Moulding Plane Maker - Norman Bayliss (1962)

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2020
  • Norman Bayliss was the last beechwood moulding plane maker at William Marples. Born in 1921, after leaving school, he went to go and work with his father, Jesse, at William Marples.
    In the early years of Norman’s career at Marples, he was called up into the Royal Engineers during World War 2. He later returned back to Marples after the war ended. He retired at the age of 65, after which he moved to St Ives, Cambridgeshire where he died in 2005.
    To find out more about the Hawley Collection and to donate, visit our website: www.hawleytoolcollection.com/
    See also our sister website at hawleysheffieldknives.com/

Комментарии • 64

  • @PeanutsDadForever
    @PeanutsDadForever 3 года назад +41

    The importance and value of these videos would escape most people’s attention. Thank goodness for your farsightedness. Excellent!👴🏻🇦🇺

  • @MrZOMBIE170
    @MrZOMBIE170 3 года назад +25

    no one will ever be skilled enough again to make moulding plane like this with speed and accuracy as Norman Bayliss could .

    • @darrenwheatley4677
      @darrenwheatley4677 3 года назад +1

      Not sure about the speed, but check out Caleb James (calebjamesmaker.com/). His work is amazing! I just wish I could afford to buy some 😀

    • @HeartPumper
      @HeartPumper 3 года назад +10

      @@darrenwheatley4677 Or Stavros Gakos here on YT.

    • @HeartPumper
      @HeartPumper 3 года назад +12

      Well, obviously Mr Bayliss, was master in his craft. He made thousands of planes, which made another hundred of thousands furniture or utilitarian pieces. He was unique as every human.
      But nowadays, there're more and more followers of this awesome craft. Fortunately. Globalisation will end miserably someday. We need skilled craftsmen and passing their knowledge.

    • @musamor75
      @musamor75 Год назад +3

      @@HeartPumper Well put, you tookthe words out of my mouth. Stavros does some really stunning stuff. I've been watching him for years. He's actually Polish. He now seems to have quite a following. But the gentleman above is just simply one of the "old boys"- who made history, and also were the pride of good old-fashioned firms like Marples and Sons. The deft speed at which he works is astounding- you can tell he can see the end result from the very beginning. That's what mastership is about.

    • @HeartPumper
      @HeartPumper Год назад +3

      @@musamor75 Haha following Stavros as well (he's my compatriot after all) 😆

  • @byOldHand
    @byOldHand Год назад +3

    Whenever I need inspiration and want to freshen up, I open it and watch this video. magnificent products made by great masters with their skilled hands and basic simple tools. we still use hand tools made by them. Thank you for sharing this beautiful documentation with us.

  • @mrstandfast2212
    @mrstandfast2212 3 года назад +8

    Wonderful old 8mm footage. A true craftsman at work. If you've never visited the Ken Hawley collection at the Kelham Island Museum in Sheffield, I can wholeheartedly recommend that you do. Their tool collection is incredible. The staff are incredibly helpful, and the displays are superb. Highlight of a visit is to see the 12,000 hp River Don steam engine working. Roll on the end of lockdown so we can visit again.

    • @zen4men
      @zen4men Год назад

      Wish I lived closer!

  • @ikust007
    @ikust007 3 года назад +5

    Thank you !

  • @jamescampbell7780
    @jamescampbell7780 3 года назад +4

    Skills of a bye gone era but is great to have been recorded in recognising a true craftsman.

  • @donghwashin8105
    @donghwashin8105 3 месяца назад

    I’m really impressed for such confident cut and strike. Truly decent.

  • @unknxwnlxve
    @unknxwnlxve Год назад +2

    this is my friends grandpa!!

  • @user-du2of3lh1g
    @user-du2of3lh1g 3 года назад +3

    Gotta love the vices used!

  • @jameshay884
    @jameshay884 3 года назад +6

    What astounding speed and accuracy this man demonstrates. Hugely impressive. I had no idea someone could work so quickly and accurately. I visited Sheffield from Canada 25: years ago. Perhaps I need to go again, just to see the Hawley collection.

    • @nickyork8901
      @nickyork8901 3 года назад

      I thought it must have been speeded up, but having looked again more carefully I think not.

    • @HeartPumper
      @HeartPumper 3 года назад +1

      @@nickyork8901 It probably slightly is, due to analogue cameras fps, to nowadays standards. But indeed he's quick, very. Muscle memory of thousands made pieces.

    • @MrZOMBIE170
      @MrZOMBIE170 Год назад

      they had to be fast they got paid for every plane they made not by the hour

  • @gregzoller9003
    @gregzoller9003 Год назад +1

    He takes such huge chunks of wood out with speed and precision. Without doubt hes made 100s (1000s?) of these in his career.

  • @gig5462
    @gig5462 3 года назад +2

    Thank you! Absolutely brilliant!

  • @byOldHand
    @byOldHand 3 года назад +2

    respect !!! gorgeous video. thank you for sharing. 60 years ago, an artisan and his amazing skills. i loved !!!

  • @ehisey
    @ehisey Год назад +1

    So many little questions get answered in thtis video. Spoon bit makes so much since for the throat tunnel.

  • @tcl5853
    @tcl5853 6 месяцев назад

    Wonderful!

  • @amezcuaist
    @amezcuaist 2 года назад +3

    Imagine Antonio Stradivari being filmed as he made his violins .

  • @pmwoodworkingstudio7610
    @pmwoodworkingstudio7610 3 года назад +1

    glad i found this video.

  • @EricTViking
    @EricTViking Год назад

    Beautiful to watch. So great that the techniques of a master craftsman have been captured on film, really interesting to see how the chap held his saws and planes.

  • @jonliba1788
    @jonliba1788 8 месяцев назад

    Fresh beech!

  • @calitri10
    @calitri10 Год назад

    Pure GOld !! thanks for sharing

  • @davida369
    @davida369 2 года назад +1

    I found it quite sad, history, like a requiem.

  • @elijahwilliams7975
    @elijahwilliams7975 2 года назад +1

    One of my grandfathers was a gun smith and the other was as a delivery driver in the early 1900s in the US I never met them but the pictures I have of them are in my room/ small shop

  • @mikesradguitars
    @mikesradguitars 3 года назад +2

    That bevel gage!! Never seen!

    • @elijahwilliams7975
      @elijahwilliams7975 2 года назад

      I see them here in the US at antique shops locally

    • @mikesradguitars
      @mikesradguitars 2 года назад

      elijah williams go look again

    • @stevesteve6545
      @stevesteve6545 8 месяцев назад +1

      It’s called a springing square. Set at the spring angle of the plane, which is the angle the plane is designed to be used against the work. Typically around 20 degrees. It allows marking up of the profile on the plane sole.

  • @ibrhemahmed170
    @ibrhemahmed170 Год назад

  • @Murphy-if9uh
    @Murphy-if9uh 2 года назад

    I'm getting RSI watching this fellow go.

  • @tim_bbq1008
    @tim_bbq1008 3 года назад +2

    Looks like he had a heck of a collection of 'reverse moulding planes' used to cut the moulding plane profile. I wonder what happened to that unique collection?
    That man was so experienced that it would take him minutes to make what takes me all day to produce. So interesting to see his techniques and custom tools in action. Very impressive. Thanks for sharing!

    • @barrychambers9515
      @barrychambers9515 2 года назад +2

      The Hawley Collection has all the reverse moulding planes from the William Marples works

    • @michaeljoiner2503
      @michaeljoiner2503 2 года назад +1

      they are called "Mother" planes ♡

    • @CleaveMountaineering
      @CleaveMountaineering Год назад

      I've wondered that too... But which came first, the moulding plane or the reverse moulding plane? I suppose there's a clever way to originate the shape accurately. Making the shape on an iron would be a straightforward matter of laying out the shape, filing, sharpening. But then how do you get that into the first plane bottom? I suppose you could get close with hollows and rounds, or have a plane set up without a shaped bottom like how a Stanley combo plane works?

  • @RGRGJKK
    @RGRGJKK 2 года назад

    Pura vida amazing woodworking talent and great job I want toe know if he was filmed at marples factory let me know guys pura vida

  • @behonestwithyourself3718
    @behonestwithyourself3718 Год назад +1

    I wonder how many planes he could make in a day.

  • @jaydwy8069
    @jaydwy8069 2 года назад +3

    Quality you will never get from china

    • @haisamjab
      @haisamjab Год назад

      Chinese have a really ancient culture. If they want they would be capable of great accuracy

    • @jaydwy8069
      @jaydwy8069 Год назад

      @@haisamjab "they just choose not to be accurate because they dont want to that's why...."

    • @haisamjab
      @haisamjab Год назад

      @@jaydwy8069 I agree

    • @stevesteve6545
      @stevesteve6545 8 месяцев назад

      Chinese and Far Eastern woodworking crafts are as good as any anywhere

  • @policedog4030
    @policedog4030 3 года назад +1

    Anyone know if that is old-growth Beech? As in say 150-200 or 300 year old trees? I couldn't see the grain the the video; but I'm thinking that these days we wouldn't be able to easily find any Beech wood that is older than 25 or 30 years so much more pulpy stock now than was available then.

    • @barkebaat
      @barkebaat 3 года назад +4

      I'm a professional furniture maker in Norway and I regularly buy beech of excellent quality. I cannot say how old the tree was but it comes in beautiful, clear, wide planks, so it's no sapling. I hear your kind of moan / complaint often from non-woodworkers, basically telling me that the wood was so much better in the olden days. Have you done much restoration work ? Have you not seen the shitty wood the old timers sometimes used ?

    • @policedog4030
      @policedog4030 3 года назад

      I'm not familiar with Beech at all. I compare the quality of a given sample of wood by cutting a strip about 30 centimeters long and 5mm x 5mm in cross-section. Then it's strength and resilience can be easily evaluated by just bending it. In general the wood that is readily available in my area will fail this test as there will be only a single growth ring in the 5mm cross section and the wood itself was sawn from the pulpwood section of the tree rather than from the heartwood. This compares to the older growth where there could be five to six growth rings in the 5mm section, and all heartwood, and it can be bent into a half-moon shape without breaking, and will return to its straight form.

    • @deemdoubleu
      @deemdoubleu 3 года назад +1

      I have bought beech from B&Q even and it's very hard and durable, problem I found is it's hard to find quarter sawn stock which I think is what you need to make planes and such. I tried making something from what I bought and it moved a lot overnight after a bit of cutting and planing.

  • @alexanderguestguitars1173
    @alexanderguestguitars1173 Год назад +3

    "Yes, we make all different types of moulding planes here at Hibernia Works; astragal, ovolo, cove, bead, reed, anything you want."
    "Great. Can I have a left handed one please?"
    "Errrr.........Noooo, we don't make cack-handed stuff here sir."
    "Oh.......okay then."
    Only problem with those things. But a true craftsman. All that skill, just killed off by router bits and cheap Chinese routers. Appalling shame.

  • @ravebrave8866
    @ravebrave8866 3 года назад +4

    todays people are stuck in router bits and cannot even do a simple SH.. IT work.....

  • @CMAenergy
    @CMAenergy 2 года назад

    very poor quality of video

    • @KenHawleyCollectionTrust
      @KenHawleyCollectionTrust  2 года назад +5

      We realise the quality of the video does not measure up to HD standards we are used to. However please remember the original is 8mm cine film taken in 1962 i.e. 60 years ago

    • @CMAenergy
      @CMAenergy 2 года назад

      @@KenHawleyCollectionTrust OK

    • @CMAenergy
      @CMAenergy 2 года назад

      @@KenHawleyCollectionTrust understood

    • @dingolab
      @dingolab Год назад

      This video is a priceless archive for future generations. Thank you so much for preserving it and making it available to the world.

  • @saschamathejczyk6188
    @saschamathejczyk6188 2 года назад

    Wonderful!