms spinoff noise shop. I do have a small tablesaw. but I relish when the noise is done and I can use my planes, saws and chisels
Great project for beginner, I like that you used salvaged wood. This would have been a good opportunity to show how to hammer finish nails flat and their installation for a more authentic look, of hammer made nails of this era.
What if you also added glue to the joints? Wouldnt that still support instant connection from the nails, and also give some added support from the glue?
You should try it, I've made many bows with just a farriers rasp, pocket knife, and a hatchet or machete, seeing as how you like minimal tool videos might I suggest m.ruclips.net/video/6eWDgNrLYps/видео.html I watched this whole series of videos to get me started, but be forewarned, if you succeed in making one, you will never stop, EVER
@@andrewchurchley5705 I've never used yew, being from Texas and I always wanted to it seems like great wood, I prefer white woods like oak or hickory simply do to the speed in which you can dry it and start working on it, but I can't wait to get a chance to get some yew
noble green Thanks for your prompt interest. Here in the U.K. in ancient churchyards they planted yew for its use in bow making. Some of it still grows in them today. At some time in history I believe there were laws about it and about youth having to practice archery. My yew started in the garden, planted by birds and I've been watching it grow patiently!
7:20 Pounding nails in a piece of woodwork ???… YES ! It has been done for hundred of generations : since the existence of nails actually ! The use of screws or / and glue generalized in the last generation thanks to cordless drills and the development of very efficient glues which were not available (or remained somewhat too expensive) before (till the late 50's, mid 60's). I still have nails in my workshop and toolbox. I confess I don't use them so often, and when I stumble on my nail organizer that have been with me for forty years I sometimes think that I should use them more : nailing is fast, straightforward, clean and cheap (*). It gets the job done easily with only a single tool. So YES use nails !!!… (*) it also prevents woodworkers from spreading glue with their fingers ! … A messy job, and not so healthy : would you eat your salad with the plastic bag it comes with ?… ;/
It's kinda reverse where I live. My grandparents have furnitures from over 150years ago. None of them have a single metal part in them. Metal was crazy expensive back then. And because of high humidity and temperature, nails would break off after a couple of years. Everything is held with fine joinery and bamboo dowels. I have a chair from 70 years ago in my room. Still looks good as new and sturdy too. But nowadays because of modernization, they put nails and screws in everything, After a few years, they're all garbage. They do it to keep the market flowing. Anything with dowel construction is considered premium now.
Lovely little box. I would suggest moving the rebates & nails to the side pieces though, since then the weight would be pulling more across than along the nails & it should provid some added protection against people dropping something heavy in there & giving it a shock. Of course, the downside to doing that is the grain direction having to change for the sides, but nailing into endgrain on the longer front & back shouldn't matter as much because the weight will be pulling forwards, off the wall, rather than pulling at the sides of the box.
If we're staying "with what we have" grabbing another nail with a nice flat heat, to use as a poor man's nail set can slash work, as long as your careful not to let it slip.
Thanks for yet again a really nice project :), think i'll make it next week , don't think it will be finished in just a couple of hours though. I enjoy your woodworking for humans series very much, keep them coming….
Really entertaining and cool video! Would any pate wax work on wood, like Turtle Wax / carnuba wax for the car? I presume there are paste waxes specifically for wood but I was just wondering. I am a very novice woodworker
We need another installment of the adventures of Abraham & Josiah.
It's nice to see that even a pro can occasionally install a piece backwards and bend a nail! Thanks for leaving those in.
We all do it. Not all of us share.
Rex Krueger As I said before, GOOD OL REX! 👏🏻
Yes...amazing but true, he's only a human like you and me...and the rest of humans.
"Your children won't starve. That's a win..." and "Go make a thing it'll be great." Now those are words to live by. Thanks Rex. I really enjoy watching you do your thing on here....
Maybe!
I appreciate you watching!
@@RexKrueger There's a million ways to die in the West
Rex, I've been lurking this channel a bit and I have to say; As a fellow woodworker and as a caprenter with 20 years experience, I think this channel is GOLDEN for amateurs and professionals alike.
Two thumbs up!
I'm glad this is woodworking for humans and not some other species. This really made it feel like a catered guide from the go! Thanks Rex.
I just like this guy! "Go make something, it'll be great!" is such a great sentiment to end the video on, especially on a video that's basically "let's bang out something really simple really quick". It serves to remind people that what makes the thing great is the fact that they built it, not that it's flawless or that the piece is extremely complicated or requires extreme skill or tools.
Nice project! Didn't know "Abraham" had access to Japanese saws. Must have been a world traveler!
You didn't know Abraham was an East Asian name? Original promised land was where Tokyo is.
@@BoringDad88 Must be where he got those wire nails from, too! Seriously, though. Awesome project. 👍
Hirahito is that you?
Japan was trading with Europe since 1609, thanks to the efforts of William Adams who got the Dutch extensive trading rights and set up a Dutch East India Company trading outpost at Hirado. The company dealt mostly in Asian goods such as spices, textiles, porcelain, and silk, but also exported pretty much everything else, including tools and weapons. You can thank this guy for starting the "Asia is exotic!" meme that is so prevalent in the west these days.
SO yeah, Europe and the US did in fact have access to Japanese stuff in "the olden times". It would have been entirly possible for a woodworker on the East Coast of the US to have a Japanese style saw, though likely very unusual. HOWEAVER, you can't tell me that some smith in Europe wasn't like "Hey, my clients really like them expensive Asian saws. I recon I can make them myself and sell them for way less than the Dutch."
Abraham was a ships carpenter, before he retired to wood working. He traveled around the world. Spent some time on shore leave. Knew a good thing when he saw it. Brought a few home, handle less. Folks in the US, misunderstood & mounted the handles on the wrong end.
I think this is one of your better videos as far as content, but then I think all your how-to videos have been great. Thank you for showing everyone who watches how simple inexpensive woodworking can produce amazing items that may become family heirlooms.This simple box looks like something my grandmother might have had in her house for many years.
I really like the honesty. Putting pieces together wrong once in awhile. It's good to know I'm not the only one.
Thanks for leaving that blotched part in their. We had a warm, rainy day today so I figured I'd go out and try to work on my planing skills and make a simple shelf. I couldn't plane it correctly and messed up numerous times and thought to myself, "Self, you know, everytime you watch one of Rex's videos it looks so easy you feel you can do it. Then you go into the real world and fudge the entire project up. Maybe you shouldn't be doing this." Then i saw you mess up and it was kinda a sigh of relief.
We used to make pencil boxes as part of our assessment in woodwork class back when I was in high school using similar skills and methods. I can attest to how much of a hammering things constructed like this can take. I agree wholeheartedly on the feeling of accomplishment attained in the end result too.
This video dug up some long buried memories and feelings for me and as much as I love the convenience of power tools, this way of building has a certain tactileness that is sadly fading away in this modern world. I too have a love for using our brains and hands to create in ways our ancestors did (as well as with said modern powered conveniences) rather than just purchase something which is subpar and feel it is important to not let these skills die out so thank you for sharing yours.
Cut nails, reclaimed nails make this type of project look so much better.
yeah i made a box for wood scraps on wheels using rabbets and brad nails plus wood glue using some cabinet ready plywood in 15 minutes and put to use on the spot. After the glue fully cured 24 hrs later that thing is insanely strong.
Your attitude towards what you do is what makes what you do so great. Keep being you.
Took nearly a year, but you did build that blanket chest! After watching this I built tool boxes with just nailed rabbet joins, though I did use more nails and a bit of glue. A year later and after banging about the back of my van, my garage and the garden shed, they're still going perfectly well!
I think nails are often forgotten in making boxes but they are very strong when the box is assembled. Thanks for sharing this helpful tutorial. It was great.
I remember this type joinery on stuff my grandad made. He was a do it all, born in 1901. I still have a trunk he made, with very similar joints. Thanks for the reminder on "good enough".
I ran into this recently, I needed some wood to make shelves for my kitchen well i had a old storage cabinet in the basement that was left here by.....well not sure but I took it apart with a 3 pound hammer , this cabinet was put together entirely with lap joints and just nails , let me tell you WOW that thing was Very hard to disassemble, but I saved 98% of the wood and well it's free wood so bonus!!!! , anyway I can testify to the rabbit joint and just nails Its super strong . -CJ
Hey Rex, I just want to thank you.
I have been working with wood for years and even I have learned a few things from you. Keep making great content and have a great holiday season.
You 2!
I really enjoy your content. You are down to earth and practical. I notice you are always pulling out wood that you've managed to salvage from somewhere. I am always doing that. I just built a pretty elaborate drafting desk with hand cut dovetail drawers and an inclining top. I made it from and old beat up dresser, a wooden frame for a twin bed, and a strip of leather from an old cowboy boot as a drawer pull. Plus some scrap plywood. A Frankenstein drawing desk made of pine, maple, poplar, birch, red oak and mahogany. The only stuff I bought was a dowel rod, two exterior door hinges and paint. Many other RUclips woodworkers seem to mainly be marketers where essentially I am watching a commercial with other commercials interrupting the commercial I am watching. Your approach is educational and refreshing.
What’s more important then knowledge : originality & imagination. Bravo for all!
This is really just old techniques. I didn't innovate much!
I used to pull out a router and guide for all my rabbet joints. Until I tried it with hand tools and wow it is truly faster. Put away the routers guys, this is the way to do it!
I mean, for a LOT of rabbets, then okay, but for a small project, skip that noisey thing.
The book provides clear illustrations ruclips.net/user/postUgkxbnOKZBE4evMO5V2vroHeCjq6d_MV6wJO diagrams that cover many of the essential topics. The projects at the end of the book are valuable for enhancing your skills and creating your own furniture. A digital platform linked to the book that could offer the plans for other woodworking projects with the cut sheets would have been a nice addition, but overall, the book is excellent.
I've used the nailed rabbet joint on a big bookshelf and it worked just fine!
I never thought anyone would persuade me to make a box like that, especially using those techniques! But, guess what? ....... Thank you, Rex!
I hope I get to see the one you make!
Rex Krueger You'll be the first to see it........ but my workbench and workshop have a few issues to resolve before I can start.
Meantime have a wonderful Christmas and New Year!🎄
This has to be one of my favorite RUclips videos. I love history and I love woodworking, especially with hand tools. This Rex Krueger is amazing in a dozen different ways. How sweet it is!
Ha, yes sir, the kids not starving is always a perk for the wood worker. hehehe. Love your stories sir, keep up the fun videos.
Very cool build. i love it. Takes me back to when I was a kid, we didnt have wood glue as a norm, or at least, we didnt have any in our garage when I was a kid, (it was probably around, just dad didnt have it laying around,) I build a lot of little boxes like this, not in this detail but nailed together, kinda fun to see it made with nails for a change of pace in lue of screws and glue etc.
Thank you sir and have a blessed week.
Dale
Just wanted to say I really appreciate how you did the rabbet two ways. So many tutorials just skip over the methods with fewer tools, or give flat out bad advice. Even a college teacher did that to us, and gave us terrible advice (that only makes sense if the only hand tool you own is a screwdriver...)
Also and more importantly thank you x 1000 again for making the Woodwork For Humans series. I had to rewatch the spokeshave episode twice, it was really good! All your projects are approachable to weekend woodworkers and it's cool to see your thought process come out too. I actually bought one of those garbage $6 spokeshaves you junked hoping the blade would fit a 151 I found (it doesn't) and now I have a use for the blade! :)
I bet it will come out great. I just made mine for the video, but now I'm using it even when I don't have to.
Man thanks. Its very refreshing to hear something else than dovetails. I do love them. But I need to make boxes fast. So this fits perfect. So good content. Keep up the very good work! I really appreciate it!
Rex, as to your simple approach, it is greatly needed. I’ve gotten too few projects done over the years, in part due to machines complicating things up. I built a Joiners bench (modified down in length) and am delighted that I’m back in the shop again. Better to build a simple project followed by a better version than never building any version at all!
Your Best asset Enthusiam and just plane simple Techniques. Nicely done Rex. . .
Rex you have given me so much confidence in my work i made my first pair of winding sticks with a mystery hardwood i found on the side of the road. (most definitely popler) sharpened my first plane iron and had the most satisfying feeling of a perfect shaving. I wish i could be a patron but i’m keeping myself afloat. But every time i do one of these projects i’m gonna buy the plans. keep it up dude!
I don't know who's down thumbing this... but they're nuts. Your videos are awesome man. Thanks for sharing your knowledge!
Thanks for watching!
I've disliked this video, because "fast shelf" tooks nearly 3 hours. Why bother with handtools when you can make good shelf with power tools in 8-10 minutes? The shelf looks awful, front piece is MDF while he tells us that it is pine. Nah
@@Eto_Kusay then don't watch the "hand tools" video's? lol. The video is to demonstrate the form, function, and viability of a nailed rabbet joint (with hand tools) which i think Rex did a phenomenal job at.
@@Eto_Kusay Why watch a video about handtools when then if you prefer powertools? The front piece is pine, not mdf? Please upload the video where you make a better looking shelf in 8-10 min. Idiot.
to play devil's advocate here, nowhere does it say "hand tools" in the title or the thumbnail or even description. someone unfamiliar with the channel will see the video title and expect power tools or at least a sub 1 hour build since it has the word "ultra-fast" leading to dislikes. but in reality it doesnt matter, youtube algorithm has been shown to not discriminate between likes and dislikes it uses a combination of both to determine how much people "engaged" with the content. plus im sure rex knows how much people enjoy his content even if he had the like/dislike turned off.
Best woodworking video I’ve seen in years.
Thanks for watching!
This kind of stuff is why I also like Rag'n'Bone Keith's videos. Using reclaimed materials effectively, to create something useful. Making a "rainbow riverbed live edge charred dining room table" is really exciting right up until you get to the tool, material and time investment.
Ha!
I like woodworking that doesn't dis SPF. Here in Poland in big box shops, we only have SPF. Nailed rabbet? SPF? I love your channel more and more Rex. Oh and dont forget the smell that boiled linseed oil adds, when its fresh people seem to love the wood more - happy customer.
Agreed! BLO smells great!
I've used nails as pins, as rivets and once I even made a drill bit from a nail. I've really used a nail as a nail though...
Clinch nailing is one of my favorite steel woodworking joints!
I believe you've *nailed* the woodworking with your skill
reminds me of a quote of my grandfather who was a cabinet maker who always asked this question when he wanted to know what sort of finished product the customer wanted,
"and would you like that dovetailed or neatly bradded"
If he had any more jems, I'd love to hear them.
I've got to say Rex, the box turned out awesome! I really like the lines and curves of it, and the nails don't detract from the project at all. Thanks for the tip, I will consider using nail more often in the future.
I was thinking that you could show people how to make hide glue. I made some and love it! Strong and super easy to fix mistakes (water). Boil a bunch of rawhide bones for a few hours and let it dry out to the point you want. Boom, you got glue. It's what everyone used forever.
I recained a chair from the 1890's and it's still working with lots of use.
I'm a vegetarian!
@@RexKrueger The neighbor's dog isn't. You're just taking collagen out of it. Then give it back to the dog after the rawhide has dried out again . No wasted anything.
That's pretty work Rex, keep'em coming.
Good ol Rex- always informative and NEVER boring! Many thanks! 🙏
I made a tool tote similar to one you made in a previous video, and I used glue and nails. The sides on mine were pretty short, so movement was not as much of an issue, but it was cross grain. In that case the nails are clamps, and also insurance in case the glue fails.
Fantastic video Rex! Thanks so much for this awesome project!
Jeez I just spent 8 minutes racking my brain for the term used by cabinetmaking teacher 25 years ago. It's not like I haven't used it since. I must be getting old. "Rebate" is what it's called in British English.
Rabbet?
@@hortshack rebate is british, rabbet is americanized for the same thing.
I kept hearing rabbit, I thought "ok, I guess those planes kinda look like they have rabbit ears?", then I saw the title of this one.
Nice, simple piece. Thanks for the reality check.
In reality, simple is good.
You made a very good presentation here and I appreciate it.
Thanks for the videos! I used this design to make a dog bed box; added length&width, but bsicly the same! keep it up bro. In these covid days, somebody is going to make money to eat, and feed their fam. Wood is free eerywhere; even planed flat 2x12's around housing projects. I found a plank 21/2"x 16"x16 feet! sitting right in the dumpster(free fer the takin'). I could barely handle it, and had to leave it in the end, but wood is out there, for free!
Nice Rex. It looks great and I like your "non-power" tool method. I have been buying tools for some time now with no cords. Great looking box and nice gift idea as well..
Thank you! I'm glad you liked the approach!
you just made my woodwork way better!! thank you very much
Great job Rex, always an inspiration to get off my butt and make something useful!
The pre industrial nailing held better then those modern wire nails. The square nails hold wood a lot better then the round type.
I just found your channel, and I love your content. You're great on camera and it's a pleasure learning from you.
high end furniture in my country always include nails in their work.. if you see screws holding your piece mainly, it is done by someone looking only to mass produce and have quick turnaround. real carpentry is done using hand tools only and that is highly sought after.
Man I love your style!! Thanks for teaching and inspiring!!
Nice demonstration.
Nice Work Brother!
Great film - love the weekly video - keep up th great work.
Great story to go with the build. Great build as well. I have been looking at the 1/4 1/4 1/4 or 1/2 1/2 1/2 technique for building drawers and trays and am now wondering about combining that process with what you have shown here. Thanks
Thanks for the really clear instructions. I'm gonna go make a thing!
That's a wonderful video. Thank you very much, Rex. I'm going to give this a try.
Nice project. Well done and great instructions. Loved your monologue too !
Awesome !!!!!!! I prefer Dado joints , but Rabbit joints are great too. Thanks for the knowledge , Rex !!!!!!!!!!!!
Just a quick tip, start the rabbet with taking cuts at the front of the rabbet and move back !
You should be a woodworking speedrunner. Maybe we can get GDQ to accept it as a category
Another excellent video dude. I am now gonna go make a thing.
I know it will be great!
Another great and easy project. Still loving the videos. 👍
Another great and well produced video!
In the time period, you’d have been extra unmussed about being only almost done when what’s his name got back, as then you’d get a chance to properly catch up and swap stories as you invite him to have a beer with you while you work and then you also get to show of how it looked just before finishing and how well you turn it into the final product, impressing him as well.
When i finish stuff, i use raw linseed. It does take a few days to dry, but its worth it for me because it gives a really hard finish. I just discovered your channel today, and i like it. Keep it up!
Also you use primarily non power tools, So many on here have a Norm Abrahms spinoff noise shop. I do have a small tablesaw. but I relish when the noise is done and I can use my planes, saws and chisels
Oh boy I'm getting inspired to build a bureau cabinet seeing your work man xD
I really enjoyed this video, a lot. Thank you!
wow what a great tutorial! Thanks
Great project for beginner, I like that you used salvaged wood. This would have been a good opportunity to show how to hammer finish nails flat and their installation for a more authentic look, of hammer made nails of this era.
What if you also added glue to the joints? Wouldnt that still support instant connection from the nails, and also give some added support from the glue?
I make bookshelves like this! And they hold A LOT OF Weight.
I bet they do!
Hey rex might I suggest a challenge of woodworking skill, try making some traditional American longbows, I would love to see how you go about it
I've often thought about it!
You should try it, I've made many bows with just a farriers rasp, pocket knife, and a hatchet or machete, seeing as how you like minimal tool videos might I suggest m.ruclips.net/video/6eWDgNrLYps/видео.html I watched this whole series of videos to get me started, but be forewarned, if you succeed in making one, you will never stop, EVER
I have some yew branches seasoning outside, ready to make my longbow sometime in 2020.
@@andrewchurchley5705 I've never used yew, being from Texas and I always wanted to it seems like great wood, I prefer white woods like oak or hickory simply do to the speed in which you can dry it and start working on it, but I can't wait to get a chance to get some yew
noble green Thanks for your prompt interest. Here in the U.K. in ancient churchyards they planted yew for its use in bow making. Some of it still grows in them today. At some time in history I believe there were laws about it and about youth having to practice archery. My yew started in the garden, planted by birds and I've been watching it grow patiently!
You are refreshing! Bravo !
7:20 Pounding nails in a piece of woodwork ???…
YES !
It has been done for hundred of generations : since the existence of nails actually !
The use of screws or / and glue generalized in the last generation thanks to cordless drills and the development of very efficient glues which were not available (or remained somewhat too expensive) before (till the late 50's, mid 60's).
I still have nails in my workshop and toolbox. I confess I don't use them so often, and when I stumble on my nail organizer that have been with me for forty years I sometimes think that I should use them more : nailing is fast, straightforward, clean and cheap (*). It gets the job done easily with only a single tool.
So YES use nails !!!…
(*) it also prevents woodworkers from spreading glue with their fingers ! … A messy job, and not so healthy : would you eat your salad with the plastic bag it comes with ?… ;/
It's kinda reverse where I live.
My grandparents have furnitures from over 150years ago.
None of them have a single metal part in them.
Metal was crazy expensive back then.
And because of high humidity and temperature, nails would break off after a couple of years.
Everything is held with fine joinery and bamboo dowels.
I have a chair from 70 years ago in my room. Still looks good as new and sturdy too.
But nowadays because of modernization, they put nails and screws in everything,
After a few years, they're all garbage.
They do it to keep the market flowing.
Anything with dowel construction is considered premium now.
Rex nailed it in this video! ;-) I crack myself up.
A good thing about town, alleyways and trash pick up spots.
Lovely little box. I would suggest moving the rebates & nails to the side pieces though, since then the weight would be pulling more across than along the nails & it should provid some added protection against people dropping something heavy in there & giving it a shock. Of course, the downside to doing that is the grain direction having to change for the sides, but nailing into endgrain on the longer front & back shouldn't matter as much because the weight will be pulling forwards, off the wall, rather than pulling at the sides of the box.
Rex, love your channel! You don't have the chisels you use in your link list. Thanks.
Thanks Rex. 👍
🤔simply amazing techniques.. bravo !
I think I already knew it. Actually I use em almost every time
Really old nails were not sharpened wire, right? Weren't they rough metal wedges that would prevent them from slipping in the future?
Agree files are sublime tools: one day I will treat myself to Liogier files :)
You just got another subscriber!
If we're staying "with what we have" grabbing another nail with a nice flat heat, to use as a poor man's nail set can slash work, as long as your careful not to let it slip.
Dig the name selection 👍
I bought a bunch of wrought iron nails to do this type of joining. Still haven't taken the plunge.
Thanks for yet again a really nice project :), think i'll make it next week , don't think it will be finished in just a couple of hours though.
I enjoy your woodworking for humans series very much, keep them coming….
Am I the only one who wants to hear more adventures with Abraham and Josiah?
Really entertaining and cool video! Would any pate wax work on wood, like Turtle Wax / carnuba wax for the car? I presume there are paste waxes specifically for wood but I was just wondering. I am a very novice woodworker
I've used carnuba. It's thinner, but it works. Use what you got!
Fair enough for quick work.
Thanks for making videos
Try ring shanked nails. Tight as any glue joint in this type of application. Will not loosen.
I’m so glad this video popped up. I need to build a box to protect an expensive gadget in my sons’ room from getting broken