The LEGENDARY Six-Board Chest

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  • Опубликовано: 2 фев 2021
  • Bring this project to life with nailed joinery and affordable wood.
    Now part of the Nailed Furniture Bundle!
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    Videos I Mention:
    Nails in woodwork: • Nailed joinery is MUCH...
    Make an Adjustable Jointer Plane: • Build an Adjustable Jo...
    Get the Plans: www.rexkrueger.com/store/plan...
    Japanese Cutting Gauge: • Making a Japanese Cutt...
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    Build the Joiner's Bench: • The incredible English...
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    Router Plane: • Make a router plane fr...
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    Marking Gauge: • Make your own marking ...
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    Turning Saw: • Make a turning saw fro...
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    Tools from the Video:
    Fine Dozuki Saw (Affiliate): amzn.to/2YoTuaI
    Books/Articles:
    Moldings in Practice: lostartpress.com/collections/...
    Joined: A Bench Guide to Furniture Joinery: www.mortiseandtenonmag.com/co...
    Chris Schwarz on 6 Board Chests: www.popularwoodworking.com/pr...
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    Wood Work for Humans Tool List (affiliate):
    Cutting
    Gyokucho Ryoba Saw: amzn.to/2Z5Wmda
    Dewalt Panel Saw: amzn.to/2HJqGmO
    Suizan Dozuki Handsaw: amzn.to/3abRyXB
    (Winner of the affordable dovetail-saw shootout.)
    Spear and Jackson Tenon Saw: amzn.to/2zykhs6
    (Needs tune-up to work well.)
    Crown Tenon Saw: amzn.to/3l89Dut
    (Works out of the box)
    Carving Knife: amzn.to/2DkbsnM
    Narex True Imperial Chisels: amzn.to/2EX4xls
    (My favorite affordable new chisels.)
    Blue-Handled Marples Chisels: amzn.to/2tVJARY
    (I use these to make the DIY specialty planes, but I also like them for general work.)
    Sharpening
    Honing Guide: amzn.to/2TaJEZM
    Norton Coarse/Fine Oil Stone: amzn.to/36seh2m
    Natural Arkansas Fine Oil Stone: amzn.to/3irDQmq
    Green buffing compound: amzn.to/2XuUBE2
    Marking and Measuring
    Stockman Knife: amzn.to/2Pp4bWP
    (For marking and the built-in awl).
    Speed Square: amzn.to/3gSi6jK
    Stanley Marking Knife: amzn.to/2Ewrxo3
    (Excellent, inexpensive marking knife.)
    Blue Kreg measuring jig: amzn.to/2QTnKYd
    Round-head Protractor: amzn.to/37fJ6oz
    Drilling
    Forstener Bits: amzn.to/3jpBgPl
    Spade Bits: amzn.to/2U5kvML
    Work-Holding
    Orange F Clamps: amzn.to/2u3tp4X
    Screw Clamp: amzn.to/3gCa5i8
    Get my woodturning book: www.rexkrueger.com/book
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  • ХоббиХобби

Комментарии • 522

  • @RealLuckless
    @RealLuckless 3 года назад +135

    Remember, there is no such thing as cutting a piece too short.
    You have merely cut a piece for a smaller project sooner than was needed...

    • @Lawrence330
      @Lawrence330 2 года назад +5

      Ah, yes, the old "those aren't scraps, I'm saving those for a different project" philosophy.
      Ugh...I had to move last year. I can't believe how many "future projects" that I gave away to clean my garage out after I packed everything that would fit in the POD 😥

  • @johnhubbard6262
    @johnhubbard6262 5 месяцев назад +6

    I am old, beat up, broke down and more wore out than my 70's work truck. When I need a pick me up, energy shot, motivation to get out in one of the shops I just watch one of your videos - Your energy is infectious

  • @JackRockBLC
    @JackRockBLC 3 года назад +159

    This channel is hands down the best Patreon decision I'd ever made.

    • @RexKrueger
      @RexKrueger  3 года назад +11

      THANK YOU!!!

    • @cliffordduhh45
      @cliffordduhh45 3 года назад +2

      This and Sampson Boat Co. with the Tally Ho. Both preserving the history of woodworking in their own way.

    • @josiahpeters4717
      @josiahpeters4717 3 года назад +1

      It's the only one for me and I haven't regretted it!

    • @dansanders340
      @dansanders340 3 года назад +5

      Yet at the same time he doesn't make us feel like we're missing out on anything by not donating. I plan on donating but I'm currently buying cheaper tools than he uses🤣wish me luck, and maybe a stanley no. 4 😂😂😂

    • @mdglussier
      @mdglussier 3 года назад +2

      Definitely. Happy to be a patron of this channel as well!

  • @lanecobb4150
    @lanecobb4150 3 года назад +21

    Sweet! That’s a really pretty 6 board chest Rex. About 35 years ago I made one with some wide pine boards I had around. Dovetailed the corners, painted it with federal blue milk paint and gave it to my 2 kids as a toy chest. Over the years it began achieving its own legendary status by acquiring its share of knocks and scrapes. When my son was about 10, he helped “antique” it one night by scratching the Chicago Bulls logo into the front. I still have it, it looks 100 years old and every time I look at it it reminds me of them and how much I love them. The kids are now 36 & 40 and one day I’ll give it back to one of them...but not yet. ♥️

    • @Goibniu001
      @Goibniu001 Год назад +2

      "When Dad's done with it, it's all yours!"😉
      We all knew what that really meant and never pressed the issue further.🥺
      Thanks for the share.

    • @yizhuolin3906
      @yizhuolin3906 Год назад

      I'd really like to see a photo of your chest and appreciate the beauty of it.

  • @TheThriftyWoodworker
    @TheThriftyWoodworker 3 года назад +86

    “Hand tools are harder”. A truer statement has never been made.

    • @davebrown7198
      @davebrown7198 3 года назад +5

      But so much more satisfying

    • @W4ldgeist
      @W4ldgeist 3 года назад +4

      Some of them are quite literally harder than most modern machines (who are mostly made of sheet metal and plastic) :D

    • @thomasarussellsr
      @thomasarussellsr 3 года назад +3

      @@W4ldgeist ah yes, but so much more tranquil and satisfying to use. And, I don't have to wreck my hearing turning up my headphones so I can hear the music over my hand tools. Though admittedly, it ain't rock and roll with the dial at 2.

  • @nicoeckerstorfer5893
    @nicoeckerstorfer5893 3 года назад +196

    Where i am from (Austria) we have a saiyng that goes like: ive cut it twice and it is still too short!, almost every austrian craftsman knows this saying XD

    • @CeeJayThe13th
      @CeeJayThe13th 3 года назад +15

      That sounds like something AvE would say lol

    • @duanemiller5606
      @duanemiller5606 3 года назад +10

      Most of us yanks here in America know the saying too, along with measure twice cut once and yet we still end up with the I’ve cut it twice and it still too short problem.

    • @ericgreene7993
      @ericgreene7993 3 года назад +21

      Measure it with a micrometer, Mark it with chalk, and cut it with an axe. Works every time.

    • @cursplat
      @cursplat 3 года назад +3

      @@CeeJayThe13th but without AvE's expletives.

    • @silentwisdom7025
      @silentwisdom7025 3 года назад +4

      @@cursplat cunninglinguialls

  • @joer9638
    @joer9638 3 года назад +23

    It's like my dad always used to say: "I cut it twice and it's still too short!"

  • @jrk1666
    @jrk1666 3 года назад +163

    ah yes, the best compass we can have, the "random round object in arms reach"

    • @michiganmoto7687
      @michiganmoto7687 3 года назад +14

      I use mostly my cans of stain. They come conveniently in graduated sizes. Lol. Sometimes I even step up to a gallon paint can. 😂

    • @RexKrueger
      @RexKrueger  3 года назад +20

      That's really how I do it 99% of the time.

    • @lesstraveledpath
      @lesstraveledpath 2 года назад +3

      The inside of a roll of blue or duct tape is my reference "round thingy"...

    • @trysibjorkrot5419
      @trysibjorkrot5419 2 года назад +1

      Ah the swedish snusdosa

    • @eloscuro704
      @eloscuro704 Год назад

      @@lesstraveledpath Skateboard wheels work great for me.

  • @thomashverring9484
    @thomashverring9484 3 года назад +52

    Excellent video as always, Rex. I love that you not only mention your mistakes, but that you mention who inspired you to make a project. Too many make videos like they invented everything themselves.

    • @RexKrueger
      @RexKrueger  3 года назад +14

      I don't invent much in my videos. The tool designs are largely mine, but everything else has a source.

  • @manfredschmalbach9023
    @manfredschmalbach9023 3 года назад +16

    When I learned forging antiques some decades ago, any powertool besides the big bandsaw (imitating the traces a big two person rift Venetian saw lets behind) was banned from the workshop to make things uneven and "handcrafted" enough to *_not_* come over like imitations - which of course works best when actually handcrafted. Lots of thoughts went into construction and building sequences to have enough room to cheat, hide and trim. I liked Your approach of looking at a plethora of other people's work to find the one that satisfies You, no matter how "easy" or "simple" it might've been built. To date I like most the rural, "peasant's" woodwork, using cheap or left-over wood, making the most of what's left from a better piece, with visible cheats and tricks and ingenuity surpassing the lack of better material.

  • @brendanlangord1687
    @brendanlangord1687 3 года назад +57

    The chest looks awesome, well done.

  • @Harrell423
    @Harrell423 Год назад +1

    The first 20 seconds of this video had me so hyped up I almost left for the hardware store.. I wish more videos were simplified like this. Basic materials.. and nothing to difficult.

  • @exilis2
    @exilis2 3 года назад +12

    I found a weird looking, really heavy oak cabinet in the attic of the house i bought. Later then i noticed that it actually was a chest and someone had just put feet on its side and stood it up. Only thing its missing is the original lit. I think your video has inspired me to revive that old thing, it deserves a second life in the house. Great Video, have been following you since very early on. Your channel is just different than most Woodworking channels, very didactic. Keep up the good work and greetings from Germany.

  • @SpaceMarshalGyorni
    @SpaceMarshalGyorni 3 года назад +16

    I can't tell you how encouraging it is to hear how normal it is to mess up even simple projects somewhere along the way. Between you and Adam Savage, that gives me enough confidence in not bein a total idiot even when things go south during a project.

    • @FastEddieDee
      @FastEddieDee Год назад

      Ditto. Since discovering Rex, I curse and beat myself up alot less when I make a mistake. It's so comforting to see that even the pros make the same mistakes. It gives me hope for my future projects.

    • @dane3038
      @dane3038 9 месяцев назад

      Being a good woodworker is about correcting and/or hiding mistakes. You WILL make mistakes. I don't care who you are.

  • @edwardgurney1694
    @edwardgurney1694 3 года назад +33

    I have a long 6" wide scrap of pine board leftover from some shelves I did recently, and I need a small storage box to tidy up said shelves. Maybe I'll make a miniature version of this...

    • @CeeJayThe13th
      @CeeJayThe13th 3 года назад +4

      I was kinda thinking something like that myself

  • @rhpsoregon
    @rhpsoregon 3 года назад +43

    That "Joined" by Joshua Klein is an excellent book. I have it as well. Thanx for your honesty for putting in your mistakes and talking about how things haven't gone as well since switching over to hand tools. I really appreciate knowing that I'm not alone in having problems. I'm sure others are as well.

    • @RexKrueger
      @RexKrueger  3 года назад +5

      You're totally not alone!

    • @azurplex
      @azurplex 3 года назад +3

      Mastering a craft just means learning how to overcome challenges and avoid past mistakes.
      Rex helps us by showing his so we can learn doubletime.

  • @bloodgain
    @bloodgain 3 года назад +9

    Perfect timing on that book rec for _Joined_ -- just the thing I needed to get my Lee Valley cart over $30 for free shipping on another sale item!

  • @nemo227
    @nemo227 3 года назад +3

    I KNOW that I can safely give a thumbs up for Rex Krueger's videos even before I watch them. Always.

  • @TheCaptainmaim
    @TheCaptainmaim 3 года назад +82

    Rex, just wanted to say that one of the things that I love, and that makes your channel different is the book recommendations. I often pick them up and enjoy them, while I'm waiting for the next video. I'm building quite the little woodworking library. Keep it up!

  • @johngalanes5264
    @johngalanes5264 3 года назад +28

    First time I've seen someone use hearing protection for a hand saw:)

    • @donmazurick1821
      @donmazurick1821 3 года назад +4

      Delicate ears my son

    • @truthburn
      @truthburn 3 года назад +7

      It's a 3M worktunes, so hes either listening to a podcast or music. I listen to mine alone in silence in my shop all the time.

  • @michael.h.bradley1865
    @michael.h.bradley1865 Год назад

    be comforted by this Rex -- you are not alone when you goof on cutting too short. i was the carpenter at a Steam Museum here in East Anglia, U.K. lol

  • @-Honeybee
    @-Honeybee 3 года назад +20

    I haven't even watched the premier.
    I'm making this chest.

  • @racastro62
    @racastro62 3 года назад +16

    I'm learning so many things here! This channel is becoming almost addictive to me.
    What I like the most, Rex, is your not so usual honesty when telling about your mistakes. That adds an extra degree on learning. Thanks a lot!

    • @fletchro789
      @fletchro789 3 года назад +3

      I second the kudos to your honesty, Rex! I'm procrastinating writing a paper on "learning from failure" for my entrepreneurship class. And, although I won't be able to include any references to this video, it provides a bit of food for thought on the subject! Thanks!

  • @BirdYoumans
    @BirdYoumans 2 года назад +11

    I've learned that once you cut something too short, you can cut it as many times as you want to after that, and it will still be too short. I've had to learn that more than once unfortunately lol! Love your practical approach to things. Nice simple chest by the way.
    By the way, I bought a dozuki saw and have loved it. I now use hand tools about half the time, tho not totally. Any time I only need a cut or two or just want to make a hand made object, I use it. Once you get use to the pull cut as opposed to the push cut, you can do wonders with it and it is very accurate. I not only draw the line across, but on 90 degree cuts I draw that line as well. If you follow both lines, magic. A good 90 degree cut. But odd angles are just as easy once you get the hang of it. I also have the dove tail version as well. Love them both!

  • @perrymoser3014
    @perrymoser3014 3 года назад +21

    I hope the third bottom is stable enough, otherwise all I can think of is the swamp king from Monty Python and the Holy Grail: "The third one burned down, fell over and THEN sank into the swamp."

    • @jefftapp8991
      @jefftapp8991 3 года назад +6

      But the fourth one stayed up!

    • @peglor
      @peglor 3 года назад +5

      Huge... Tracts of land :-).

  • @yizhuolin3906
    @yizhuolin3906 Год назад +1

    this piece is absolutely beautiful.

  • @carldavis6902
    @carldavis6902 3 года назад +6

    I ordered myself some old cast nails like 5 months ago for a trade show step stool. Now I have another project for my nails.
    Thank you for all the encouragement and teaching
    Davis Designs

  • @robwagner2789
    @robwagner2789 3 года назад +2

    Rex, that last few minutes are why I watch this channel. That's possibly the most honest motivational speech for woodworkers I've heard yet.

  • @enriquekahn9405
    @enriquekahn9405 3 года назад +60

    found the guy who definitely reads romance novels

    • @trevordavison4078
      @trevordavison4078 3 года назад +30

      Rex is just interested in their chests... wait a minute...

    • @maryjoanhill7847
      @maryjoanhill7847 3 года назад +1

      That means he is good at what he does...

  • @verkmastare
    @verkmastare 2 года назад

    The medieval monastery chests and the viking tool chest are near to my heart, I have built many in my days as a medieval recreationist back when all this was a hobby. I am glad I found this project, it brought back many great memories. As a custom medieval musical instrument maker (used to be a large scale computer network administrator and systems manager), I do not have the luxury of choosing to be a hand tool craftsman, in order to recreate the sounds and personality of a medieval instrument, you have to have a proper finish inside anywhere sound waves contact the material - in other words when you look in early extant instruments you see the toolmarks, you see the results visually of the techniques used to hollow and carve and pare the pieces, and those finish details, the tool marks, the raised grain and unevenness around wood features (pin knots, pitch pockets, hard grain bits and burls) all contribute to the authentic sound of an instrument from the period. So I have had to collect and learn to use several specific hand tools for this craft.
    I use machine tools, to do general rough shaping, material hogging, I have just developed ways to use these tools to increase efficiency, after all it is not a hobby. My power tools I consider my apprentices - I train them to do the rough work, they give me a piece that is ready for me to apply my sikll to. But by necessity and not choice, that skill involves almost exclusively hand tools, and very specific detailing tools such as mini gouges, spoon planes, fine chisels and gravers, and many handmade custom scrapers. It is always a challenge.
    What I most appreciate about your channel is that you are inspiring folks to look at projects from the hand tool option. Skills that can be used to solve challenges sometimes more effectively than just setting up a fence and a stop block are being lost, and it is up to teachers to keep that alive, just practitioners do not.
    So I also teach, both the handwork tool use and the science and art of the medieval musical instrument. I love bringing students ( from high school and college age, sometimes younger depending on the project and the individual, to older established craftsmen wanting to add something to their own knowledge). Mostly I try to teach them to think in a way that doesnt rely on modern technology. Most of my projects could be done by laying out a cad drawing and using a CNC router for the biggest parts and a CNC lathe fand mill for most of the smaller ones, but the end result would not provide the feel, the sound, or the look of a medieval instrument, it would simply be something modern.;
    Kudos to you, while your content is completely usable on it's own, the way you approach the projects is the real gem. You once said that since you are an experienced professional, you can no longer approach or present the way a novice can, and I know just what you mean. As my skills and knowledge increase, it does seem that watching me do something is sort of a lie in the eyes of the novice, what seems easy and effortless for me is simply not in the knowledge or skill base of the novice. So I hate to produce content for general consumption, instead preferring small in-person workshop sessions that allow me to guide a student personally into the skills that provide results. One day I might figure out how to make legitimate content in the production of authentic medieval instruments, and when I do I hope I remember to approach it with the humility you show in each project. Thank you for your continued willingness to bring all of us, even those with some hand skills, a different way of thinking about projects.

    • @RexKrueger
      @RexKrueger  2 года назад

      You know, when I see i long comment, I usually roll my eyes. The long ones are rambling, irrelevant manifestos that often don't even really connect to the video. Your comment was so clear, detailed and thoughtful. A pleasure to read. Thanks for taking the time!

  • @johnburgoon8711
    @johnburgoon8711 3 года назад +6

    This lesson was a real bodice-ripper. Thanks, Rex.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja 3 года назад

      Except realistic and not rude.

  • @projectqueen610
    @projectqueen610 3 года назад +2

    Wow! I was raised around woodworking and I'm fascinated with hand tools especially since that was all my Dad would let me use as a 9 yr. old. I really enjoyed your video. It was very nostalgic for me. Plus your work is gorgeous.

  • @chaplainand1
    @chaplainand1 3 года назад +5

    ...forgot - when I was a builder, I put in a set of basement stairs 3x before I got it right. I was attempting to make more steps for the lady of the house who had leg/foot issues. I failed to take into account the required 6'8" headroom. Tore out the first set, thought I had made the right adjustments, and no, I didn't. Cost me about $300 in materials - three sets of 2x12 stingers plus OSB treads and risers. Plus lost wages...so, yah, mistakes get made. Comes from our parents reading too many romance novels...

  • @Katsoup98
    @Katsoup98 3 года назад +3

    This video is great. Subtle humor, honest humility, and an encouraging message. Not to mention the chest, of course. That thumbnail molding technique blew me away, and it looks like something I might try one day. Great job, Rex. Thanks for continuing to make content that has meaning.

  • @Stelios.Posantzis
    @Stelios.Posantzis 3 года назад

    Nice project and nice pep talk on using hand tools alone. The only (a-hem) things I would add are:
    a) You don't need to spend a lot of money on tools (just a fraction of what power tools cost) and you can instantly start on carpentry with just a basic toolset. Hand tools also allow you more time to think and realize you're making a mistake and gradually learn carpentry.
    b) You don't need to spend time and brain cells on choosing the best power tools you can buy for your budget, worry about battery life, cables, wall sockets, optional accessories, warranties etc.
    c) You don't need a dust extraction system.
    d) You don't run the risk of accidentally maiming yourself or someone else maiming themselves or having other serious injuries/electrocution inflicted upon you/them.
    e) Unless you practice carpentry for a living (where time becomes a big issue), the sense of fulfilment from completing a piece, by just using your bare hands, and exercising your creativity simply do not compare. One is an art the other is a process.. pick your preference.

  • @user-qh9lu5cl6n
    @user-qh9lu5cl6n 2 месяца назад

    In about two minutes of viewing somewhere around the 5 minute mark I saw enough of your tools and thought process to see that you too spend time with Paul Sellers's videos. Nice work.

  • @ScottHurlbert
    @ScottHurlbert 2 года назад

    Just finishing up my chest from your plans. Loved it. Thanks so much for the lessons. As others have mentioned I enjoy that you share your mistakes. I, for example, used my cordless router to cut the dados because of all the time it would save. I can't explain it and I don't know why but I spent 40 minutes getting the measurements and guide right for my first dado. I measured from the shelf line only to realize it wasn't square. I then measured from the bottom wrong - twice. I then realized I was measuring from the front of the router bit for the offset but the offset should have been from the back. At one point it was so bad that I took everything off and sanded the freaking mistake lines off my board and started over. I cut that dado, flipped the board over and had the sister dado cut in under 2 minutes. Some times you're just ... stuck in a groove baby! Thanks for the help.

  • @thomasarussellsr
    @thomasarussellsr 3 года назад

    Hey, Rex, the short bottom is an easy fix. Cut it across the middle and glue in a racing strip of contrasting wood. Oh, or, nail in a cross support ledger board front to back in the middle and say you have improved the design to a seven board/panel chest. The face piece for the legs will hide the through tennon on the front, and the rear one won't show when the chest is up against the wall or bed.

  • @hmpeter
    @hmpeter 3 года назад +11

    Ha, I was just looking into a chest as a nice rainy sunday project. Perfect timing, thanks! :D

    • @RexKrueger
      @RexKrueger  3 года назад +2

      YOu might even be able to squeeze it out in one day!

    • @hmpeter
      @hmpeter 3 года назад +4

      @@RexKrueger Not me, but that's okay. We tend to have lots of rainy sundays here on the north German coast. :-)

  • @michiganmoto7687
    @michiganmoto7687 3 года назад

    I started out with hand tools because I couldn’t afford power tools so that’s where I learned accuracy. Now I have a whole shop full of power tools (because I’m getting older some of the hand tools aggravate my arthritis) but when possible I use the hand tools more than not. There is just something about hearing the blades interacting with the wood without the noise of electric motors to drown them out.

  • @VanDamArtisan
    @VanDamArtisan 3 года назад +4

    Thanks for the vote of confidence Rex! I'm a contractor/rough carpenter turned hand tool woodworker with a RUclips channel. Sounds like we're similar, except I'm way behind. Love your content. Thanks for your efforts. I know it's not the easiest thing to do.

  • @timothyvolkers5343
    @timothyvolkers5343 3 года назад

    I've been living in a rental house since 2014 and have been doing some power tool woodworking as a side hobby and have massed a decent collection. From a strong 3.5 horse tablesaw a good ole Craftsman in excellent shape, as well as several other benchtop power tools mostly through craigslist. However I am going to need to move into a apartment due to some financial changes and I am considering switching over to doing hand tool woodworking instead. I have enjoyed both Rex's channel here and the classic Paul Sellers channel and instruction. So I think hand tool woodworking is where I will need to go from here, wish me luck y'all.

  • @ardenthebibliophile
    @ardenthebibliophile 3 года назад +7

    A SEVEN board chest! All lies! /s
    Great job yet again Rex!

    • @DerekWoolverton
      @DerekWoolverton 3 года назад +1

      Nine if you count the two bottoms that were too short.

    • @rustyshackleford3978
      @rustyshackleford3978 3 года назад

      @@DerekWoolverton Love it; it only takes 9 boards to make a 6 board chest!

  • @toddstapley7185
    @toddstapley7185 2 года назад

    Great video, humble teacher, crisp and to the point

  • @garynelles
    @garynelles 2 года назад

    Good point on hand tools and power tools. I found after using hand tools a bit that I became more precise.

  • @ralphlivingston762
    @ralphlivingston762 3 года назад

    I just received "joined" from ABE book exchange and have ordered "Mouldings in Practice" from Lost Art Press. I'm basically a Shopsmith woodworker who has gravitated toward more use of hand tools. I have a lot of white and red pine so a six board chest is in my future. Many thanks for your post.

  • @michaelthompson5875
    @michaelthompson5875 3 года назад +10

    So I'm not alone in being able to cut pieces too short...multiple times? Ugh story of my life.
    Great project Rex. The chest looks great.

    • @isabelgutierrez8150
      @isabelgutierrez8150 Год назад

      I think anyone who says they haven’t, must be lying. Its like a woodworkers brain fart, you knew the last one was too short but you cut the next one the same length 🤦‍♀️

  • @miguelsanzpalomino6921
    @miguelsanzpalomino6921 3 года назад +5

    This really inspire me to make something similar, I would love to watch a video about the finishing of this chest. Thanks for all your work Rex

  • @CurtisMassey
    @CurtisMassey 3 года назад

    Man I'm glad ur good enough to tell us about ur mess ups. I think we all do 'uh-ohs' all the time, but we always feel like we're the only woodworkers that mess up.

  • @ryanellis7520
    @ryanellis7520 2 года назад

    one of the best channels on woodworking hands down.

  • @Fatevad
    @Fatevad 3 года назад

    do the work get the results. Half of the reason I watch these videos is because of your enthusiasm and your dedication to the work and it translates well to your viewers. Thank you Rex

  • @bradmoshenko7733
    @bradmoshenko7733 3 года назад

    Have something similar in my house. Apparently made by a great great grandfather or something like that. Apparently also went to the Yukon. Hinges unfortunately have broken out but a cool thing is the stuff in it is super old as well, mostly blankets.

  • @pinkeye00
    @pinkeye00 3 года назад

    Rex - honesty is amazing @ 10:30 ... I appreciate that which is why I come back.

  • @mattstalford9769
    @mattstalford9769 3 года назад +8

    I love your finished project. Gives me a project to do later this year when my basic skills are more refined (and my workshop warms up). One thing I like is the way the bottom can be customized.

    • @RexKrueger
      @RexKrueger  3 года назад +4

      It's a very flexible form. You really do what you want.

    • @mattstalford9769
      @mattstalford9769 Год назад

      @@RexKrueger Finally got mine made. It will be used as a toybox for my grandkids.

  • @LucianoSerranoPalestras
    @LucianoSerranoPalestras 2 года назад

    Man, thanks a lot for your passion in work hand tools with wood, you give us a amazing power to keep us going on and getting better no matter what we can't do yet. In Live in Brazil amazon florest City and i have Access to some greatest hard wood, i am doing some works learning from RUclips and yours youtube channel is a great support for me. Thanks a lot and i wish you a haapy and blessed live.

  • @christopherparks7819
    @christopherparks7819 3 года назад

    Thank you for noting your mistakes, I like that more and more woodworkers are bringing this up. Woodworking is such a singular and personal hobby that sometimes we can get caught up on trying to be perfect.

  • @bubbleyboy
    @bubbleyboy 3 года назад

    Okay. I slept a couple of days on watching this one, and I regret it. This has actually helped contextualise a bunch of things I've been a little bit confused about really well. I'm super amateur and learning pretty much just from RUclips and trial an error, and the explanation about nails vs. glue and why to use nails for this just... Made a few things click into place. Love it. Previously I've only seen people commenting vaguely on this.

  • @Madmoody21
    @Madmoody21 Год назад

    Rex there are others. Others who have more hand skills than you. Others have more this and that. I do like this overall channel very much due to low snobbery yet you have a very refined eye. All the photos of design examples are great good work.

  • @marinechapssemperfiout9939
    @marinechapssemperfiout9939 Год назад

    Wow! I like this presentation along with your genuine humanity! There was much enjoyment. Semper Fi

  • @lynxg4641
    @lynxg4641 3 года назад

    Once again, another great project and explanation of the why's. Your video last week on nails really opened my eyes to why the "old timers" only used nails and no glue a lot of the time. I'll be attempting this project in a month or two once I've managed to make my work bench, vice, saw vice and got the tools to do it - currently on 2nd lockdown, so no hardwares open for another 2 weeks.
    Just finished my first mallet using a hammer, chisel and sand paper and am fairly impressed that I got it to come out pretty good, tapered mortise, wedged and the handle is square on both axis, sitting on my counter drying now. Next project is the restoration of my father's mitre saw, around 70 years old, handles almost done, blade started, need to finish the blade and sharpen and wouldn't be attempting any of this without finding your channel, so thanks so much Rex.

  • @dandypants1983
    @dandypants1983 3 года назад

    Thanks to your videos, I've made the low sawhorses, the stump-bench (with future plans to fit a poor man's moxon vise to it), a (very rustic) bow saw, a poor man's rabbet plane, a rustic three-tool stool, a massive mallet, and a small bench. All from techniques you've taught me. It's been less than a year.
    Making a chest has been something I've wanted to do for a while, and my face lit up when I saw this video!

  • @dougiefresh9618
    @dougiefresh9618 3 года назад

    You must have picked trough every cheap board on the planet to get the no knot boards. Nice project.

  • @patriciau6277
    @patriciau6277 3 года назад

    I built one of these for my youngest. I put a drawer between the legs and chest it spanned the bottom. She kept all of her wooden blocks stored in it. Easiest build ever.

  • @davebrown7198
    @davebrown7198 3 года назад

    Amazing. Great project idea and excellent video. Post video philosophy and commentary are spot on. Exactly the content I have been searching for lately. Keep these types of projects coming!

  • @nsmith2908
    @nsmith2908 3 года назад

    I have been woodworking for 20 years and never heard of the painters tape/super glue trick. Great idea! Thanks!

  • @DrIngo1980
    @DrIngo1980 3 года назад

    Mr. Krueger, like I said a few minutes ago on another video of yours, you have an amazing talent and simply watching your videos already made me more knowledgeable than I ever imagined to be. Please keep up the amazing content. I think I'm not the only one when I say you are helping out a completely new generation of DIYers and woodworkers. And that is awesome! We all love you!

  • @shauncherry7305
    @shauncherry7305 3 года назад

    Love the clear way you describe your methods. Always worth watching your videos. Another great project.

  • @dougwagner607
    @dougwagner607 Год назад

    Solid tips and humor too! Thanks for another great video Rex!

  • @QuadDoc
    @QuadDoc 3 года назад

    You are awesome! Thank you for sharing your TALENT with the world!!
    Your teaching style, videography, and creative mind gets us hooked on you as we wait like addicts for your next video to post! Thanks again Rex!!

  • @GaryT1952
    @GaryT1952 3 года назад

    Great project Rex...very visually pleasing, nicely done

  • @harrybrooks7750
    @harrybrooks7750 3 года назад +1

    Absolutely loved this one Rex. It will allow anyone with a reasonable level of skill and a minimum of tools to make a real piece of furniture that will be passed on through generations. So many woodworking projects on RUclips are the exact opposite: unnecessary complexity with little consideration of historical technique and the reasons behind it (did someone say epoxy river table?) Keep up the good work!

  • @theeddorian
    @theeddorian 3 года назад

    Measure twice and cut once and again and again. Been there too often to count. Great video.

  • @Jeffwheeldon
    @Jeffwheeldon 3 года назад

    I am so glad you posted this video. I have been eyeing the six-boarded chest in the Achancist Design Book for a long time and was sitting on the fence about building it, but now I think it will be my next project!

  • @maryjoanhill7847
    @maryjoanhill7847 3 года назад

    You explain the process so I TOTALY understand . THANKS 😊

  • @candycoatedcactus
    @candycoatedcactus 3 года назад

    WOW. This project is BEAUTIFUL! Thank you so much for the great project, I've wanted to make a treasure chest for a while, this taught me a lot!

  • @CeeJayThe13th
    @CeeJayThe13th 3 года назад

    I'm not sure how you manage it but you really make me feel like I can do anything when I'm watching your videos.
    Like, I'm pretty confident in my skills but Rex Krueger and Steve Ramsey really make me feel like I can *do things*. Thanks for that.

  • @MabruBlack
    @MabruBlack 3 года назад

    This looks BEAUTIFUL! I’m currently moving to a new house so I might build this chest in the near future, it would be a great addition to our new space. Thanks for sharing Rex!

  • @keithhaycraft3765
    @keithhaycraft3765 3 года назад

    My Trade is that of Carpenter. When I was doing my learning, I was taught to work with hand tools before using power tools also, how to maintain my tools including using "lump" hammer for setting the teeth of circular saw blades before tct blades became available.

  • @timhockersmith3934
    @timhockersmith3934 3 года назад

    Great video, Rex! Thanks for your great descriptions of each step! Well done!

  • @johnwhitley2898
    @johnwhitley2898 3 года назад

    Great work and I love this chest!
    As a "Power Tool" man, I felt that in making this chest, I will have to get out my hand tools and practice the art again. I appreciate your restarting the fire again!!

  • @northroadwoodwork8616
    @northroadwoodwork8616 3 года назад +1

    I support your channel because I think you do an excellent job of sharing woodworking skills and information in a very approachable manner. This is another great example. Well done.

  • @jezfrench9435
    @jezfrench9435 3 года назад

    Part of being a true craftsman is admitting to, and learning from your mistakes. Love your videos Rex 👍

  • @truus5653
    @truus5653 2 года назад

    Just finished making this chest, it was really much fun 😄. Thanks for creating this kind of content Rex. This was my fifth bild from your plans

  • @SpaceMonkey23101
    @SpaceMonkey23101 3 года назад

    Amazing video, Rex. Thank you so much.

  • @royharkins7066
    @royharkins7066 3 года назад

    Wow ....thanks so much for showing 😊

  • @MATLOCKE269
    @MATLOCKE269 2 года назад +1

    This was awesome! I've been interested in woodworking recently and this makes me really interested in using hand tools! Thanks for the inspiration

  • @davidcharny
    @davidcharny 3 года назад

    Well done!! Big fan of hand tools work

  • @brucemillar3015
    @brucemillar3015 3 года назад

    I really, really, like how that Six-Board Chest turned out - It's beautiful and practical - Excellent video and brilliant tutorial - Nice work!

  • @destinationunknown1445
    @destinationunknown1445 3 года назад

    You continue to inform and inspire. Thank you.

  • @nickwoo2
    @nickwoo2 3 года назад

    Oh well I already built a viking sea chest out of some white oak and modified it to have a attachable worktable to it. It was a great project I will have it till I pass.

  • @danharris1747
    @danharris1747 3 года назад +1

    Love this video. Looks simple enough when you see it being made but I bet it’ll be a test cutting all the joints accurately and all the mouldings. Loved the details into the nails and the reasoning behind it all too. I’ve got to have a go!

  • @Tinkering4Time
    @Tinkering4Time 3 года назад

    Thanks for the tools and perspective, Rex!

  • @nkachur
    @nkachur 3 года назад +1

    Rex, another excellent video. Thanks for the tutorial.

  • @eclipsestorm1975
    @eclipsestorm1975 3 года назад

    Very nicely done

  • @wehaveasaying
    @wehaveasaying Год назад

    Fantastic content. I love the hand work / simple tool. I love that you are not afraid to refer your viewers to excellent resources just because they're excellent resources. I love the honesty of your mistakes and the work around for those. You do just a really super job at making wood working accessible to the average Joe. Thanks.

  • @MegaGavinski
    @MegaGavinski 3 года назад

    Great video, Rex, and quite inspiring for someone like me returning to woodwork in my retirement. I particularly like your independence from machine tools - I don’t want piles of power tools, and its far more satisfying to get the result you want just by using hand and eye. Keep up the great work. G

  • @JamesSmith-su3oz
    @JamesSmith-su3oz 3 года назад

    Rex,
    I watched the video and read the link that you included I must say you hit the nail on the head ( pun ). A better explation of how to build and more than one way. Well done.

  • @Johansentrae
    @Johansentrae 3 года назад

    So nice to see a build video, Rex. Chest looks good. Handtools are coolest :)

  • @warpfly6318
    @warpfly6318 3 года назад

    excellent video and i think what appeals to me is that you admit and show your mistakes and or imperfections its very reassuring.

  • @barefootlyrooted
    @barefootlyrooted Год назад

    I’ve recently been interested in using cut nails and this seems like the perfect first project! I also really like your chisel router plane and will probably try making one of those as well. Thank you for sharing!