This Was Harder Than It Looks || How to Build a Bathroom Vanity With Drawers
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- Опубликовано: 24 янв 2025
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Man, that is a GORGEOUS cabinet. Builds like this are why I love woodworking.
Jason is somewhat of the master in cabinet building. True craftsman.
Got a brisket prepped and on the smoker then sat down with a fresh cup of coffee just minutes after the new Bourbon Moth video. It’s going to be a great day!
Can't beat a good brisket
Peak male weekend off to a great start.
I genuinely had to check and make sure you weren't my dad. That's his ideal Saturday! (Also that's a compliment, my dad is one of the best cooks I know and his smoked meats are amazing!)
I've never tried brisket, but it sounds yummy. 😋👍
@@StaceNyourFaceeyou need to fix your life!!! :(
Dude, that beading feature is probably one of the prettiest things I’ve seen you design. Love it!
This is definitely one of the most beautiful pieces of furniture I’ve seen you build here on RUclips
Whiteside bits are amazing. Worth every penny. That beading bit if you look at it, is crazy how it can actually make that cut because the tip is sharp. You are one patient man.
Don't know if someone else has mentioned it, but when you run your router along the fence you should use the round side of the guide - that way if you turn it a bit it won't change the bit distance from the fence and you line stays straight. If you use the straight edge of the router base then any little twist will make your line wander.
used to think the same. then i saw this, and have been using the straight edge since with better results. ruclips.net/user/shortsVOup7Jm0bE4?si=f2rHPFxK9uZjwjxQ
@Rob-df6py thanks hadn't seen that before.
Damned if you do, Damned if you don't 😂
Unless the router is perfectly centred on the base, the cut will drift on the rounded side too.
Love the vanity, it’s a beautiful piece. Also love the subtle dig “science”, or at least what I perceived to be a dig.
You are a clever boy Jason, Norm would be proud of you.
Art & Joshua from Ohio
Jason, I have been watching your videos for a couple of years now and I really enjoy and learn a lot from your techniques. I ran screen-print shops for 35 years and now that I am retired, I enjoy doing carpentry and woodworking and would love to learn more from you. Hope that doesn’t sound creepy or anything 🤣Love the fluted panels, I’m looking for the point round over bit now.
LOVE the way the walnut's grain pops thru the fluting, that looked so good!
(and, while I hate spraying a finish, this project would've had me thinking about that option)
What a gorgeous bathroom vanity!
Very nice work Jason. I have a tip to help speed up the fluting process. I have a molding head that mounts to the table saw. You can get a wide assortment of cutters, including fluting cutters. Using this tool, you can cut 4 flutes at a time. This will speed up the process a bit, and the results are terrific. You'll have to make a new table saw insert to accommodate the size of the molding head cutters. I love this tool - and use it often. Hope this is helpful...
Gorgeous vanity! Always amazed of your work. Love the floor tile too. :)
Got a bourbon blade for Christmas. Love it. Also, it's awesome to wake up early and see your newest vid is already posted. Watching now with my coffee. Perfect Saturday morning
Coffee + bourbon + moth. A man’s breakfast.
@thebobloblawshow8832 or a woman's breakfast
Good instincts on those drawer fronts, I probably just would have used a forsener bit to make a couple of recesses for the pulls to sit in, but this looks *way* better. It kind of has a South Asian vibe.
I really did not like how this was turning out while watching you build it. But seeing the finished product installed changed my mind. It looks great.
Bro routing that much with no mask, you're a monster 😂 great video awesome results
Love your fluting pattern and the jig you developed to do it. The drawer front handle the way you designed the flat inserts I think brings every thing together. Thanks for your content. your work is impeccable.
Nice solution for fluted panels with tools at hand. Also thank you for the Bits and Bits recommendations. They are great.
The walnut and un lacquered brass is a beautiful combo. Adding the fluting adds an elegant touch.
I just built in place a custom closet shelf organizer in a dark 24 inch deep closet so I feel the pain. It was fun to build with no plans, I’m a plan it out person, made it with poplar and white wood. Looked good when finished. Took some tips and tricks from your past videos too. I just design buildings and interiors as my living but have a love for woodworking.
I think that's my favorite build you've done. I'm sorry that it's a bathroom vanity out of all the amazing things you've built.
Always nice to see a new video from you Jason. I am an older retired cabinet and furniture maker, and I always made my doors and and face frames the way you have always done it. I really liked to see you use the Lamello and then oversized the doors like the cabinet maker did who helped you. I would really like to hear from you to see if it was a positive experience for you using this method as I am finally going to build my wife of39 years the kitchen of her dreams since our home is finally paid off.
jason this was insane. using a $200 palm router to create a work of art. awesome build
When doing the flutes on those doors. It's a lot easier on the mind, if you use a round base plate on the router. Since it's round, it can run along the straight edge, and turn in any orientation, while the bit stays the same distance from the straight edge.
Nice design ideas. Thanks for posting. And not a single Domino in sight. Of course, the Lamello Tenso connectors made up for that.
My dad used to have a set of cutters that went into the table saw and one of them was a flute cutter with about 3 or 4 flutes on it and it made things like this much easier and quicker. I don't think they make them anymore, though.
Oh, thank goodness! I was really thrown for a loop when last week's video wasn't more cabinetry.
Love the fluting! The only thing is I wish you’d used the same trim around the drawers for the doors but that’s minor. Thank you for not going with the cnc route to make the fluting and instead your trick to use the table saw fence as your spacer was absolutely brilliant and probably more accurate and consistent than had you made a jig and relied on a measurements for spacing.
When you were prepping for the draw handles I was thinking what a shame you had to remove the fluting but after you had finished and fitted the handles I must admit I really like the look of the smooth insert behind the handles. It looks great. 👏👏👏
Love your videos! Amazing build as always. IMHO for that flute you could have used stop blocks to move out same distance every time. Put a block against the fence and then a straight edge against it, remove stop block and move the fence. Voila. Also you should use round side of the router against the straight edge as I have learned from RUclips 😂.
Man, that is one fantastic looking vanity! Bravó!
Very pretty and impressive. I like how you did this with normal wood shop equipment.
Fantastic build! Love those fluted panels on the draws, doors & side panel! 👍👍
Clearly your patience in your projects is one of the reason they turn out so great. I feel like the laziest woodworker watching some of your vids. I would never have taken the time for the fluting (and probably some other details).
I’m pretty sure that fluting feature is called tambour. You can unit in sheets with a thin backer that can be glued down to a flat panel instead of routing every single groove. Just an option I case anyone is wondering.
Fluting looks great. I like that it was that pointy bit instead of just a roundy one. Looks classic.
I love the cabinet. It is the most elegant and gorgeous cabinet. I have ever seen in my life, even if it didn’t have marble on it sides. And it only had a marble top. It’s still beautiful. If you don’t mind, I would like to copy that and make a dining room buffet that beading really looks fantastic. It was the right way to do it. I can’t wait for the next video.
Those drawer fronts went from $100 to $300 each when you put the edge molding on them. Just gorgeous, and the Whiteside bit is a great idea . I'm stealing it but you'll get royalties. (verbally)
RUclips hid this video from me for 4 days >:(. This is awesome!
Hi Jason,
if you glue your faceframe to your carcasse you could use the original wooden Lamellos.
It's much cheaper and more sustainable rhan these plastic Lammellos.
Greetings from Germany, Dietmar
Your right! It looks too good for the kids bathroom. 😉 Great job
Love how the fluting looks darker than the rest of the piece. Came out sweet.
It's really easy to install hinges, when you can't. I feel it.
Beautiful cabinet. Received a left handed Bourbon blade for Christmas, and then a right handed Bourbon blade along with a Bourbon Moth T-shirt on my birthday 2 days later. I have a great family 😊.
Great choice of drawer handles. Really brings it together. Love it.
Can you imagine taking all that time to flute the door and you screw up one of the last cuts and have to scrap it. Looks great!
Was thinking that too. Plus was wondering why he’s using the flat edge of the router guide. I thought it’s safer to use the rounded side this these types of operations. Obviously it worked for him and can’t argue with the results.
I think using the table saw fence to space the flutes out was ingenious! I plan to use that technique some day
I used one of those same bits to do the fluted drawer fronts for my son and daughter in law bedroom furniture. Did mine on the cnc but your method was probably just as easy honestly.
I call it a slot cutter for the p-system . I refer to the machine by "zeta" (lamello zeta p2) because referring to a lamello often implies a classic biscuit joiner.
Oh , and the folding miter with tape methode works great combined with the clamex connectors. Just make sure to use the correct spacer clip on the fence when needed.
Bloody hell those toe kick boxes are a brilliant idea... ive just been using those stupid leveling feet that come with those pre fab kitchens.
The fluting is exceptional, as is the whole piece - love the pill-shaped pieces the handles was mounted to
Looks Great Jason!! Kids/renters will enjoy that bathroom. It was a #1 job for doing #2!? LOL Trying to add your crazy humor there.
Great build, Jason~! That "fluting" came out looking fantastic~!! I'm sure applying finish in all those nooks & crannies must've been painful.
WOW‼️You nailed it again✨👍🤗❤ I really love watching you work on something or upgrading a room in your house like thIs or your brother's kitchen or grandma's bedroom.You inspire me to try DIY-ing something inside my house too.
Tedious work but I think that router bit and guide was a great solution.
You need a worksite light tree for working in rooms not fit for lighting. You can definitely build your own and include several custom features. Before I became disabled, I was a handyman carpenter for over twenty years. A handyman's light tree is a great build and useful tool. You have several lights, including a movable arm light on a little tower with a solid base that you can roll from site to site like a dolly. I used to put a power strip on mine for the light and an additional power strip for my tools which I could connect to my generator on a heavy duty extension cord. I also put a tool caddy for screwdrivers and bits on mine and rest my toolbox on the base to further stabilize the light pole. My light pole was 78 inches tall with a 48 inch adjustable arm with a light on the top of it. The adjustable arm could pivot 360 degrees on the bolt that mounted it to the pole and it was thumb screw adjustable along 2 joints with a pivoting spotlight at the end. I used truss construction for everything out of poplar to keep the lighting jig from being too heavy, and it was a game changing tool for me, when I was fixing up houses for the landlords who used to employ me. I hope I've inspired you. Sadly, my tools, pictures, and ability to work as a handyman were lost in a tornado 14 years ago, so I enjoy your woodworking journey vicariously. I have developed severe hand tremors, since then, so I can't safely build anymore, but I truly enjoy watching you refine your skills and teach others, Jason. Your videos bring back a lot of happy memories for me when I was a younger, able-bodied man, still learning the carpentry trade.
Turned out beautifully! Thanks for sharing!
Great Fluting tip! I always wondered about the spacing issue. You provided my answer. Thanks! Keep up the great content..
That is gorgeous bathroom furniture. Nice work.
Not related to the video. Sending you congratulations on being named for excellent tools in Woodshop news magazine. Your excellency to properly fabricated tools is bar none. Good on you sir!
One of my favorite builds of yours to date sir!
HAPPY NEW YEAR JASON, WIFE, & SUPERVISOR,
Another great build. I really like the look of the fluting, or whatever it is that you did to the fronts of the drawers and doors, it really does give it an upscale look. I especially like how it shows the wood grain off more and gives it depth...as though you're looking under the surface of the wood at the grain.
A rounded edge of a cabinet with the same fluting would look really good. You would have to make the fluting closer together so that when you bend it around the corner it would be similar in width to this, because I think it's the small distance that gives it the effect I mentioned above, of looking at the grain under the wood surface.
This idea would also make it a challenge for you because you would have to router both sides of the wood. One to get the treatment you used here, but also on the inside so you could accordian it around the corner, and you would need to leave enough wood in the center of the panel to keep the solid look of the wood. No peeking holes in the panel.
A good challenge that I know you could pull off because of your madness and crazy skills coming together like Dr. Frankenstein.
Everyone of your videos makes me more and more want to get into building cabinetry. I've always loved wood working on my own for my projects or for theatre props and builds, but I've never gotten into cabinetry as a profession. It would give me a lot of satisfaction and pleasure and I know I have the creative mind to do it. Hmmmm, maybe a 2025 personal resolution to try and see how it works out, and if it would be something possible to do it full time and work for myself as you do.
Thanks Jason!!!
Have an INCREDIBLE 2025.
Matt - Toronto, Canada
Looks good but i would have set those handles in with a forstner bit on the drill press. Two holes, zipp, zapp... Done? Though i suppose the flat surface underneath is a nice contrast as well.
The fluting came out really nice - great idea using the table saw as an indexer!!
Highest praise/compliments Jason! That'd have taken me weeks of pecking away at it an hour+/night, and endless 2nd-guessing... asks for help/tips from better hands - and you just dove-in! I'm soooo impressed.. and yes, too nice for a cabin's minor bathroom... but if think of it as a 'learning project', so can make next (similar) ones faster.. then even better! YOU amaze Jason. *btw: what is a "C+C"?
Love your wood work, and humor👍
Love the vanity, and walnut is one of my favorites. Ain't gonna lie though, I was a little disappointed you didn't build a cool reclaimed wood kitchen island for the cabin...maybe you can build a walnut hood for the stove. Good video, cool design!
This is one of my favorite projects you have done. Beautiful!
Looks like corduroy drawers. Beautiful
Great job! Looks really nice!
Fantastic design and build! Thanks!
Came out gorgeous! Only thing that seems off to me is the knobs on the under sink cabinet. I feel like they should have been centered in the middle for some reason. OCD CITY.
Making it look easy man. 🤘
I absolutely enjoy your sense of humor, oh and your wood working too😂
A very North Eastern process! 😉 Looks great.
Really enjoy New Bourbon Moth Video Day, aka, NBVD
Looks like Powermatic is a new sponsor. A serious upgrade from Grizzly. Very nice!
I guess you don’t watch your own woodworking friends' videos. 😂😂Keith says that the company recommends that you add glue to those clips. Anyway beautiful vanity as usual love your work ❤
Great looking project as usual.
Another fluting pattern might be a wave pattern your jig would help make. Details like this go on jewelry boxes or something small.
But on a large cabnit its a statement.
Very Cool I particularly liked the "Fluting ". You forgot one thing though, where is the secret bourbon storage? Lmao 🤣 🤣.
The vanity looks great!
Jason, did you look into how companies like PDS Debt work? They negotiate down your debt and then you pay them and they pay your debt holders. In the meantime your creditors report this on your credit report and completely ruin your credit, bankruptcy actually isn’t any worse of a solution.
Ha, I did this a year ago and used the exact same bit from whiteside. I made a fluted bench with fluted panels on the sides. About 200 flutes per bench…3 benches later…I should have used your technique.
I used a clamped track saw track, which moved and caused way more screw ups than yours lol
Wow! That vanity is a real humdinger! Please show us the vanity when the marble top is put on.
Those flutes were a great addition.
Hey mothy guy! I like this episode a lot. It just solved a problem for me. Thanks!
One of your prettiest pieces.
Just FYI…those are reeded panels, not fluted. Fluted panels are the exact opposite with the grooves being concave not arched. They are still beautiful and the whole vanity looks awesome!
I’m going to use that fluted look, thanks for the tutorial 👍
Beautiful work. 👍🙂
Beautiful build! Was it difficult to go back to the “old way” of cabinetmaking after the kitchen cabinet build? It was wild to see how efficient all of the process and tooling could be in a professional shop!
It came out looking very classy!!!
I see you adopted your buddies cabinet door method of making them long and cutting them after!
Wow! Simply, wow!
That looks great 😊.
I redid a bathroom in 69. Vanity price/radial arm saw about the same price. I bought the saw and build a solid oak vanity.
Funny how fast that bit went on backorder prior to video release! Ha but this is so timely. I'm literally about to start the fluted process myself and, once again, amazing video + information. Well done as always, Jason.
After years of wood work, I recall telling my algebra teacher that " I will NEVER need to use fractions!" Oh how smart we were as teenagers.😅😅
And then you try metric... and you never have to use fractions 😂
@daviddehaan111 imagine learning all those fractions instead of switching to metric like the rest the world 😂