Dear Paul, I know there is a great possibility you won't see my tiny text in the huge list of comments and thanks you'll receive (as each time you publish anything, the community is so unequivocally happy and grateful), but I just wanted to tell you that each time I'm listening to your videos, I feel so warm inside like when I was listening to my grand-pa telling me the story of each board he kept in his workshop, near Orleans, in France. Each time I hear your quiet and nice ton of voice, it's so much more than just education for me. It's like a free trip to the nicest little moments of my childhood (and I'm 54' !).
WELL, HERE I AM READING YOUR FEEDBACK AND FEELING GRATEFUL BECAUSE I ALWAYS WORRY AFTER EVERY VIDEO WE MAKE THAT I MAY FALL SHORT OFM INSPIRING EVERYONE. THANK YOU.
Ditto. I could compound on your comment, but other than location you've pretty much said it. (And I'm 47 and lost my woodworking grandpa at 14 years of age) wish I had had more time with him to learn more.
I found the answer to my problem with different grain directions in your video. I feel deprived not having been taught these skills earlier in my life. Thank you all the more.
As someone who's now starting to use hand tools for small projects, this is the most helpful video I've watched and explains the source of my frustrations. Thank you for making this.
i think i wanna cry... i read a books and saw plenty videos about understanding grain and took nothing. And then boom you upload this video, and explain very briefly and clear. feels like i want to grab my wood now but it's midnight here. Thank you Mr. Sellers,
I was thinking to myself today that I needed to get a better understanding of how to read the grain to improve my woodworking, and tonight, here's a brilliant and concise video. Thank you so much!
Ladies and gentleman witness a true teacher in action. Awesome Paul, been a huge fan for years. There are a handful of videos that make it clear how passionate you feel about this craft, this is one of those videos.
I could listen to Paul talking about wood for hours and hours. Could you make this a series going forward? I love the tutorials too, but all the theory and knowledge, behind the materails and the tools, is really interesting as well. Thank you for sharing this!
Thanks Paul. You remind me of my Dad. He trained as a joiner in Liverpool in the fourties. He’s not with us anymore but you remind me a lot of him. We’ve been in Canada for almost 51 years now.
Fascinating thing about knots paul didnt realise the wood was still hard as it left the knot just started woodcarving as a hobby ,wood always surprises you lovely vids much appreciated
I yet say that "As the Grain Turns" is a great name for a woodworking channel/blog/whatever. I got this thought when I first started to understand grain and fine woodworking. Thanks Paul, I refer folks to your work all the time.
Ty for helping me learn about direction of grain and tree growth. New to the hobby and learned more in this video than have in any other video I’ve watched so far. Your well spoken and an easy listen. Ty again
I wish I would have seen this video 25 years ago. It would have saved me a lot of hard lessons over the years. This is a great video that even after 35 years of woodworking gave me a couple of tips I had not learned or thought of yet. Thanks for the awesome teachings.
You are brilliant and a genuine GIFT to the global woodworking community! Thanks very much for your continued teaching, as you bless us with your excellent woodworking wisdom.
Just spotted your vid after fighting a piece of oak, I did woodwork at school sixty years ago but wood was prepped, we are never too old to learn. Nice one.
Paul, you are amazing. I am just getting into woodwork, restoring some basic tools inherited from my stepfather (an old Scotsman who spent decades in construction) and learning the very basics. Your style, your explanation of every step and the reasoning behind it, puts you as truly a Master. Not only of your craft, but of how to instruct others and pass along your skills. Thank you so very very much!!
Wow, I am so amazed by your video. You have a way to bring out the true fundamentals of teaching about wood. You explained the most simplest element of wood working's DNA in a simple way. Thank you!
Different grains even within the same lot of wood is what keeps life interesting! If it were all the same, I would wonder if we would be bored to tears ... or working with MDF? Thank you for posting this video, I never cease to learn something new watching Mr. Sellers.
Thank your Paul for this information. I am new to planing wood by hand. I knew not to go against the grain but not about dealing with knots or difficult grain. Thanks again.
Paul I really enjoy and learn so much when you take the time to both show how to do something and the why you did it the way you did. I’m in my seventies and I appreciate the skill and knowledge you bring into your instruction. It truly shows a master of his craft and his desire to pass it on to other generations. Thank you for your gentile easy approach while you are doing processes and explaining. I understand you lived around the Kerrville, Texas area while I lived in Boerne, Texas I would have truly enjoyed sitting under your instruction as I do now.
AS always Paul Sellers instruction and presentation are as close to perfect as possible! He is a master of wood and instruction. I've learned much over the years from this man. Thank you from a student from Grapevine, Texas.
Thank you, Paul! Great video! This is exactly the complete answer to the question I asked you under the video on making a workbench. The subject here is one of the most difficult issues for a beginner woodworker.
Just getting into woodworking, and Paul you are a God send! Any topic I think of, you have it covered. I like your relaxed approach to your teachings and makes me feel confident in taking on woodworking. Thanks for these vids, I very much appreciate you parting your knowledge to others like myself.
Mr. Paul your videos are a real class of Woodworking, with a simple, perfect didactics and without arrogant . Thank you very much for your teaching, in all of your videos I learn a lot from this sublime Woodworking Art. This subject is very interesting. I wish much success and health. A big hug from Brazil. Said Choucair
A great presentation and explanation on how to read wood grain growth direction. Using the planes reinforced what you explained was well done. Absolutely look forward to checking out more of your videos. Love your easy way of speaking too. Definitely informative, thank you
This is something that any observant student of woodworking will understand after working a plane for the first time. It is simple to observe, and I have known these things for over 30 years, never gave it a second thought.
if my woodshop teacher taught like this I may actually have been interested. Looking feeling understanding rather than just hammering pieces of wood together with nails.
Wood anatomy is a an interesting topic, and that's what we're dealing with when speaking of "grain," the gross anatomy of the tree's cellular structure when exposed on a planar surface, either roughly (sawn) or smoothly (planed). In general, the more bland the better the working properties, but so much of the beauty of wood is the endless variety of irregularities, all of which indicate something going on in the way the tree grew this material that we call "wood."
Fantastic and very educational/informative. My great grand parents were all carpenters and in 18/1700s they didn't have the tools we have and their items were masterpieces and known in their small town in Scotland. UK. I was a police officer now retired and repairing things at mums and having to learn all the things I should of paid attention to at school. Refurbishing a 100yr old Pew and wanted to know what my wood i am working with.
Thank you so very much for this video. As is the case with most of your videos, the learning experience is as clear as a bell. Through my own experience, I've learned a lot about this very topic, but have never heard it explained so well. Watching this also helps me to realize that I need to pay more attention to the wood when working a piece. I've made many mistakes, (tore up some really nice pieces of wood) and will make more, but with each learning curve rounded, I can only hope to make less and less mistakes. Always look forward to watching your videos and learning more each time.
I’m starting in this beautiful work and with you I feel I understood how noble and pure is this material. Thank you, perfectly explained and very productive!
I am just new into wood work and that was what i learned working on a piece of scrap pine. You are very generous for sharing your experience and knowledge :) i wish i had watched you before i chipped my planes blade :) lucky for me i started cheap but your video trully follows the Japanese adage.."you must first understand that wood comes from the forest and not the lumberyard" :)
really, really useful. I've spent a ridiculously large number of hours watching your videos over the last couple of weeks. I only found you because I was having trouble carving a flippin' spoon. I've spent 2 days sharpening my chisels, will sharpen my old planes tomorrow, and I plan to make your workbench as my first major project. Spoons? Pah.
Brilliant explanation. Thank you! I have been wrestling with a piece of ash. Your explanation of looking at the layering along the sides that meant I could identify where the grain changed half way along the stock.
Thank You Paul very educational enjoyed learning from you and your videos fairly new to hand tools but has changed the whole way of woodworking for me and I just want to say thank you.
Thank you so much!! That was my first wood video to ever watch, and I found it so interesting and informative about the tree growth, the knots, the grain... I couldn't stop :). Aloha!
Thank You for this insight! Was one of the things I struggled with understanding when building the workbench. Appreciate the tip on backing off on the plane depth when you encounter this.
Fundamental wood philosophy, well explained and extremely important. Perhaps, if Paul can elaborate even in more details due to the significance of understanding the wood. Well done and appreciate it more. Thank you.
Thank you very much for such an educational videos that you do! I wait for them eagerly every time they come out. Another nice feature is the caption on the button of the screen. But sometimes caption covers what you are showing in this video and it is not seen at all.
For those of you who want to become intimately familiar with wood grain growth and effects, get yourself a piece of pine, cut it in the general shape of a heart with a coping saw, bandsaw, or jigsaw, get a very sharp pocket knife, and finish carve the heart into a nice carved object. You'll learn more in an hour than you can learn from weeks watching videos or reading books.
Your videos are so very much appreciated Paul! I wonder if anyone can tell me how I might plane a large benchtop I'm building without a lot of tear out. It's laminated Doug Fir and I'm planing the edge grains, (which are the table top and bottom), and I'm having horrible tear out.
Dear Paul, I know there is a great possibility you won't see my tiny text in the huge list of comments and thanks you'll receive (as each time you publish anything, the community is so unequivocally happy and grateful), but I just wanted to tell you that each time I'm listening to your videos, I feel so warm inside like when I was listening to my grand-pa telling me the story of each board he kept in his workshop, near Orleans, in France. Each time I hear your quiet and nice ton of voice, it's so much more than just education for me. It's like a free trip to the nicest little moments of my childhood (and I'm 54' !).
WELL, HERE I AM READING YOUR FEEDBACK AND FEELING GRATEFUL BECAUSE I ALWAYS WORRY AFTER EVERY VIDEO WE MAKE THAT I MAY FALL SHORT OFM INSPIRING EVERYONE. THANK YOU.
Ditto. I could compound on your comment, but other than location you've pretty much said it. (And I'm 47 and lost my woodworking grandpa at 14 years of age) wish I had had more time with him to learn more.
I wish I had a woodworking grandpa or any of my family! 😅
@@Paul.Sellers Never
I found the answer to my problem with different grain directions in your video. I feel deprived not having been taught these skills earlier in my life. Thank you all the more.
As someone who's now starting to use hand tools for small projects, this is the most helpful video I've watched and explains the source of my frustrations. Thank you for making this.
i think i wanna cry...
i read a books and saw plenty videos about understanding grain and took nothing. And then boom you upload this video, and explain very briefly and clear. feels like i want to grab my wood now but it's midnight here.
Thank you Mr. Sellers,
Trully agree here..first time wood became understandable to me :)
I was thinking to myself today that I needed to get a better understanding of how to read the grain to improve my woodworking, and tonight, here's a brilliant and concise video. Thank you so much!
A treat for all to have this man share his knowledge with us
Ladies and gentleman witness a true teacher in action. Awesome Paul, been a huge fan for years. There are a handful of videos that make it clear how passionate you feel about this craft, this is one of those videos.
The Rebate Plane video is another one of those videos. Like watchin a kid in a candy store.
I have watched many videos trying to better understand how to read the grain and how to deal with it. This is a great video! Thank you Paul!
I could listen to Paul talking about wood for hours and hours. Could you make this a series going forward? I love the tutorials too, but all the theory and knowledge, behind the materails and the tools, is really interesting as well. Thank you for sharing this!
Hi Jens. This is a great idea. I’ll talk to the team to see if this is something we can put on the schedule.
Thanks Paul. You remind me of my Dad. He trained as a joiner in Liverpool in the fourties. He’s not with us anymore but you remind me a lot of him. We’ve been in Canada for almost 51 years now.
Fascinating thing about knots paul didnt realise the wood was still hard as it left the knot just started woodcarving as a hobby ,wood always surprises you lovely vids much appreciated
I yet say that "As the Grain Turns" is a great name for a woodworking channel/blog/whatever. I got this thought when I first started to understand grain and fine woodworking. Thanks Paul, I refer folks to your work all the time.
Ty for helping me learn about direction of grain and tree growth. New to the hobby and learned more in this video than have in any other video I’ve watched so far. Your well spoken and an easy listen. Ty again
I wish I would have seen this video 25 years ago. It would have saved me a lot of hard lessons over the years. This is a great video that even after 35 years of woodworking gave me a couple of tips I had not learned or thought of yet. Thanks for the awesome teachings.
I love the way you explain things with such clarity and simplicity.
It a true mark of a person that has really understood the subject by them self. Both theoretically and practically.
someday when i have children, these will be their bedtime stories
Thank you for sharing your expertise with us Paul. You are a true gentleman.
You are brilliant and a genuine GIFT to the global woodworking community! Thanks very much for your continued teaching, as you bless us with your excellent woodworking wisdom.
Thank you! Brilliant and easy to understand.
Just spotted your vid after fighting a piece of oak, I did woodwork at school sixty years ago but wood was prepped, we are never too old to learn. Nice one.
Paul, you are amazing. I am just getting into woodwork, restoring some basic tools inherited from my stepfather (an old Scotsman who spent decades in construction) and learning the very basics. Your style, your explanation of every step and the reasoning behind it, puts you as truly a Master. Not only of your craft, but of how to instruct others and pass along your skills. Thank you so very very much!!
Luthier's apprentice here ! Your channel is very helpful thank you so much for sharing knowledge
A true master of his craft. Beautiful explanations!
As a novice woodworker I struggle with this all the time. Great explanation! Love the scraper tip too
Mr Seller, just one word: Awesome! Thank you for giving me more insight.
Wow, I am so amazed by your video. You have a way to bring out the true fundamentals of teaching about wood. You explained the most simplest element of wood working's DNA in a simple way. Thank you!
Different grains even within the same lot of wood is what keeps life interesting! If it were all the same, I would wonder if we would be bored to tears ... or working with MDF? Thank you for posting this video, I never cease to learn something new watching Mr. Sellers.
Thank your Paul for this information. I am new to planing wood
by hand. I knew not to go against the grain but not about dealing
with knots or difficult grain. Thanks again.
Paul I really enjoy and learn so much when you take the time to both show how to do something and the why you did it the way you did. I’m in my seventies and I appreciate the skill and knowledge you bring into your instruction. It truly shows a master of his craft and his desire to pass it on to other generations. Thank you for your gentile easy approach while you are doing processes and explaining. I understand you lived around the Kerrville, Texas area while I lived in Boerne, Texas I would have truly enjoyed sitting under your instruction as I do now.
AS always Paul Sellers instruction and presentation are as close to perfect as possible! He is a master of wood and instruction. I've learned much over the years from this man. Thank you from a student from Grapevine, Texas.
Very useful...most useful I have seen on reading grain and how we can use that information to bring a smile...
Thank you, Paul! Great video! This is exactly the complete answer to the question I asked you under the video on making a workbench. The subject here is one of the most difficult issues for a beginner woodworker.
As always, a master at work and presented as world class craftsman to his apprentice.
Very good video Paul, I always have trouble reading the grain, but the way you explained it makes so much more sense. Thanks
Mr. Sellers is a great instructor.
Just getting into woodworking, and Paul you are a God send! Any topic I think of, you have it covered. I like your relaxed approach to your teachings and makes me feel confident in taking on woodworking. Thanks for these vids, I very much appreciate you parting your knowledge to others like myself.
Thank you.That was very informative. I like your analogy of water ripples and looking into the wood.
Mr. Paul your videos are a real class of Woodworking, with a simple, perfect didactics and without arrogant . Thank you very much for your teaching, in all of your videos I learn a lot from this sublime Woodworking Art. This subject is very interesting. I wish much success and health. A big hug from Brazil. Said Choucair
I have often had this problem and found no good explanation until now. Thank you Paul.
A great presentation and explanation on how to read wood grain growth direction. Using the planes reinforced what you explained was well done. Absolutely look forward to checking out more of your videos. Love your easy way of speaking too. Definitely informative, thank you
I'm a new woodworker, your videos are inspirational thank you.
This is something that any observant student of woodworking will understand after working a plane for the first time. It is simple to observe, and I have known these things for over 30 years, never gave it a second thought.
if my woodshop teacher taught like this I may actually have been interested. Looking feeling understanding rather than just hammering pieces of wood together with nails.
Wood anatomy is a an interesting topic, and that's what we're dealing with when speaking of "grain," the gross anatomy of the tree's cellular structure when exposed on a planar surface, either roughly (sawn) or smoothly (planed). In general, the more bland the better the working properties, but so much of the beauty of wood is the endless variety of irregularities, all of which indicate something going on in the way the tree grew this material that we call "wood."
Fantastic and very educational/informative. My great grand parents were all carpenters and in 18/1700s they didn't have the tools we have and their items were masterpieces and known in their small town in Scotland. UK.
I was a police officer now retired and repairing things at mums and having to learn all the things I should of paid attention to at school. Refurbishing a 100yr old Pew and wanted to know what my wood i am working with.
Thank you so very much for this video. As is the case with most of your videos, the learning experience is as clear as a bell. Through my own experience, I've learned a lot about this very topic, but have never heard it explained so well. Watching this also helps me to realize that I need to pay more attention to the wood when working a piece. I've made many mistakes, (tore up some really nice pieces of wood) and will make more, but with each learning curve rounded, I can only hope to make less and less mistakes. Always look forward to watching your videos and learning more each time.
I’m starting in this beautiful work and with you I feel I understood how noble and pure is this material. Thank you, perfectly explained and very productive!
I am just new into wood work and that was what i learned working on a piece of scrap pine. You are very generous for sharing your experience and knowledge :) i wish i had watched you before i chipped my planes blade :) lucky for me i started cheap but your video trully follows the Japanese adage.."you must first understand that wood comes from the forest and not the lumberyard" :)
really, really useful. I've spent a ridiculously large number of hours watching your videos over the last couple of weeks. I only found you because I was having trouble carving a flippin' spoon. I've spent 2 days sharpening my chisels, will sharpen my old planes tomorrow, and I plan to make your workbench as my first major project. Spoons? Pah.
You are making me smarter about wood. Thank you.
You Sir are a Brilliant teacher!I learned so much from this video alone Thank you for your time and effort in putting this video out!
Brilliant explanation. Thank you! I have been wrestling with a piece of ash. Your explanation of looking at the layering along the sides that meant I could identify where the grain changed half way along the stock.
I really appreciate your great insights and teaching!
I wish I would’ve seen this video years ago. It summed up a lot of the mistakes I’ve been making with reading the grains.
Thank You Paul very educational enjoyed learning from you and your videos fairly new to hand tools but has changed the whole way of woodworking for me and I just want to say thank you.
I needed this video a week ago BEFORE I started carving a paddle... 😮😂 Thank you Paul!
love the videos you make I learn so much from you about wood and the passion you have for it.Thanks, paul and I hope you had an awesome birthday.
Thank you so much!! That was my first wood video to ever watch, and I found it so interesting and informative about the tree growth, the knots, the grain... I couldn't stop :). Aloha!
Thank You for this insight! Was one of the things I struggled with understanding when building the workbench. Appreciate the tip on backing off on the plane depth when you encounter this.
You are a great teacher Paul. Thank you!
Paul, thank you for this wonderful lesson. You are such a Treasure.
The last part, its like ripples in a river. MY GOD what a great comparison. So simple and easy to understand. Thank you PS
I always think of a mackerel sky with curly wood
Your videos are wonderfully relaxing and so completely motivating ...great way to exemplify woodworking
Every day is a school day. I have always thought the small ring after the knot was the highest not the lowest. Thanks Paul.
Somehow you make everything so easy to understand for anyone... Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us all :)
wow.... I' have always never really understood wood grain. This video helps a lot.
Thank you for sharing with us. Your passion for wood and teaching show.
This is just from another world! Thanks for sharing this
Excellent explanation as usual, clear and concise, many thanks for that.
Fundamental wood philosophy, well explained and extremely important. Perhaps, if Paul can elaborate even in more details due to the significance of understanding the wood. Well done and appreciate it more. Thank you.
Boom! All of a sudden I start to get it. Thank you.
Im having trouble planing right now and this explains why. Thank you!
Vital information Paul. I'm going out on a limb here and guessing the thumbs down guys don't use hand tools or have someone else do their work.
nice! i saw the sliding dovetail socket for the upcoming coat rack on that piece of pine. can't wait to do that project.
Fabulous. Thank you so much for your incredible knowledge so wonderfully shared.
A true Master teacher!!!! thank you!!
I'll have to watch a few times, lots of good stuff
This was very well done. Thank you paul
Really valuable knowledge thank you for sharing it with us.
Great help for rookie woodworkers. Thanks!
Great explanation from a great Master
Excellent explanation and examples. Thanks for that!
Thank you very much for such an educational videos that you do! I wait for them eagerly every time they come out. Another nice feature is the caption on the button of the screen. But sometimes caption covers what you are showing in this video and it is not seen at all.
Marvelous ! I'm trying to learn about grain direction etc thanks for sharing
So valuable! Gotta love this man. Thank you.
A great and useful video as always. Thanks!
You're the Bob Ross of woodworking.
Master Teacher thanks for sharing your knowledge Keep going Paul !
Very informative video, thanks very much for helping me understand this.
Great explanation,
I'm enjoying your Essential woodworking book that I got for Christmas 😁
you make it so easy to understand Thank you!
This was the video that i needed. Thanks master
Fascinating presentation. Thank you.
Thanks, this will surely save me some time.
Thank you for sharing, this is so useful knowledge.
For those of you who want to become intimately familiar with wood grain growth and effects, get yourself a piece of pine, cut it in the general shape of a heart with a coping saw, bandsaw, or jigsaw, get a very sharp pocket knife, and finish carve the heart into a nice carved object. You'll learn more in an hour than you can learn from weeks watching videos or reading books.
Very educational as usual. Thanks
Brilliant information as usual Paul. Any chance you could do a video showing how to sharpen and use a cabinet scraper ?
Your videos are so very much appreciated Paul! I wonder if anyone can tell me how I might plane a large benchtop I'm building without a lot of tear out. It's laminated Doug Fir and I'm planing the edge grains, (which are the table top and bottom), and I'm having horrible tear out.
Clear and brilliant! Bravo!
brilliant Info! Watching your videos has helped me sleep better, thank you..None of this red bull woodworking...