Peter Gillock I was wondering about that, but it came together so well anyway. He's crazy good. And enough glue contact with that centre piece that I can't imagine it'll ever come apart.
Sweet jesus....this is intense. Even if I had a full wood shop I dont think I could pull this kind of quality off. Well done man. Good use of those kickass tools.
I am from Hungary, Budapest. Being a carpenter I really enjoy to watch your projects. For smaller pieces of venir we sometimes use the white glue, and then iron it (to add heat) so it dries fast. For bigger surfaces or curved we also use contact glue. What we do very different is the finishing. We always disassamble the piece and spray the varnish, or the paint on MDF one by one. Just been to NZ, enjoyed a lot!
What a nice piece of furniture. Great job! I noticed the frame is cantilevered from the base, and they are attached at a slim section by glue and a few screws. I hope that kind of attachment will be enough to sustain the stress of the frame's weight over time. Cheers!
+Breno Luna cheers . Yea I had thought about this. The cube frame is very rigid so is holding itself together and centre over the plinth. Meaning it can't roll off the plinth
Just re viewed this one for some bed design ideas. Was suprised i didnt notice the clever ply core before, that makes the solid loose tenons in the corners so easy to insert and fasten. I might steal that idea. Did you fix the headboard in place by any means or do you rely on its weight? - no upward force anyways with regular use patterns :)
Great job as always. Looks like it went together pretty quick. Bet you made a nice profit. Those Fastcap screw covers are amazing. They probably look better than real hardwood plugs and fraction of the time?
If you had assembled the posts in two halves then dominos would have slotted together. Anyhow I think it's plenty strong how you did it and it looks amazing dude!
I'm looking at building a piece similar to this and was going to use solid wood or, potentially LVLs, but I quite like the idea of (almost) veneering the plywood with the nicer wood. What sort of load capacity would this have on the upper parts of the frame? E.g., if a heavy kid were to grab hold of one of those cross members, would it hold weight? I'm guessing it wouldn't, but engineering isn't my expertise. I could use physical hardware (i.e., metal L brackets to add support), but I'm wondering if there's a better / strong manner in which to build this? Thanks for the great videos!
Thanks for the reply! Given this, I'm thinking I could make the veneer timber thinner and the plywood core larger. I could also design the vertices to transfer the load differently - e.g., only the longer members need higher load bearing capacity for me (of 200-300kg dead-weight) - so, I could go with a half-lap joints on the longer edges and then if need be reinforced all edges with steel brackets. This as an option definitely makes it viable for using nicer hardwoods, whilst keeping costs down. I'd just have to be careful of whether the plywood is in compression or tension. So, I probably would want mainly the grain going ||| relative to the floor, with only some going perpendicular to the floor (at least, that's what I recall plywood to be strongest in)
+TheGarageEngineer it's a Makita hammer/pencil holder. I removed the hammer loop and added a rear earth magnet for my steel rule. I want to get it made in leather but haven't had any luck finding someone to do it.
You probably dont care but if you guys are stoned like me during the covid times then you can stream pretty much all of the new series on Instaflixxer. I've been streaming with my girlfriend these days xD
Lovely work as usual. No criticism, just a question: Why did you decide not to use 3x3 solid posts? In U.K. would have been way more time/cost efficient. It's a bed so in a relatively dry and stable environment. Ps thanks for including your small work-a-day tips and errors. Let's me know you're human! All the best!
+Steven SDbuild couple of reasons. Timber unless rift sawn generally looms very different all for sides. When wrapped around a post I can get continuous grain. Also while a bedroom is usually stable humidity wise beds often receive a lot of mid day sun here in nz the sun is particularly fierce and would cause solid timber to twist warp over time. Plus just thought it would be fun to do it this way.
hi Joey, just a question, why didn't you use a mitre lock cutter on your powerful router table? I think it would have work pretty well considering that walnut can easily be milled. Or was it because you absolutely needed a solid plywood core?
if it is the correct set up that's causing the problem: professional mitre lock bit are supplied with a table that indicates the correct bit height and dept (at the router table) for any given thickness of your milled parts. it only took me somewhat 10 minutes to get it set up correctly. I got one from CMT whose national distributor was so kind to show these tables online.
I love this bed! I recently bought a bunch of large power tools and decided to remodel my own house, learning everything as I go. Now, I would like to get into furniture making. Any suggestions or advice?
Hi pal, would it have worked to attach two dominoed mitre boards and then those two right angled/"L"-shaped lengths (which would equate respectively to a face-on angle) onto each of them, making every corner dominoed?
Hi man, beautiful wood. What was wrong by connecting two halfs stright to each other and to reach similar size.. Sure maybe the weight was heigher, and the shape was slight different but you was surely saving time and money no ?
If the customer is shifting to a different house, can they disassemble the bed and reassemble? If they can, after reassembling the bed, will the screw hold it tight???
Its' been mentioned below about two halves of the post. the other thought is to use Biscuits which are a bit more forgiving for that situation, (it worked for me). Shame you did not show the cable trick on the veneer last week. I did a small job a few days ago, using the normal Dowel method but it came out of alignment while removing one of the dowels and did not stick straight. 'Bugger' no payment for that job.
@@prettyprudent5779 email me (from website) with details of what you want. I then design and price your piece custom to you. Or let me know something I have already made and I can let you know pricing pretty easily.
+Peter Compton almost. It's actually ready just need sign off. Then possibly some modification before we actually move in if you know what I mean. ....
And i have 7 to go🙄😁 never watch your vids when the wife is near... oe aaa i like that, is that your neck project?....😅 Ps scaffolding boards make a perfect floor , juist big click laminate. 283m2 of floor done in a month..only problem is my back hurts now.. 😆
You could assemble those posts in two halves, that way the dominos could be used on all four pieces. Amazing job though.
Peter Gillock I was wondering about that, but it came together so well anyway. He's crazy good. And enough glue contact with that centre piece that I can't imagine it'll ever come apart.
I just love to watch you work. Amazing craftmanship. Really inspiring.
Walnut wood is really beautiful, it's my personal favorite type of wood, everything about walnut is perfect especially the color.
Sweet jesus....this is intense. Even if I had a full wood shop I dont think I could pull this kind of quality off. Well done man. Good use of those kickass tools.
+wingnut0837 cheers
Beautiful job Joey! I really like how the head board slides on, similar to how your workbench went together.Keep up the great work
+Carpenter One3 thanks!
Those off cuts would make nice costers ☺
Fantastic project Joey. Stunning work. Keen to stop by your workshop next time I’m in Auckland.
+Matt Williams sweet
Another magnificent work!
I hope it's starting to get warmer in NZ!
Love from Florida :)
+Marshall Emmett yea getting nice now, cheers
Yay ! Another video ! Loving your work Joey - keep it up !
love the look of walnut..awesome job man keep it up
Awesome build! Love when I see a new video of yours popping up on the feed
+KnottyDogWoodshop cheers man
Beautiful work
Incredible design and craftsmanship! Hope they never move, taking that bed apart won’t be fun.
Love the put together with the wrong stringer . . . happens a lot. I have the same window location in our bedroom . . . great video
Всегда приятно смотреть как ты работаешь. Лейк Однозначно!!!!
Спасибо !
I am from Hungary, Budapest. Being a carpenter I really enjoy to watch your projects.
For smaller pieces of venir we sometimes use the white glue, and then iron it (to add heat) so it dries fast. For bigger surfaces or curved we also use contact glue.
What we do very different is the finishing. We always disassamble the piece and spray the varnish, or the paint on MDF one by one.
Just been to NZ, enjoyed a lot!
+fecundus balbus cheers, yes would have been better to take apart for finish. Only had no room at the to spread it out due to other jobs
Another great project from KingPost! Thanks for sharing.
+Jeff Forbes cheers
Congrats, mate! You have invented 4x4.
You have inspired me to keep making things sir. Love your work. Keep these awesome videos coming please
+Anthony Wallace cheers . Will do.
beautiful design & impressive execution . Thanks for sharing .
+5656eric cheers
Nice work again Joey
That huge piece of veneer with contact adhesive - I bet you held your breath on that one !
Very well done
Chris
+a6cjn yea was a bit do or die
Wow that came out super tight! Awesome job 👌
+MillersWood thanks
I can just dream about that kind of timber. Really nice job and video as usual.
+Peter Isaksson cheers
Love the way you tackled the posts Joey. That's a lot of work, however the payoff was huge!
+GuysWoodshop cheers Guy , yes it certainly was worth it!
Absouletly brill gr8 work again
Супер!!! отличная работа!!
Love your work. Honestly tho, you kinda scare me outta doing custom stuff lol i just want to a studio. You like, you buy. :P
+xrateduser haha cheers
Great looking job on the bed Joey from Jason Ham of Ham's Custom Woodworks Athens Alabama Roll TIDE
+MrJh66sh thanks man
Saya indonesia,saya suka konten chanel ini,keren
Amazing Work!
Nice work as usual!
Amazing. Awesome. Super. I'm running out of superlatives for your work! :-)
+Ryk Haviland ha cheers
Good job 👍🏻😁
Amazing job!
What a nice piece of furniture. Great job!
I noticed the frame is cantilevered from the base, and they are attached at a slim section by glue and a few screws. I hope that kind of attachment will be enough to sustain the stress of the frame's weight over time. Cheers!
+Breno Luna cheers . Yea I had thought about this. The cube frame is very rigid so is holding itself together and centre over the plinth. Meaning it can't roll off the plinth
Just re viewed this one for some bed design ideas. Was suprised i didnt notice the clever ply core before, that makes the solid loose tenons in the corners so easy to insert and fasten.
I might steal that idea.
Did you fix the headboard in place by any means or do you rely on its weight? - no upward force anyways with regular use patterns :)
Well done. I was just looking for ideas for a bed but you made a top quality bed. Well done. I'll make your my wife doesnt see this one. lol!
Great video..!!! Great project..!!! Thank you...
Quality - Beauty - Outstanding Craftsmanship.
+SuperYtviewer thanks
Lovely!
Wow, im going to guess that was REALLY expensive!
amazing job bro
Nice job!I really enjoy watching your videos!keep it up!👍
Cheers
BTW the cord trick was a Norm Abram's from This Old House. The bed is beautiful, great job.
Very good. Muito bom.Parabéns
Great job as always. Looks like it went together pretty quick. Bet you made a nice profit. Those Fastcap screw covers are amazing. They probably look better than real hardwood plugs and fraction of the time?
+Joel Harry yup excellent little things
very nice bed 🛏
the nicest bed i ve ever seen, perfecet!!!!
+Nikos Karavias thank you
Inspiration is how you always achieve that everything looks easy to make
Thank you very much
+Ramo Omerašević cheers
Nice job thank you
If you had assembled the posts in two halves then dominos would have slotted together. Anyhow I think it's plenty strong how you did it and it looks amazing dude!
+Stuff I Made cheers plus that would be double the time to glue up......
Would never have thought to use filler in this way, great tip
+Robin Lewis cheers man , yea ended up working really well
EXCELENTE MAESTRO
Schöne Arbeit ,bin auch Schreiner weiter so Joey
7:26 coasters by Joey
read my mind
bravissimo molto ma molto bravo.
Very nice👍
nice~
Great job as always! How much the client paid for the bed? ;)
I'm looking at building a piece similar to this and was going to use solid wood or, potentially LVLs, but I quite like the idea of (almost) veneering the plywood with the nicer wood. What sort of load capacity would this have on the upper parts of the frame?
E.g., if a heavy kid were to grab hold of one of those cross members, would it hold weight?
I'm guessing it wouldn't, but engineering isn't my expertise. I could use physical hardware (i.e., metal L brackets to add support), but I'm wondering if there's a better / strong manner in which to build this? Thanks for the great videos!
These posts ended up very strong. You could hang on them with minimal deflection. Lvl with veneer would be great.
Thanks for the reply! Given this, I'm thinking I could make the veneer timber thinner and the plywood core larger. I could also design the vertices to transfer the load differently - e.g., only the longer members need higher load bearing capacity for me (of 200-300kg dead-weight) - so, I could go with a half-lap joints on the longer edges and then if need be reinforced all edges with steel brackets.
This as an option definitely makes it viable for using nicer hardwoods, whilst keeping costs down. I'd just have to be careful of whether the plywood is in compression or tension. So, I probably would want mainly the grain going ||| relative to the floor, with only some going perpendicular to the floor (at least, that's what I recall plywood to be strongest in)
Really beautiful woodwork, sadly it won’t be well displayed in such a small room with low ceilings
+davecsaszarable ceilings are actually 3 metres
I've never seen posts made in that way, very cool. Is that a common technique?
+Timber Anew no I don't think so. First time for me
Great video and great project. I like your tool belt/pouch. What is the brand and model of it? I've been looking for one like that.
+TheGarageEngineer it's a Makita hammer/pencil holder. I removed the hammer loop and added a rear earth magnet for my steel rule.
I want to get it made in leather but haven't had any luck finding someone to do it.
KingPost TimberWorks I like the size and shape. It looks very handy. Good idea with the magnet.
Nice one Joey!
+Dorian Bracht cheers man
You probably dont care but if you guys are stoned like me during the covid times then you can stream pretty much all of the new series on Instaflixxer. I've been streaming with my girlfriend these days xD
@Jaxton Gunner yup, I've been watching on Instaflixxer for months myself :)
Great looking bed Joey.
Why did you put the ply core into the posts, wouldn't the mitred glued edges have been strong enough by themselves?
+Ian Beckett I guess they would. I just wanted a nice solid beam that was as stable as possible.
OK. Thanks
Another great vid. The bed and plinth seemed very low to the ground, or was that just perspective?
+Andrew S yea it's pretty low, although finished mattress height is 450mm which is a standard chair height.
Lovely work as usual.
No criticism, just a question: Why did you decide not to use 3x3 solid posts? In U.K. would have been way more time/cost efficient.
It's a bed so in a relatively dry and stable environment.
Ps thanks for including your small work-a-day tips and errors. Let's me know you're human!
All the best!
+Steven SDbuild couple of reasons. Timber unless rift sawn generally looms very different all for sides. When wrapped around a post I can get continuous grain. Also while a bedroom is usually stable humidity wise beds often receive a lot of mid day sun here in nz the sun is particularly fierce and would cause solid timber to twist warp over time. Plus just thought it would be fun to do it this way.
Nice job!, how much would you charge for this bed?
+Macaber Top 6k
hi Joey, just a question, why didn't you use a mitre lock cutter on your powerful router table? I think it would have work pretty well considering that walnut can easily be milled. Or was it because you absolutely needed a solid plywood core?
+Bart Loncke I have a very good lock mitre bit and have spent hours trying to get it to work!
if it is the correct set up that's causing the problem: professional mitre lock bit are supplied with a table that indicates the correct bit height and dept (at the router table) for any given thickness of your milled parts. it only took me somewhat 10 minutes to get it set up correctly. I got one from CMT whose national distributor was so kind to show these tables online.
+Bart Loncke yea have the cmt too. I guess I'm doing something wrong
let me know this lock mitre bit's reference number, perhaps I can check if this table is online?
I love this bed! I recently bought a bunch of large power tools and decided to remodel my own house, learning everything as I go. Now, I would like to get into furniture making. Any suggestions or advice?
Hi pal, would it have worked to attach two dominoed mitre boards and then those two right angled/"L"-shaped lengths (which would equate respectively to a face-on angle) onto each of them, making every corner dominoed?
HiYa great video. I was wondering where you got your clamps from? coz i know clamps here can get pretty pricey!.
+darren cho I think I just went to mitre 10 as it's closest to me
16:53 - "Whoops, better just check this screw won't go all the way through!"
Hi man, beautiful wood.
What was wrong by connecting two halfs stright to each other and to reach similar size..
Sure maybe the weight was heigher, and the shape was slight different but you was surely saving time and money no ?
Good job ! Only one question why do you use plywood for tenon? Not maybe be wood too. You have a good day.
+Ronald Rivera it's very stable and strong won't split under stress
How much did all that timber set you back?
What? You CAN use dominoes on all four sides. Just assemble them in powers of two. Or am i missing something?
+Arcus Cerebellumus yea but two glue ups equal double the time .....
KingPost TimberWorks I think you could do it in one pass... not without considerable pain in the ass though :)
прекрасно изпълнение
Curbed is my choice but more luxury and pre
If the customer is shifting to a different house, can they disassemble the bed and reassemble?
If they can, after reassembling the bed, will the screw hold it tight???
Como chama aquela máquina que o senhor usou para fazer os furos e depois colocou aqueles pinos?
You can use dominos on four joints of the post. Assemble the first half, then the second half and put them together.
Its' been mentioned below about two halves of the post. the other thought is to use Biscuits which are a bit more forgiving for that situation, (it worked for me). Shame you did not show the cable trick on the veneer last week. I did a small job a few days ago, using the normal Dowel method but it came out of alignment while removing one of the dowels and did not stick straight. 'Bugger' no payment for that job.
+Peter Compton bugger
Any particular reason you didn't go for a lock mitre to join the sides?
+Andy P they don't work
Really? I was under the impression they were a strong joint.
Какое дерево используете?
Can you buy solid walnut posts? Save all the work?
+Big Guns not about can I but will they stay straight.
Every time you say domino I hear Van Morrisson
ANY WAY I CAN MAKE THIS ACRYLIC!!!!!!
My OCD says something has to be done about that window
+pianomoverr yup bed is not on it's final wall right now
Hear me out fence posts?
Do you sell your beds?
Yup all custom made to order
Great, how can we view your products and purchase them?
@@prettyprudent5779 email me (from website) with details of what you want. I then design and price your piece custom to you. Or let me know something I have already made and I can let you know pricing pretty easily.
BTW.. Have you moved into the House???
+Peter Compton almost. It's actually ready just need sign off. Then possibly some modification before we actually move in if you know what I mean. ....
And i have 7 to go🙄😁 never watch your vids when the wife is near... oe aaa i like that, is that your neck project?....😅 Ps scaffolding boards make a perfect floor , juist big click laminate. 283m2 of floor done in a month..only problem is my back hurts now.. 😆
+xander witt haha I get the same when making the pieces. Oh can you just make 2!
KingPost TimberWorks you are a lucky man to have a wood shop. I have a 4 by 4 meter room 17 high in a flat. Hahaha
where is bed canopy or real name baldahin
#ineedaBFOworkshopmethinks
1) why paint the back of the headboard?
2) did you just put plywood through a planer?!? 8:42
+Brian Hackett so it looks and is a professional finish all round. Yes you can thickness plywood. It's just not fun!
Looks great!
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Какое дерево используете?
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