Handsaw storage build

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  • Опубликовано: 14 фев 2019
  • A note on gloves: I’m wearing them in this build because my shop is cold. They make hand tool work clumsier, and if you use machines they are dangerous, as they can get caught in spinning things. Be careful okay.
    In this video I make a storage solution for my hand saws; a wall mounted shelf with slots for the saws, and a front edge to keep them from sliding out. The lumber is reclaimed pine and plywood. Because of the simple joinery in my design, I decided to put some curves on the shelf to make it more fun. I’m leaving it without a finish for now but I think I’m going to paint it when the temperature gets higher.
    I’m no professional and I don’t have anything to teach, this is just me, sharing my thoughts and my work. Join me as I’m learning fine woodworking!
    Follow me on Instagram for progress pictures of upcoming projects @gillisbjork

Комментарии • 42

  • @crossgrainwoodproductsltd9230
    @crossgrainwoodproductsltd9230 8 месяцев назад +1

    This is something I would want hanging in my shop. Esthetically beautiful and it addresses my concern of exposed blade teeth from holders that have the teeth facing forward.
    I must say, you are a talented free-hand drawer as well as a talented woodworker. The two go well together. Thank you for showing that by adding a little extra to a design, it adds functionality as well as beauty to the space you work in. When putting my shop together, I added flare, or my personality to each piece. It not only makes a cabinet or set of drawers last longer by using rabbits, dovetails, and thru dovetails to name a few, instead of butt joints. I hear woodworkers say all the time "well, it's just shop furniture, who cares what it looks like...". I disagree with that sentiment. Whether you are a hobbies or full-time woodworker, you are going to spend a fair amount of time in that space. Making it look nice will make you happier and more productive. But most importantly it allows you to practice joinery. You wouldn't want to practice on a nice piece of furniture your making for a client and have it fail or look horrible. No amount of sawdust/glue combo is going to hide your mistakes, especially if the joint fails. Plus, it is fun to learn new joinery methods. I have been woodworking since the age of 10, 50 years, and my grandfather taught me that.
    You don't have to use expensive woods, like walnut wood or Purple Heart to make your shop look beautiful. You can achieve the samething with plywood, pine, or repurposed woods. Plus, if you are making items to sell , what better showcase than your own shop!
    If a customer sees a nicely appointed workshop, it will reassure them that you will put as much effort into something for them. My family have been cabinet, furniture makers since 1647 when the first cabinet maker came to America to fulfill a dream to open his own store someday. I have the tools he brought over from Ireland in 1647. Everytime I walk into my small, humble shop, the first thing I see are those tools. And anytime I make something for a family member I use a logo that is just for family, is put on the item. This indicates that i used one or all of thos tools in the gift i have made for them. Now I am rambling. Excuse my indulgence.
    Thank you for being an inspiration to new and old woodworkers like myself. At 62, I love learning something new, or trying out a new design such as this humble saw rack.

    • @GillisBjork
      @GillisBjork  8 месяцев назад

      Thank you for the compliments and for sharing your story!

  • @rew6542
    @rew6542 Год назад

    like the way the cutting edges face the wall....good safety feature! Nice Job ....all the hand tool work keeps you warm!

  • @wildough
    @wildough 3 года назад +4

    Thanks for showing the design at the start. Everything else makes so much more sense when you can visualize what the end result will be.

  • @thebgp13airgunenthusiast99
    @thebgp13airgunenthusiast99 3 года назад +2

    Good on you mate, no fluff, no filler, just the business at hand.👍

  • @normpeplow3813
    @normpeplow3813 3 года назад +2

    Nice job. I enjoy watching you with hand tools. You have good knowledge of them. You Tube brought up your video for me to see.

  •  4 года назад +4

    A nice shelf for hand saws. The design for the tools is nice. Congratulations. good idea...

  • @hassanal-mosawi6049
    @hassanal-mosawi6049 5 лет назад +4

    Thanks for sharing that, well done

  • @rockeysingh1475
    @rockeysingh1475 Год назад

    Thanks Brother.

  • @pebblesthecat3625
    @pebblesthecat3625 4 года назад +2

    Great idea - I'm definitely going to have to make one of those for the accumulation of saws I seemed to have amassed, without even really trying to.

  • @pgoessnitzer
    @pgoessnitzer Год назад +1

    I like your design and nice work for the saw cradle. Just a note regarding your cold shop, my shop is quite cold too, I have to special store glues, paints, etc. so they don't freeze in the winter. Thanks for sharing!

  • @rockinjuliescott
    @rockinjuliescott 4 года назад +1

    Thanks for sharing this. I didn't want to use the self locking rubber balls for my hand saw storage, and was glad to find your video. Nice work! I love your "old school" way of doing things. I use scrapers, chisels and hand saws also.

    • @GillisBjork
      @GillisBjork  4 года назад

      Thank you, glad you liked it! I should say though, I've not been happy with this design over time, and I'm trying to come up with something different. This one can't quite take the weight of the saws, it has developed a permanent sag. I'm sure you could reinforce it to work better but I'm thinking about other designs too.

    • @jiroyamada1139
      @jiroyamada1139 4 года назад

      @@GillisBjork The horizontal plank's rigidity is severely weakened by all the cutout slots for the saws. It can be reinforced by adding a brace between each slot.

    • @GillisBjork
      @GillisBjork  4 года назад +1

      Exactly. I considered bracing it but I’d rather start over with a more solid design to begin with. Lessons learned!

    • @jiroyamada1139
      @jiroyamada1139 4 года назад

      ​@@GillisBjork Maybe two vertical planks, 3-4 inches tall, and the small gap between them is the slot for the saw?

    • @GillisBjork
      @GillisBjork  4 года назад

      @@jiroyamada1139 We think alike! That's precisely what I did for my clamp rack in my most recent video, works very well. Somewhat time consuming to build for clamps but one tends to have fewer saws so it might be even more suited there.

  • @capti443
    @capti443 3 года назад +2

    That is a wonderful demonstration that you don't need a bunch of expensive power tools to do good work in woodworking. Bravo!
    I am wondering though, in the cold shop that you have, if the glue did well in adhering to the wood? Many glues I am familiar with give a lower temperature limit of about 50 degrees Fahrenheit. Perhaps you could have brought it in the house to dry?

    • @GillisBjork
      @GillisBjork  3 года назад +2

      Thank you! I did have problems with the glue not bonding very strongly back then. I have heating now, I only turn it on while I'm in the shop, but it solved a lot of problems!

  • @joedance14
    @joedance14 4 года назад +1

    Very nice work! You obviously have a lot of skill and perhaps even a “gift”. To watch you work is inspiring. Thank-you.

  • @nobuckle40
    @nobuckle40 2 года назад

    Nice work!

  • @marshwood6945
    @marshwood6945 4 года назад

    Well done - both on the project and the video. I just stumbled onto your channel this morning while looking for plane till ideas and this is the third of your videos I’ve watched. Simply put - you deserve more views,!

  • @alangknowles
    @alangknowles Год назад

    Would be better with a thicker horizontal. The front lipping cannot add stiffness in the usual way because it has been cut through.
    It may sag and trap the blades.
    How does the glue dry if it's so cold?

  • @jmp116
    @jmp116 4 года назад

    So smart 👍

  • @Ruhrpott_Pony
    @Ruhrpott_Pony 3 года назад

    Hej Gillis, your work deserves the term handmade. You weren't completely exhausted after that extremly saw setting😬? Well done, nice craft. Greetings from Germany

  • @Samcraftcom
    @Samcraftcom 4 года назад

    Very smart!

  • @maja9534
    @maja9534 5 лет назад +1

    Applåder!!

  • @richardwilliams6055
    @richardwilliams6055 5 месяцев назад

    If the cuts look tight, is not best to make them a little bigger

  • @mikekelly7456
    @mikekelly7456 4 года назад +1

    I like your design better than any other I have seen, but how do you make slots for back saws thanks mike

    • @GillisBjork
      @GillisBjork  4 года назад +1

      Thank you! You would just have to make the slot a little wider at the front to accommodate the spine. Two short cuts parallell to the main slot and chisel out the waste.

  • @josephpotterf9459
    @josephpotterf9459 3 года назад

    I've never seen an orange handsaw like that before is it local to Sweden or made by Husqvarna? lol nice video thanks

    • @GillisBjork
      @GillisBjork  3 года назад

      I think it's a Bahco if I recall correctly, so Swedish made yes

  • @mikekelly7456
    @mikekelly7456 4 года назад

    ok thanks

  • @chrislord7035
    @chrislord7035 4 года назад

    Where did you get your chisels from ? I bought two like yours in Oslo in 1980 and they have been going fine since.

    • @GillisBjork
      @GillisBjork  4 года назад

      I guess that's the Bahco with yellow handles? They are my dad's old chisels, probably bought in the 80s as well. I have a half-inch and one inch. Generally not a fan of plastic but I reach for these two all the time

    • @chrislord7035
      @chrislord7035 4 года назад +2

      @@GillisBjork thank you for that, my two are 5/8 and 1 1/4 " and also the go to pair for hand work on the bench. Even though i have set of irwinMarples in a case. Glad you said Bahco as the markings have tarnished out. Very good steel and edge.

  • @joshuabenthimer356
    @joshuabenthimer356 2 года назад

    Nope