Huge Furniture Commission - 5 Handcrafted Pieces in American Black Cherry
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- Опубликовано: 23 июн 2024
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You gotta love people who post negative comments on how someones videos are made . Evidently someone needs to edit his own negativity..
Sheesh, your comments have been brutal lately. Will watch you build anything of any style personally. Your work is always timelessly beautiful
Loved the story at the end as well!
Thanks!
Well I love a long video jam packed full of really in depth information on the reasons why you do things and how you execute them. I hope you'll take no notice of those people who are so lazy and lacking in intellectual curiosity that they cannot be bothered to watch a video longer than ten minutes.
I thought your admission at the end there was very gracious and supremely honest, well done. I'm glad you did your best to accommodate that lovely couple's needs and that you appreciated how much there was to learn from them.
You did a great job there Andy, thoroughly enjoyed the video. God bless.👍🙏
Thank You!
Such a treat to watch you work. I really love how you kept coming back to the finished products, told us what you were going to do, and the showed us how you did it. Oh, and the pieces are beautiful!
Andy, you have this rare habillity to inspire me in a very profund way, and I thank you, so much, for that.
Being able to enjoy these videos where we can see your craftsmanship evolving, makes you great. But having you share how your craft also helps you develop has a human being, just makes you special.
Thank you for everything you give us in these videos. They are truly priceless.
I really appreciate this feedback!
Thanks for what you shared at the end Andy! It's encouraging to hear someone be humble and share something they maybe aren't too proud of in retrospect and a great reminder for me to "not judge a book by it's cover" as they say. Love how grateful you are for what you get to do!
The pieces look fantastic as well!
Beautiful pieces!
Love cherry wood. Smells great, and will darken over time.
I always become inspired to create after watching your videos. Thanks for creating and sharing with those of us who wish to emulate your level of craftsmanship and humility.
It is so beautiful ! You did a wonderful job !! TAKE CARE !!!
Loved it Andy. Felt old school Rawls.
Awesome work and thanks for sharing. Learn a lot from these videos.
Beautiful work. Thanks for sharing with us.
Right on Brother,great work,great story about the clients!
Incredible build!
Beautiful pieces of furniture,love the wood choice,customer should be very happy.continue on doing what you do best.👍👍👍😎😎😎
Great video Andy, as usual. I love that you show interesting techniques and talk about how and why you do things rather than just going through the build from start to finish, it's a lot more interesting to me to see you explain and cut joinery rathen than watch you mill lumber for 5min at the beginning. Love how it turned out too, well done.
Thanks!
Great video Andy. As someone who started their own small custom furniture business this year, Its really helpfully to hear your attitude and experiences. Great work as always
Thanks! Best of luck to you!
Great furniture built by a great man. Thank you Andy.
Art from Ohio
Great looking pieces, Andy!
Nice work. Thanks for sharing. Remember everyone, to live in the moment and take your time with every step.
Beautiful work, as always.
As usual- looks amazing.
As always beautiful work
Andy, your videos are not too long. It takes what it takes to build beautiful hand crafted furniture. You keep putting up videos, and I'll keep watching. As a craftsman myself, I appreciate your work. Thank you for mentioning our Creator and giving Him praise for your amazing craftsmanship.
The build video was really interesting and incredible!!!! 🤯❤️🙏🏽 I don’t know if you would ever have the need to make a jeweler’s workbench, that desk truly reminded me of one!!!!
Another great video Andy !
Perfect video. Thanks for the great content.
Beautiful suite of furniture. I loved the "fix" on the desk, although I probably would have used ebony$$$ or walnut...but that would ruin the classic style. Depends are where you want to end up. I enjoy watching your craftsmanship; it inspires me to try a little harder and build a little better. Always waiting for the next video. God bless.
Thanks for the kind words! Its great to hear my videos inspire you to get in the shop and build better.
What an inspiration man, great work, great video
Looks great!
Wow😮 They look awesome and love the details.
I wonder how you go about designing complicated furniture like this.
Amen. Beautiful work as well.
This piece features some very rock-solid joinery, Andy! Thanks for sharing your knowledge and skills with us.
Andy, just a thought: another option for making the dado jig, would have been your CNC rather than using your tablesaw. It would have also been somewhat safer. (Just an idea from another designer-maker who's now a converted hybrid-plus woodworker).
That was a great idea you came up with for raising the height of the desk after it was completed!
Great video Andy! I truly enjoy your craftsmanship and attention to detail. It’s not the mistakes that make a true master, but knowing how to correct them. I typically put your videos on in the back ground while I’m working in the wood shop, but this one I couldn’t put down! Great build as always, and thank you for your honesty at the end of the video.
We all run into clients/jobs/commissions like that. Where we dismiss the importance of other people. Jesus never did that, and it should be a reminder to all of us to not dismiss the smallest, or little jobs/requests. Because sometimes that’s where we have the most growth.
Keep it up brother!
I really appreciate it!!
Always look forward to your videos Andy. Beautiful work. Even if the older couple don't watch, hopefully whoever they eventually hand these peices down to appreciates the amount of effort that went into them and to film it for your audience. Do you still put your stamps on the pieces?
Yes, I brand and date every piece I build
Mr. Rawls- thanks again for an awesome video and walking through the tips and tricks for this gorgeous group of furniture. Curious- I heard you mention that you did some seal coating w/ Z SealCoat. What was the remainder of your finishing regimen? Asking because I am currently working on a cherry cabinet and love the way yours turned out. Thanks again!
I really enjoyed this video. And loved what you said at the end. God bless you brother!
Thanks Scott!!
@@AndyRawls You're welcome!
Wow, beautiful.
nice work
They came out great. The only thing i'd change, is i'd add a HDPE foot plate so the wood's off the floor. They always end up chipping. Rarely do the owners have the presence of mind to raise the furniture and put feet caps when moving them.
It helps also to chamfer the bottom of table and chair legs, it makes it less difficult for the grain to catch and split.
speaking of sketchy dados about 13 years ago I was doing the exact same thing except it was a thinner board with a wider dado, that thing grabbed and flew to the back of the room hit the cement wall and bounce back right at me busting my finger open. happened in a split second. Never underestimate the power of those blades once they grab into that wood. Also your tenons were tight because it was visibly noticeable you could see a gap under the end of the rails as they were going over the dado blade. just needed some downward pressure by the blade.
Thanks for sharing that. This does happen alot when cutting tenons on the table saw, if you don't keep that downward pressure the tenon grows!
22:08 Always taste your glue to make sure it's still OK to use on wood.
I want to start a builtin for our dining room. Mostly to hold books. Lots of books. I will be using frame and panel, like you did, with maple as it will be cheaper than ply! For the shelves, did you just attach them at the four corners on the stiles? I wasn't sure if I should make my side panels flush on the inside for more shelf support or just attach to the stiles.
I added a strip of solid cherry on the inside to flush it up with the legs.
That Oliver morticer has a very similar peddle layout to my old Wadkin LM. Maybe I'm just short, but I find the top position is too high to be comfortable for me. I've just made a little 4" high duckboard (sorry, not sure if that is an English term that doesn't translate well to the US) and that has made it infinitely more comfortable to use and far less tiring. Not sure if that helps at all.
Great suggestions thanks!
@@AndyRawls no worries, I always look forward to and enjoy your uploads. I have no idea how you find the time to do them as well as getting work done. I try and fail to keep a regular upload schedule, between family life and trying to keep clients happy I just can't seem to find the time. 🤷🏻♂️ 👍
Well played making that dado jig with the dado stack.
Btw: do you have to square you're slider fence every time you Lock it in?
Yes I square it pretty much every time
So annoying. SawStop needs to fix that issue.
W/O getting into the pricing issue because as a contractor I know it’s changes somewhat from here to there ? However; can I ask about how long it took you? I do finish carpentry and vanities, built- ins ect? I am looking at that thinking a minimum of 3/4 months?
If he used rough sawn lumber and not s4s I’d add another week on. And I suspect he doesn’t use s4s.
It took roughly 195 shop hours to build all 5 pieces.
I use rough sawn but I have an S4S in my shop so I can mill rough lumber fast
19:43 heh, happens to everyone. :)
I have done the tenons on a table saw for decades without using a bump block. I don't understand the advantage of the block since there is nothing that can get pinched and fly back. I always just set the fence to the length of the tenon. Actually, that way it doesn't matter if the end is slightly off square. What is the advantage of clamping a block to the fence?
Let’s say your fence is slightly out of square, it can affect the cut, and potentially cause kickback if the fence is pushing inward at the back of it. With a block set in one place, it eliminates all these issues, and helps repeatability.
@@SamWanamaker1valid points I suppose. I have never had that happen. I check my fence quite often. Probably why I haven't had it happen. I do wonder if any one has ever had the material move on them after it leaves the bump block. Move one way and the tenon is cut too short, move the other way it could be cut too long.
I don't think there is really any advantage, both ways work just fine. I just feel more comfortable staying clear of the fence some.
What happened with the redhead bloke ???
If I hear the word mortise one more time 😂
Currency is something we humans made up 🙄🤭 but the real value of wealth was experiencing that feeling the moment you first stepped into their apartment.
Since robert left your videos have gone to the $#!t. They are so broken up and all over the place. It's unbearable to watch and frankly too long and boring.
Woodwork is cool. I love watching awesome projects but you don't need 40+ minutes of nonstop talking, let the project speak for itself.
Piss off and let’s see your work and tax returns at the end of the year! And your love for Andy’s employees is none of our concern! Oh ? God Bless you
Opinions are like you know what.
Bye, felicia...
Wow
Ya know you can always stop watching them mister perfect. I am sure there isn't one AR fan that would miss you.
I would love to make pieces like these but wood gets so expensive in large amount let alone for different species🥲