宮大工の仕事紹介

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  • Опубликовано: 20 янв 2025

Комментарии • 59

  • @Tsyoka
    @Tsyoka 12 лет назад

    That was absolutely beautiful work gentlemen. It seems that pride of craftsmanship is one of the universal traits that tie all true artists together...
    Well done.

  • @a198003311
    @a198003311 4 года назад +2

    素晴らしい!土台も留めなんだ!

  • @llew777
    @llew777 13 лет назад

    Quality and workmanship lives, notice all done by hand, The signature at the end Pride, and rightly so. Thank you
    Rob From Canada

  • @SteveFrenchWoodNStuff
    @SteveFrenchWoodNStuff 11 лет назад

    Nice joinery! I like the big mallet too.

  • @andrewcarmichael8683
    @andrewcarmichael8683 11 лет назад +1

    Having lived in Japan, and studied carpentry there. It is the reason I now do carpentry. I hate slap together stuff! Everything is a race. I will be returning to the methods I learned!

  • @千葉ゆ
    @千葉ゆ 8 лет назад +27

    釘、ビス、ボルト。
    金物なんか使わなくても地震に強い建物は造れます。
    でも、お国が許してくれないんですよねw

    • @papillon407ify
      @papillon407ify 4 года назад

      技量に差がでるし判断が難しいからでは?

  • @pespesle
    @pespesle 12 лет назад

    the important is that: he didn't use any adhesive to join the joints, very exiting.

  • @waynecates5266
    @waynecates5266 11 лет назад +9

    There are some companies in the states that do work with joinery like this. Mine does.
    The problem is that most people don't want to pay for the time that it takes to do the work. Most houses built today are meant for resale in 5 or 8 years. Carpentry has been industrialized in America and a house no longer serves the purpose of housing generations. A house has become a commodity to be produced as cheaply as possible and to be sold just as fast as it went up.
    Its really a shame.

    • @thoperSought
      @thoperSought 10 лет назад +1

      it’s worse with normal houses in Japan: they don’t have an resale value beyond the value of the land, so rather than build for resale, they’re built for demolition.

    • @andrewc0128
      @andrewc0128 9 лет назад

      ThoperSought There are a few different reasons houses resale for less in Japan than the craftsmanship.

    • @thoperSought
      @thoperSought 9 лет назад

      Andrew C
      I can see where you'd take that as talking about the craftsmanship, but that wasn't what I meant. the craftsmanship is fine, as far as I've seen-though the average house is obviously not on the level shown in this video.
      I was talking more about commoditization. ***** was talking about commoditization driving the way house-building worked in the U.S. (not the other way around, as your comment seems to suggest)
      well, here it's really commoditization of the land. I've seen a lot of nice older houses torn down-with no salvage effort at all. I've seen houses less than 30 years old torn down and replaced with two, three, or four houses. at least in parts of Kanto, the land is the commodity and the house is irrelevant.

    • @andrewc0128
      @andrewc0128 9 лет назад

      ThoperSought I agree. Land seems to be the more valuable of the two here in Japan.
      In Tokyo, a few houses were torn down near mine, and some of the wood was recycled. A few of them were simply demolished, probably because the wood was far too deteriorated.
      As for demolishing one house to make 2 of what I call "cigarette boxes"... Japan's real estate is going to be a mess when the population starts to drastically decline. There are going to be a lot of empty houses.

  • @TheRealFOSFOR
    @TheRealFOSFOR 11 лет назад

    Beautiful. But is it not a bit overkill? Are those joints any stronger than the more "western" ones.
    I mean. all the elaborate shaping of the wood does weaken the beam itself. Doesn't it? And of course there is a lot of extra work into it. But nevertheless extremely beautiful work.

  • @pcabellb911
    @pcabellb911 8 лет назад

    mis respetos, un gran trabajo, saludos desde Perú

  • @melvil6300
    @melvil6300 6 лет назад +3

    基礎に接手をつかったところで、1階床の水平強度は基礎立ち上がりとボルトで出てしまうので、接手は仕事していないのでは?(施工側の趣味でされる分には良いですが、これで工作作業手間賃を施主さんに請求してるとしたら不要な手間賃となります)。またもう少し単純な接手ならプレカットでも可能です。またボルトなしだと、横方向からの加重によって建物が基礎から落ちてしまいますのでボルトは必要です。

  • @annarboriter
    @annarboriter 11 лет назад

    The hook detail on this corner joint is such overkill. The anchor will surely keep everything bound together.

  • @valentinlance8072
    @valentinlance8072 10 лет назад

    I like the joint work.

  • @DaytonaPaul55
    @DaytonaPaul55 12 лет назад

    Excellent work

  • @pattyosoriohernandez4298
    @pattyosoriohernandez4298 8 лет назад +1

    extraordinario ,es un verdadero arte en ejecución .

  • @jnsurg947
    @jnsurg947 10 лет назад

    An introduction video of Japanese Miya-Daiku,woodworking craftsman for the construction of temple,shrine and casles.

  • @rm42749
    @rm42749 11 лет назад

    Absolutely beautiful. Unfortunately the cost for this type of woodworking is prohibitive.

  • @papadonto8
    @papadonto8 11 лет назад +1

    Yes they ARE more stronger, using physics, when 2 pieces of wood are conjoined instead of just joined, their strength in general become stronger than when and if they were just connected by connectors. The only reason American builders do NOT do this, is because they are always in a hurry and don't want to take the time to learn such "OLD world" techniques. Ancient building was carried over into eastern modern times and still exists as an art as well as structurally sound techniques.

  • @matthewheffernan3877
    @matthewheffernan3877 9 лет назад

    I don't understand that corner joint it was loose. Hooks do nothing.
    maybe i missed something?

    • @mylesfranco3545
      @mylesfranco3545 9 лет назад +1

      +Matthew Heffernan When you say hooks were loose, I believe your talking about the gab in the joint left for a square taper peg that will lock it in

  • @ファブリック-y9y
    @ファブリック-y9y 4 года назад +2

    昔の物が良かったな。宮大工の仕事を見たあと大手住宅の仕事を見ると全然違う。そりゃ宮大工があんなんじゃ長くは持たんが❗️って言うはずだ💦

    • @osakar
      @osakar Год назад

      耐久性なんて今の市場で重視されていないからね。核家族化が進んでせいぜい2世代が住めれば良いだけだもん。

  • @sicotico123
    @sicotico123 8 лет назад

    toda una obra de arte

  • @asusume
    @asusume 12 лет назад +1

    すばらしいですね。

  • @菊池統希矢
    @菊池統希矢 6 лет назад

    芸術だな!

  • @trick384
    @trick384 9 лет назад

    I don't understand why they employ so many different and elaborate methods of joinery

    • @andrewc0128
      @andrewc0128 9 лет назад +5

      trick384 Because they are masters of it, and they take pride in their work. Just about anyone can use nail gun to connect two pieces of wood.

    • @liamg1995
      @liamg1995 9 лет назад +4

      +trick384 it is also far stronger and more beautiful. Japanese timber framed buildings can last for many hundreds of years, whereas american 2x4 and 2x6 framed buildings start to fall apart after 40.

  • @tm-xl5xy
    @tm-xl5xy 7 лет назад

    Does anybody create joinery like this using CNC?

  • @telosfd
    @telosfd 13 лет назад

    mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm nice very nice job!

  • @zapravila
    @zapravila 12 лет назад +1

    Всем сердцем я чту,
    Отдыхая в полдневный жар,
    Людей на полях. (с)

  • @ssssakuraloco
    @ssssakuraloco 8 лет назад +1

    檜だと思います

  • @Perseveranciapositiva
    @Perseveranciapositiva 9 лет назад +1

    Estoy empezando un canal donde explico detalladamente y de una forma muy sencilla como hacer juegos y cosas interesantes para gente curiosa y activa. De momento tengo tres videos y estoy trabajando en un cuarto que es como hacer un mini futbolin de madera , si no te gusta hacer cosas por ti mismo significa que mi canal no te gusta, de lo contrario echa un vistazo y puedes suscribirte.
    Un saludo!!!

  • @Afro408
    @Afro408 4 года назад

    Masterly!

  • @giodazip
    @giodazip 12 лет назад

    That's what I call joinery!

  • @mane1571
    @mane1571 9 лет назад

    Quem coroco ,coroco,quem não coroco não coroca mais.

  • @trapskeetfly
    @trapskeetfly 12 лет назад

    just amazing. after looking 2x4 with nail gun. Its a art and others are so barbaric.

  • @sajidullah
    @sajidullah 11 лет назад

    wow..

  • @papadonto8
    @papadonto8 11 лет назад

    I second that

  • @ぼっちのおさる
    @ぼっちのおさる 4 года назад

    コンクリ基礎ならボルトないと突き上げの地震には耐えれんよ。

  • @ssssakuraloco
    @ssssakuraloco 8 лет назад +6

    ボルトは法律です。

  • @BarryGordon58
    @BarryGordon58 11 лет назад

    It's a Nipponese thing. Americans won't understand.
    (just being tongue in CHEEK)

  • @KGB.0721
    @KGB.0721 7 лет назад +2

    ちょっとまて、本当に宮大工?
    うちの工務店の大工さんみんなこんな感じなんですが…。

  • @sen1000jii
    @sen1000jii 9 лет назад

    杉は使わない。土台があるのは、江戸建築以後。

  • @佐藤遊人-k5u
    @佐藤遊人-k5u 4 года назад

    宮大工じゃない
    普通の大工さんもやってるよ

  • @uservaio4564
    @uservaio4564 9 лет назад

    Meister

  • @tarousato2006
    @tarousato2006 11 лет назад

    木組み良くても木の土台パッキンじゃアリ入る

  • @jonessanadakym1385
    @jonessanadakym1385 8 лет назад +2

    宮大工?ボルト使ってるやん

    • @マー坊くん
      @マー坊くん 8 лет назад +2

      弟ねこてん 法律でそうなってしまったのではと、考えます。
      でも木組みと鉄を合わせたら凄いと思いまふ

    • @AwesomeKazuaki
      @AwesomeKazuaki 8 лет назад +7

      アンカーボルトだよ。大昔にコンクリート基礎なんって無かっただろ(笑)
      抜け防止だよ。

    • @Stephen-dorps
      @Stephen-dorps Год назад

      石場建てならともかく
      コンクリート基礎に
      ボルト無しでどうやって
      土台をとめるのでしょう?
      ホールダウン金物を使って
      柱と共に固定します。

  • @森の民レクサ
    @森の民レクサ 4 года назад

    戸建ての新築で宮大工の仕事いらないやろ

  • @ssssakuraloco
    @ssssakuraloco 8 лет назад +6

    ボルトは法律です。