spoon carving

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  • Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024
  • This video is was my approach to carving small production batches of fine wooden spoons. It highlights the obscure Swedish spoon mule, which is the wooden device I use to hold the roughed out spoon while using the push knife and draw knives.
    Check out my current work at www.woodspirithandcraft.com or on instagram: @jarrod__dahl @woodspirithandcraft

Комментарии • 141

  • @jerrymichalski2161
    @jerrymichalski2161 8 лет назад +4

    Craftsmanship at its finest. Thank you.

  • @ossu.entertainment5761
    @ossu.entertainment5761 10 лет назад

    this video is amazing, shows another approach to spooncarving, a wider set of tools than just the minimal bushcraft stuff and is thought through and edited to its best! Great work of craftmanship! Biggest respect and appriation from Austria!
    Max

  • @jcamisa50
    @jcamisa50 6 лет назад

    As they say a picture is worth a thousand works but in this case a video is worth a thousand words. I like the no talking idea, just get to work nd watch. Thank you.

  • @richardloren8833
    @richardloren8833 5 лет назад

    I just started carving. Learning the grain is interesting. Cuts smooth in one direction, then starts to snag. You have to go then in the opposite direction. Interesting to watch someone very experienced carving....

  • @leemichel8199
    @leemichel8199 5 лет назад

    Its great to come across wee gems like this video from 4 years ago xpeacex god bless you and your family

  • @daniel_miller
    @daniel_miller 9 лет назад

    Great video. I love your setup and traditional techniques that you employ. A great tutorial for new carvers like myself. Thanks!

  • @oxman0313
    @oxman0313 9 лет назад

    addictive.i made first spoon then made three more over a weekend. lots of fun.

  • @gonzo381
    @gonzo381 10 лет назад

    best spoon carving vid i have seen! many thanks for your time in sharing

  • @Tryshba
    @Tryshba 9 лет назад +1

    Hey, there! I'm a quilter who stumbled into this by way of Pinterest. What an amazing art! I didn't even know this existed. I love seeing other craftsman doing their thing. This looks relaxing.

  • @charlieplaza
    @charlieplaza 10 лет назад

    Those shavings come out like butter! I have such a hard time in comparison!! Sharper tools, softer wood, and LOTS more skill than me :)
    Great job!

  • @paulhenry7122
    @paulhenry7122 9 лет назад

    nice job good craftsmanship I do bushcraft and enjoy watching the old method carving I wish had th

  • @DavidOMart
    @DavidOMart 10 лет назад

    So good! I love your shop.

  • @hardcase1659
    @hardcase1659 8 лет назад

    That saw's ringing sounds like it's made out of really high quality steel

  • @stig92410
    @stig92410 10 лет назад +9

    Lovely video Jarrod, great to see you working from start to finish; lots of similarities and differences to how i work, just as it should be - will try the can-opener as at 5:34. Love the sections where you consider the shape, that's a great lesson for folk. Nice apron too :)

    • @jarroddahl
      @jarroddahl  10 лет назад +2

      Thanks Steve.

    • @randomfox9970
      @randomfox9970 7 лет назад

      +Jarrod Stone Dahl greetings from UK England Essex fellow spoon carver nice job old tools are best can't beat em too I loves my antique blades in this throw away society you toss it buy new years ago you repairs it. 🐾🐺👍

    • @randomfox9970
      @randomfox9970 7 лет назад

      +Jarrod Stone Dahl I recommended highly barn the spoons book too 💕🐾🐺👍

  • @saman2169
    @saman2169 2 года назад

    Very very nice 👍

  • @abdulhamidkose4169
    @abdulhamidkose4169 3 года назад

    Everything happens with tools beautiful natural

  • @Rebelbodger
    @Rebelbodger 10 лет назад

    Great Jarrod - Definitely going to make a spoon horse… Thanks for posting.

    • @jarroddahl
      @jarroddahl  10 лет назад

      It's a great tool to have in use.

    • @EugenManisor
      @EugenManisor 10 лет назад

      Hi Rebelbodger! If You have some plans, pictures, any ideas about "spoon horse", can yo share it? Thanks.

  • @williamj3459
    @williamj3459 7 лет назад

    Fantastic job. I learned a lot. Thanks so much!

  • @johnnybear9400
    @johnnybear9400 8 лет назад +5

    Hey man, i loved that this video so clearly shows the incredible level of skill that you have and your confidence in that. Magic stuff. Can you tell me the brand of hook knife that you're using in this video? Many thanks, Johnny

  • @Kallaste.
    @Kallaste. 9 лет назад

    Very nice. I love that mule. I would like to build one!

  • @TheCompleteGuitarist
    @TheCompleteGuitarist 10 лет назад

    Beautiful. Thanks for sharing.

  • @MrJonnabob
    @MrJonnabob 9 лет назад +5

    I love your shop setup! I've been carving spoons for 35 years and have never seen a shaving horse for spoons like you have. Do you have plans available? Or just some good pictures? Thanks!

  • @craig9802
    @craig9802 9 лет назад

    Nice work, Jarrod. I really like that design - light where it can be, and robust where it needs to be. I'm curious if you ever have wood movement issues carving with quarter-sawn grain like that? It would seem to solve some of the movement / cracking issues with going strictly bark-up or bark-down, as I usually see. Oh, and your technique looked perfectly safe to me, for what it's worth. I trust the guy who's been doing it for a lot of years.

  • @LifeOnBeagleRoad
    @LifeOnBeagleRoad 6 лет назад

    Such a great video on carving. Do you have one on how to construct a shave horse?

  • @Squirrelbslayer
    @Squirrelbslayer 9 лет назад

    Ahh yes. The force the blade toward you technique...

  • @renatoalves5603
    @renatoalves5603 6 лет назад

    cara você é fera dos fera marceneiro só com ferramentas manual você é o cara belo trabalho

  • @trapper9396
    @trapper9396 10 лет назад

    amazing

  • @thibautlesurvivalist
    @thibautlesurvivalist 10 лет назад

    I adore your spoon!:)
    H
    You do à good work!

  • @1611_KJB
    @1611_KJB 4 года назад +1

    Just a question for my curiosity, after you rough out with the draw-knife, you do most of the shaving with a Sloyd-type carving knife, why not a spoke-shave? It seems like a lot of wood removal using your hands and thumb where, since you have a spoon mule, you could better use two hands on a spoke-shave to do the heavy shaving and then just trim up with the Sloyd. I understand it's just a choice, but I'm curious why you made your choice. I don't have a spoon mule (yet) so the spoke-shave would be an awkward choice for me, but you appear to be setup perfectly for it. In any event, nice video, I picked up a lot of little tips. Last question, how much time did you use to build the wigwam and are you using anything besides a wood stove to heat it?

  • @roncannell4665
    @roncannell4665 4 года назад

    Anybody new to carving, needs to be told of the danger in cutting towards yourself.

  • @machenry67
    @machenry67 10 лет назад

    Fantastico

  • @foreman1946
    @foreman1946 10 лет назад

    Thanks for sharing your awesome talent. I am new to carving with small hands. I am finding some of the tools are hard to use, being too large. Do you know anyone that makes them for women? or do you have a smaller spoon knife for sale. I appreciate any assistance. Lois

  • @OldJesusFreak1958
    @OldJesusFreak1958 9 лет назад

    Excellent craftsmanship. What brand of knives are you using?

  • @robertarnsworth2464
    @robertarnsworth2464 8 лет назад

    I missed how he made the under side round. That's the hardest part for me to do.

  • @amosher5989
    @amosher5989 10 лет назад

    GREAT JOB. But I wonder how many times the knife has slipped in the past while cutting towards his thumb?

    • @davetogo123
      @davetogo123 10 лет назад

      Perfectly safe cut! Always cut away from yourself is what you tell children when they first start using a knife.

    • @curiousgeorge555
      @curiousgeorge555 Год назад

      That is called a can opener grip. If you notice, his index finger is used as a stop (hits the wood). The knife cannot travel to the thumb. Of course it takes practice and should not be tried without full knowledge of how it works and awareness of what you are doing. Put sundquist mora into ytube search. He is a master and teaches how to do it.

  • @Goldsmithexile1960
    @Goldsmithexile1960 10 лет назад

    Are you using a derwent dark wash pencil there at 1.26? I use them way better than carpenters pencils, fantastic dark clear marks especially on fresh green wood...

  • @soundcog
    @soundcog 9 лет назад

    Thanks for the video. I enjoyed it a lot. Can you tell me what type of saw you were using and also what you call the "Shaving Horse" device you used to hold the spoon blank while you used your draw knife?

  • @SkRiLLa905
    @SkRiLLa905 10 лет назад +4

    What kind of wood do you use for your spoons?

    • @Bartem_
      @Bartem_ 6 лет назад +1

      Aj Rook it looks like birch to me

  • @okendo2609
    @okendo2609 6 лет назад

    awesome skill, what knife you used there? (brand)

  • @danmottesheard5294
    @danmottesheard5294 5 лет назад

    great video. I have just ordered my first spoon carving set of knifes. I have carved a few with some rudimentary tools that turned out OK. can you recommend a brand or types of tools I should use as a beginner. any help would be a great help. love your work.

    • @ogi22
      @ogi22 5 лет назад

      Mora is OK for beginners. Although i find their hook knife a bit too thin. I made myself a couple of straight knives from old files and they work really good.

  • @TC__-oq1mj
    @TC__-oq1mj 7 лет назад

    What brand knife and axe are you using/would recommend?

  • @clydewaltenbaugh563
    @clydewaltenbaugh563 10 лет назад

    You do fantastic work. Wow, that was really cool to see that process. What was that tool you used to gouge/hollow out the spoon?

    • @jarroddahl
      @jarroddahl  10 лет назад +1

      Hey Clyde, I used 3 tools. A large hook knife, a carving gouge and a small spoon hook knife.

    • @clydewaltenbaugh563
      @clydewaltenbaugh563 10 лет назад

      Cool thanks. Did you make the knives yourself?

  • @thechildofthedamned
    @thechildofthedamned 10 лет назад

    may i ask what axe you are using?

  • @thatguyonabicycleofconsurv3908
    @thatguyonabicycleofconsurv3908 6 лет назад

    What brand hook knife do you use and size

  • @sergios.9009
    @sergios.9009 8 лет назад

    hi jarrod
    can you tel me, where did you get your hook knife?
    nice place, beautiful work.
    thanks for sharing

    • @daud7385
      @daud7385 8 лет назад

      I'm curious as well!

  • @Robert.Stackhouse
    @Robert.Stackhouse 7 лет назад

    What's that tool you are using at about the two minute mark that looks like a draw knife with handles along the axis of the blade?
    Great video.

    • @Robert.Stackhouse
      @Robert.Stackhouse 7 лет назад

      Got lucky with a Google search. Looks like it is called a Swedish push knife.

  • @toyzbg
    @toyzbg 10 лет назад

    awsome tools maybe a bit too many for a spoon..

  • @snowrain4127
    @snowrain4127 6 лет назад

    What type of wood should I use for spoons ? Would like to make a couple for use

    • @ogi22
      @ogi22 5 лет назад

      It's birch, very nice and soft wood for carving. The only downside it is pretty uniform in colour, but this can be an asset too :)

  • @tonkapoplol
    @tonkapoplol 9 лет назад

    whats the type of wood

    • @finn127
      @finn127 8 лет назад

      +Tonkapoplol birch

  • @xpapiezx
    @xpapiezx 7 лет назад

    how it calls this tool to splitting logs?

  • @mysticroots4204
    @mysticroots4204 8 лет назад

    what types of wood do you use ?

  • @thatguyonabicycleofconsurv3908
    @thatguyonabicycleofconsurv3908 6 лет назад

    Where you from

  • @toyzbg
    @toyzbg 10 лет назад +1

    also not a bad idea to use some protection

  • @amosher5989
    @amosher5989 10 лет назад

    K I am really bored...4th guy I watched carve spoons today! But yet I am waiting for one of them to slip with the knife!

  • @paulhenry7122
    @paulhenry7122 9 лет назад

    oops the tools

  • @mikenorman4001
    @mikenorman4001 9 лет назад +1

    Never sand when you can cut, and never cut when you can saw.
    And never trust a hipster in a yurt to do anything right.

  • @angeliqueamour4452
    @angeliqueamour4452 8 лет назад

    Use a dremmel and be done with it!

  • @Ninetieschannel
    @Ninetieschannel 8 лет назад +3

    ASMR in the title please ;)

  • @EvanFifesMusic
    @EvanFifesMusic 7 лет назад

    So angry.......

  • @bakdraft6578
    @bakdraft6578 10 лет назад

    speak?

  • @carloastone166
    @carloastone166 8 лет назад

    troppo pericoloso il modo di lavorare

  • @afdsadf147852369
    @afdsadf147852369 9 лет назад +3

    how have you not visited the ER yet

  • @amosher5989
    @amosher5989 10 лет назад

    Wonder if I can get $2 million to teach others how to do this. Canada needs jobs!

  • @TheWizzkid67
    @TheWizzkid67 9 лет назад +8

    Everything I watch this I learn something new. Watched this when I first started carving spoons. But now when I watch it I pick up on so many things that I missed before. Lovely spoon lovely video.

  • @bradsimpson8724
    @bradsimpson8724 10 лет назад +1

    I haven't tried spoon making yet, but I can already tell you made that look too easy. Very practiced. Curious to know what kind of wood that was. I can get my hands on some chunks of black walnut, which is supposed to be good(and really hard) spoon material, so maybe I'll give it a try. If I have any fingers left when I'm done, maybe I'll make a video too.

    • @Tsarge22
      @Tsarge22 9 лет назад +1

      Its birch wood

  • @suecollins3246
    @suecollins3246 2 года назад

    Lordy, but is that a _yurt_ ?

  • @pietrovtorringen
    @pietrovtorringen 4 года назад

    Which Wood is it?

  • @emersonroni
    @emersonroni 10 лет назад

    very good friend your video. I would like to see this bench to secure the wood to make the spoon. How is she? Its you show us?

  • @claudiakinmonth2227
    @claudiakinmonth2227 7 лет назад

    It's really interesting to set this against what we know about spoons in Irish historical texts, art history and spoons in Irish museum collections, thank you.

  • @Tabiatiarz
    @Tabiatiarz 9 лет назад

    your workshop is relaxing Mr Dahl. thanks for sharing great video. Hope best and safe days.

  • @vbamburintools
    @vbamburintools 8 лет назад

    Отличные ложки. Удачи и успехов.

  • @greygoatQ
    @greygoatQ 10 лет назад

    Very nice! I'm new to carving and your video showed me some new techniques. Thanks!

  • @thatguyonabicycleofconsurv3908
    @thatguyonabicycleofconsurv3908 6 лет назад

    Watching you carve is relaxing to me.... ty

  • @5quint1
    @5quint1 10 лет назад

    would like to know more about the spoon mule maybe some plans

  • @thatguyonabicycleofconsurv3908
    @thatguyonabicycleofconsurv3908 6 лет назад

    Where did you get the different tools in this video

  • @waspu704
    @waspu704 7 лет назад

    Yes, where did you get the hook knife, thanks.

  • @robertjohnson9355
    @robertjohnson9355 5 лет назад

    Thank you for sharing this
    Learning a lot

  • @matthartsburg6589
    @matthartsburg6589 7 лет назад

    What type of wood vice is that? Id like to know the name of it so i could try to make one. Then make spoons just like that.

    • @dominicm6144
      @dominicm6144 6 лет назад

      Did you find out its called a spoon mule?

  • @LorenErman
    @LorenErman 10 лет назад

    learned a lot. thanks for this video

  • @Goldsmithexile1960
    @Goldsmithexile1960 10 лет назад

    That saw dont mess about does it!

  • @nikhilparanjape7890
    @nikhilparanjape7890 4 года назад

    Can you please tell me what type of wood did you use? I need to do this for a school project.. Thank you.

    • @billastell3753
      @billastell3753 4 года назад +1

      I can't say for certain what kind of wood the carver is using but I can tell you what I use for my spoons in Canada. First it is always fresh cut wet wood. It is much easier to carve than dry wood. I find sumac and pin cherry to be the easiest. I also use buckthorn. It has a nice tight grain and when done it is a lovely yellow / orange colour. Lilac is OK and walnut is also a decent wood. I will not use ash as it is very hard. Many folks use birch and black cherry. Both I understand are good but I have never used them for spoons. Best of luck with your school project.

    • @nikhilparanjape7890
      @nikhilparanjape7890 4 года назад +1

      @@billastell3753 Thanks Bill... That was very helpful.

    • @nikhilparanjape7890
      @nikhilparanjape7890 4 года назад

      @Dragon Of Dojima nope.. doesn't my question give enough hints about my naivety? 😁

  • @amosher5989
    @amosher5989 10 лет назад

    What a artist!

  • @terranasunhas8962
    @terranasunhas8962 6 лет назад

    MUITO BOM!

  • @popescupop3194
    @popescupop3194 6 лет назад

    I'like ☺

  • @TheRealtordude
    @TheRealtordude 10 лет назад

    Nice to see the spoon mule in action, I also like the sneak under the bowl move

  • @NativeEarthlingAI
    @NativeEarthlingAI 8 лет назад

    Cutting the rough shape with a band saw would save a bunch of time and be way safer. Is it a macho thing to use an axe? Not sure I understand the obsession with crude tools when there are better solutions available. How is it more noble to use Japanese hand tools than a Chinese power tool. Both are born from high technology and certainly not indigenous to an American workplace.

    • @GOLDSMITHEXILE
      @GOLDSMITHEXILE 8 лет назад +5

      Hi tech chinese power tools? LOL now THEY are "crude".....if you would know a little about "American work places" you would know that elbow adzes and crook knives are indigenous American woodworking tools....
      i tink you'll find those knives Jarrod is using are possibly hand made with finnish or swedish blades
      BTW have you ever used a band saw? the blades need replacing often, and they are expensive. You get 1 good axe it will last you a lifetime same with a good working knife.

    • @hugoakerlund5114
      @hugoakerlund5114 7 лет назад

      Zebulon B Tradition

    • @hugoakerlund5114
      @hugoakerlund5114 7 лет назад

      GOLDSMITHEXILE 2016 Agreed

    • @NativeEarthlingAI
      @NativeEarthlingAI 7 лет назад

      The Chinese build all Apple products there Goldie. Have you ever been to China to see their modern cities? All the worlds best current Architecture is happening there. Check up on the racist impulse bro

    • @hugoakerlund5114
      @hugoakerlund5114 7 лет назад +1

      Zebulon B listen we dont care. Tradition is why we carve with axes and its a whole lot more fun than using a bandsaw in my opinion.