I'm an author on psychology - and I always recommend your channel as theropy for people. They can build a stool with 3 tools and get a sense of accomplishment and satisfaction. Part of rebuilding their life.
I'm 67 years old, lived in a reasonably large town in north Jersey with several elementary schools and sat at this style desk through 6th grade. Now you need to build the simple country style chair that went with the desk. Nice project, lots of memories TFS.
To the people wondering why the desk is at an angle: Slanted desks are far more ergonomic than flat top desks. They've been shown to improve a persons posture, handwriting, and reduce both hand strain and back pain. That's why artists and architects tend to work on slanted surfaces, and why school desks used to be at an angle. The people who made these desks a century ago understood the importance of proper ergonomics in the classroom, and schools only switched over to the modern flat top desk because they were more cost effective to mass produce.
When I was a kid and in school, we did have similair desks but they did have one extra feature: In our desks, there was little baton hinged across front and inside of the desk. It was possible to fold it over to support top so it was angled when needed and flat when needed. It was very smart and simple design that improved usability greatly.
It always amazes me how in the past, British and especially American simple-folk consistently came up with basic but classic designs that have shaped the generations since, using the most basic of hand tools, the cheapest wood available (with very little waste) and hardly any mechanical fixings at all, yet they stand the test of time. The sheer simplicity and lasting quality puts just about all modern techniques and manufacturers to shame - at a fraction of the cost in terms of both finance and workload to produce it. For the most part, these people were farmers and cottage industry workers; they had no apprenticeships or college training in design or manufacture - many of them probably couldn't read nor write - yet they could build and furnish a house in no time with items that last a century and more. What have we come to in just a couple hundred years (at most) when home made furniture is no longer desired and we have to spend ridiculous amounts on stuff that has a fashion lifespan of maybe a few years at most...?
My goodness, who are you? Where did you learn to write? Henry David Thoreau was the bane of my sophomore year. You knowledge and clarity are very welcome.
Personally, I loved Thoreau's book. I even a point to go to Walden's Pond on a business trip to the East Coast from California. It was lovely and peaceful. That was thirty years ago.
I don't really like craftsman style very much, but I do really like the way you put together projects without the ubiquitous expensive tools like a domino joiner. What that's done for me is as I do develop my tool set is let me do some of your projects in my own way, taking advantage of things like my small table saw and band saw (and recently - thickness planer, which has helped me get really nice boards from construction lumber in short order) to speed up tasks and make changes to suit my own style. Your plans and videos have developed my skills far beyond any other that I've worked with. And I absolutely LOVE that you use inexpensive construction grade lumber. We have northwestern Hemlock out here for construction, and it's such a gorgeous wood when finished properly. I recently finished your English joiner's mallet using a piece of Arizona Ironwood my dad gave me, with a cherry handle. I had a check down the center (it was a 5-inch limb) but the thing was ironwood, so I just ran some superthin starbond CA glue down the check and it's been rock solid. And today I finished making that low, portable bench from two hemlock 2x6's. Instead of your through-leg design, I made my legs into a more mid-century tapered shape and recessed them fully into slots in the batons. the legs feel so narrow but the thing is wildly stable. My thickness planer and table saw/sled helped me get super square, flat, clean surfaces, so I wound up with a piece that flat out looks good as a piece of furniture, and is now pulling double duty as a hallway bench for putting shoes on.
I simply can’t believe an English professor is dissing Walden! lol I love Walden, though I admit many find it dry. But your desk is anything but dry and boring: in a word, it’s wonderful! I’m going to have to build one (or two) for my grandchildren. Excellent work, as always, Rex!
He’s not a professor, but still someone who used to be an English teacher. I’m taking his comment to mean that as someone who’s not from the country where it’s a classic I shouldn’t bother reading it.
Still had them at my elementary school in the early to mid 90's as well. They were well used and abused by then, but i was in south-fulton county so everything we had was old hand downs from Atlanta area schools.
Some schools in RSA still have them, as a seated unit. For some reason, the repaired ones were never as comfortable as the old originals. I guess the shop teacher couldn't be bothered to do a decent job, even if he had his talking stick ready if you were a millimeter off.
This kind of desk takes me back to my childhood: we still used a basically similar design, much carved on by generations of schoolboys, in my UK school in the 60's. One thing in our desks that I think you'll regret not having on yours is a trough along the length of the flat section behind the hinges, not extending to the edge. This gives the user somewhere to put pens and pencils so they don't roll off .
We still had these desks when I was in school in the early 80s here in the Caribbean and I honestly still think they're suing this style now. Great memories and have to agree, the little trough was useful to hold pencils and pens. Another great project to put on the "To Build" list.
Heck, I had one where there was a filled up hole for an inkwell, along with the pencil slot. Sadly our desks were screwed shut because they were used as garbage bins.
@@hardcode57 our desks were screwed shut, and well, after the incident where a unknown person stuffed the desk full of paper and lit it.... Technical school, you know how it goes.
I always really like the « country furniture » style videos. It feels like the « classic forms » are great, but people who are not immersed in the furniture world don’t always know what pieces to even start looking at.
I just completed this project and it was a lot of fun. Made it for my mom who really needed one. She loves it! I made mine from ash, with legs from alder. A nice combination and ended up getting some ash with interesting grain patterns in it that makes it look beautiful.
My grammar school had such desks made in one with two extended feet to take a flap up wooden seat. Well carved with past pupil’s names etc. All in solid best pine. Would cost a fortune today to make. Might be still in use for all I know. They were bought with the opening of the school in Edwardian days. Some of them used in asbestos cement panelled ‘temporary’ classrooms too. The temporary classrooms to be replaced once we defeated the Kaiser. Still in use when I left in 1972. Comfortable and useful desks/seats. They had a groove for your dip pen and a porcelain inkwell for the ink. A step forward from my father’s village school with slate tablets and slate pencils I suppose.
Where I worked we had three geological specimen collections which were started in the mid 19th century. Catalog entries were made by hand in large leather bound registers. These sat in and on a large 19th century ledger desk. Much more refined than your desk. It was heavily built with massive turned legs along with the lift up top with storage underneath. The cataloguing is now done via computer for ease of searching. Some of us don't like putting Al our eggs in the one computer basket so the registers are still used to record basic information
Loved your description of Walden. About three years ago I walked the lake. Then, bought the book. I think i'm 50 pages in. It is a slog to read it for sure.
I read Walden for fun in high school, and I'll have you know I find it much more enjoyable than, say, The Last of the Mohicans, which was required reading.
@@danielbackley9301 Nah, I just like Thoreau's poetic descriptions and philosophical meanderings. On the other hand, I find James Fenimore Cooper unbelievably dull.
It is not literature in the truest sense, but if you want to beat Walden try reading the Journals of Lewis and Clark. They can make you cry with pain. Great build Rex.
Nice design, don't forget a small rounded groove on the top edge to stop pencil from rolling off. Easy with a router, but a scraper piece of rounded tin/steel on a stick of pine would do it too. (Probably what they would have used 200 years ago!)
I personally have an issue when it comes to clutter. I've been thinking about making furniture with sloped tops to curb that tendency. This is perfect for eliminating stacks and piles. The sloped top will position laptops in a more ergonomic position.
I was really looking forward to the finish, but we never got there. I think milk paint would look good on this, the light blue example was nice. Overall, great work as usual REX!!!
Hey Rex, very much enjoyed this project for your daughter. also super nice to see her in the shop with dad. watching the process of furniture being made solely with hand tools is a pleasure. You and Gillis Bjork.....birds of a feather!
Real talk, Rex. I don't know if your entire past year of projects has deliberately led up to this, but the way you present it has made it very intuitive. If it's accidental, you're a lucky cuss. If it was done on purpose, you're brilliant. Love your stuff, man. Stay safe.
With slightly taller legs to make it standing-height (maybe a cross-brace if needed for wobbling), this looks like it would be an awesome drafting desk for plans/planning in the workshop.
I was thinking this too. Make it standing height, add cross braces on the legs at a height to rest a foot on, and maybe a shelf or drawer below the body but high enough not to hit the knees... This would be a really handy piece in the shop!
Remember: It's very, very important to sit and work in a chair at the correct height, for children as for adults! Luckily most kids like to stand up when working, and that is good for body and mind, if the table has the correct height! Damn, it's complicated! :D
Love it, how you combine a bit of history and woodworking. Might build such desk a bit taller, so I can stand at it and it can hold my tools and plans. After I build my workbench, and possibly a saw bench, and that garden furniture I promised .... Nice work and another great video, Rex. I hope your daughter is pleased as well :)
Thank you Rex! I’m currently reading “Country Furniture” by Al Watson. Thank you for recommending this book. It’s a fascinating read. Your narration of your desk build for your daughter ties in well with the images characterized by Watson’s book of early settlers he describes making their own furniture. I love it and I can’t wait to tackle some of these primitive furniture pieces myself.
All these years I was afraid I was deficient in my mental abilities with my inability to appreciate Walden. I have always put it into the same category as that old Russian writer everyone always talks about. I did enjoy your desk build very much. I think I will make one using IPE or maybe Ironwood in order to give it a chance to survive my nephews use. Have a great day!
There are very few things you need to know about Russian literature. They are 1. it's always cold .2 everyone is miserable .3 everyone either dies young or is old or becomes old and miserable .4 you will never ever want to read anything that is Russian literature and if assigned to do so you MUST buy the CLIFF NOTES as Russian literature is not meant to be read. No I am not joking and I am not being completely sarcastic either. If anyone tells you that they have read WAR and Peace in it's entirety or that they enjoyed it ---THEY ARE LYING.
@@danielbackley9301 Lying or they are sick and wrong like me and got a grad degree in Russian lit. I've read War and Peace several times, both in Russian and in English. 🤣
@@VeretenoVids Congrats on the degree I know I couldn't have done it but then again I'm half Polish by ancestry. The Jesuits made me read an excerpt from War and Peace in High School there is no way I could have read the entire book and I'm someone who likes to read. God bless and please don't take my remarks too seriously.
Really nice project. Last weekend I bought a jar of cut/square nails at an antique store for a few dollars with no project in mind. Maybe I'll build my daughter a desk too
What can be said that hasn't already been said? Anyway, great project. I'm sure she thinks you're Superman. It's great when your kids say "Dad, can you make something for me?" It's even better when they ask "Dad, can we make something together?"
Thank you for your incredible research work. Awesome - all thumbs up! The knowledge you are mining from the past is what makes this channel outstanding and very interesting and very trendy. And, as sustainability is the key for the future, I can see, you are far ahead with your wood furniture. It can be used for ages, can easily be modified and at the end with a natural coating it can even be energized in the oven without any chemical pollution. It's a real deal. It is what I like to see.
You can still see these in junk shops now and then in Australia. Seems to be a pretty widespread design- suggests that it was very practical. Nice project!
Hi Rex, great video! I have a small request to you. Maybe you will make a video about card/cabinet scrapers for wood? That will be interesting. Cheer man!
Of course your daughter was pretty good with the saw, she is a girl, way smarter than us, men. Great video! I hope she enjoys the desk very much! Thanks for the content!
Yup. My observation with my kids (3 and 5) in the shop and my classmates in school rowing on the river. Boys tend to use too much force and not enough control.
Have you considered doing a video where you make a nice wooden handle for that 4 in 1 HF screwdriver? I love those things. They had them for around 50¢, a while back. I bought a bunch. Gave some to my kids and several to my church for the Operation Christmas Child shoe boxes. I've been thinking about making a London Pattern handle for one, just to see how it goes. The desk turned out great, btw. Another great video. I love your channel. Keep up the good work.
Wow. That desk is beautiful. I’ve done many of your projects, although most don’t come out even close to as nice as yours. That’s why I know if I were to try planing the little lip piece with the upside down plane, I’m leaving pieces of my knuckles in the shop
Been there done that, but I've found that a modeling plane works pretty good on really small stock like that maple, and with much less blood letting takes a little getting used to working with a plane that's only a bit bigger than your thumb
Absolutely love it. Thinking of making one with legs a bit shortened to set on top of my kitchen table that I do my work on to use as an elevated standing desk with storage
Make an Erismann's desk for your daughter -- this is quite in the spirit of your channel. Traditional carpentry with deep historical roots. Сделай для своей дочери парту Эрисмана - это вполне в духе твоего канала, традиционная столярка с глубокими историческими корнями.
Great job. My SON has a hand full of girls all very young and this along with the mission bench would be good Grandfather gifts. Square nails where do you get them?
I'm an author on psychology - and I always recommend your channel as theropy for people.
They can build a stool with 3 tools and get a sense of accomplishment and satisfaction. Part of rebuilding their life.
I'm 67 years old, lived in a reasonably large town in north Jersey with several elementary schools and sat at this style desk through 6th grade. Now you need to build the simple country style chair that went with the desk. Nice project, lots of memories TFS.
A chair to go with it is a fantastic idea. Would love to see that!
Rex Krueger says banana
To the people wondering why the desk is at an angle:
Slanted desks are far more ergonomic than flat top desks. They've been shown to improve a persons posture, handwriting, and reduce both hand strain and back pain. That's why artists and architects tend to work on slanted surfaces, and why school desks used to be at an angle. The people who made these desks a century ago understood the importance of proper ergonomics in the classroom, and schools only switched over to the modern flat top desk because they were more cost effective to mass produce.
When I was a kid and in school, we did have similair desks but they did have one extra feature: In our desks, there was little baton hinged across front and inside of the desk. It was possible to fold it over to support top so it was angled when needed and flat when needed. It was very smart and simple design that improved usability greatly.
It also allows the maker to size it for the tallest students without making it inconvenient for the younger students to use.
Plus, since in cities there is no chance to give every kid their own desk, there is little use to the storage space.
Rex is a Greek God of Woodworking. He is tall, handsome and he knows what he’s doing.
Kids these days are so spoiled. Back in my day we didn't even have floors. We did our homework on the ceiling, and we liked it that way!
It always amazes me how in the past, British and especially American simple-folk consistently came up with basic but classic designs that have shaped the generations since, using the most basic of hand tools, the cheapest wood available (with very little waste) and hardly any mechanical fixings at all, yet they stand the test of time. The sheer simplicity and lasting quality puts just about all modern techniques and manufacturers to shame - at a fraction of the cost in terms of both finance and workload to produce it. For the most part, these people were farmers and cottage industry workers; they had no apprenticeships or college training in design or manufacture - many of them probably couldn't read nor write - yet they could build and furnish a house in no time with items that last a century and more. What have we come to in just a couple hundred years (at most) when home made furniture is no longer desired and we have to spend ridiculous amounts on stuff that has a fashion lifespan of maybe a few years at most...?
Was happy to hear the Walden diss, haha
I watch your video for the woodworking, but I gave this one a like for the Literature critique.
My goodness, who are you? Where did you learn to write? Henry David Thoreau was the bane of my sophomore year. You knowledge and clarity are very welcome.
I think my granddaughter might need one of these.
Handing the wood off to your self was really creative.
You noticed!
A modern version with cellphone holder and non-obtrusive spots for running USB cables would be cool.
Maybe Walden‽ lol
That decorative piece on top is supposed to look like an opened book on a desk. Love it when you these kind of projects from history!
Walden is underrated, I hardly know anyone who’s read it, it’s amazing and life changing
I subscribed only because of your EXTREMELY ACCURATE description of Walden.....
Rex, love the channel. I wouldn't say you make woodworking look but you demistify it for sure.
I liked the one with a lip on the end of the lid to prevent your papers from sliding off
For years I thought I was a philistine because I thought Walden was one of the most unreadable books ever! Thank you Rex for liberating me!
Same. When he started padding pages early with his shopping list I knew I was in for a bad time. That's a hard sell when Mark Twain exists, ya know?
Personally, I loved Thoreau's book. I even a point to go to Walden's Pond on a business trip to the East Coast from California. It was lovely and peaceful. That was thirty years ago.
I don't really like craftsman style very much, but I do really like the way you put together projects without the ubiquitous expensive tools like a domino joiner. What that's done for me is as I do develop my tool set is let me do some of your projects in my own way, taking advantage of things like my small table saw and band saw (and recently - thickness planer, which has helped me get really nice boards from construction lumber in short order) to speed up tasks and make changes to suit my own style. Your plans and videos have developed my skills far beyond any other that I've worked with. And I absolutely LOVE that you use inexpensive construction grade lumber. We have northwestern Hemlock out here for construction, and it's such a gorgeous wood when finished properly.
I recently finished your English joiner's mallet using a piece of Arizona Ironwood my dad gave me, with a cherry handle. I had a check down the center (it was a 5-inch limb) but the thing was ironwood, so I just ran some superthin starbond CA glue down the check and it's been rock solid.
And today I finished making that low, portable bench from two hemlock 2x6's. Instead of your through-leg design, I made my legs into a more mid-century tapered shape and recessed them fully into slots in the batons. the legs feel so narrow but the thing is wildly stable. My thickness planer and table saw/sled helped me get super square, flat, clean surfaces, so I wound up with a piece that flat out looks good as a piece of furniture, and is now pulling double duty as a hallway bench for putting shoes on.
I simply can’t believe an English professor is dissing Walden! lol I love Walden, though I admit many find it dry. But your desk is anything but dry and boring: in a word, it’s wonderful! I’m going to have to build one (or two) for my grandchildren. Excellent work, as always, Rex!
He’s not a professor, but still someone who used to be an English teacher. I’m taking his comment to mean that as someone who’s not from the country where it’s a classic I shouldn’t bother reading it.
@@ragnkja He did in fact used to be an English prof. He told me himself.
You get a like just for the accurate book review of Walden.
Really like this sort of furniture. What a classic! My grandma had a similar one in her attic when I was younger =)
That looks way more comfortable than the current flat desks...
Oh man I totally agree about Walden. I always felt that catcher in the rye was a close second.
Second and third, respectively. The winner for Worst Assigned Reading has got to be Gatsby.
@@ErictheHalf_bee YES!!!!!
@@ErictheHalf_bee I kind of enjoyed Gatsby, for me Oedipus and Antigone would have to be at the top.
Created another antique. Beautiful. Live this style and thought of our history. Thank you
One the best reviews of Waldon I have heard.
We had something similar 15 years ago when i was in school
We used to have desks like that here in the US back in the 70's to early 80's, at least at the schools I attended.
Still had them at my elementary school in the early to mid 90's as well.
They were well used and abused by then, but i was in south-fulton county so everything we had was old hand downs from Atlanta area schools.
@@michaelrogers4157 I had one version that was made out of metal. Built to last!
Nice project, hope your daughter likes it.
Looks very similar to our old school desks here in the UK. Last seen in the 80s before slowly being replaced.
I remember them well!
Some schools in RSA still have them, as a seated unit.
For some reason, the repaired ones were never as comfortable as the old originals.
I guess the shop teacher couldn't be bothered to do a decent job, even if he had his talking stick ready if you were a millimeter off.
In the top edge, the older original ones had a hole. The hole was for an ink well.
This kind of desk takes me back to my childhood: we still used a basically similar design, much carved on by generations of schoolboys, in my UK school in the 60's. One thing in our desks that I think you'll regret not having on yours is a trough along the length of the flat section behind the hinges, not extending to the edge. This gives the user somewhere to put pens and pencils so they don't roll off .
We still had these desks when I was in school in the early 80s here in the Caribbean and I honestly still think they're suing this style now. Great memories and have to agree, the little trough was useful to hold pencils and pens. Another great project to put on the "To Build" list.
it would be easy enough to add a pencil trough, and that's a good idea... If/when I make one I will include that!
Heck, I had one where there was a filled up hole for an inkwell, along with the pencil slot.
Sadly our desks were screwed shut because they were used as garbage bins.
@@stoneomountain2390Filled inkwell holes? Bah, you didn't know you were born. Ours were left gaping, I say, gaping!
@@hardcode57 our desks were screwed shut, and well, after the incident where a unknown person stuffed the desk full of paper and lit it....
Technical school, you know how it goes.
This type of video is my favorite thing on this channel. The other stuff is great too, but this country style softwood furniture is very inspiring.
I always really like the « country furniture » style videos. It feels like the « classic forms » are great, but people who are not immersed in the furniture world don’t always know what pieces to even start looking at.
I just completed this project and it was a lot of fun. Made it for my mom who really needed one. She loves it! I made mine from ash, with legs from alder. A nice combination and ended up getting some ash with interesting grain patterns in it that makes it look beautiful.
I appreciate you & your work; humble, simplicity…respect.
My grammar school had such desks made in one with two extended feet to take a flap up wooden seat. Well carved with past pupil’s names etc. All in solid best pine. Would cost a fortune today to make. Might be still in use for all I know. They were bought with the opening of the school in Edwardian days. Some of them used in asbestos cement panelled ‘temporary’ classrooms too. The temporary classrooms to be replaced once we defeated the Kaiser. Still in use when I left in 1972. Comfortable and useful desks/seats. They had a groove for your dip pen and a porcelain inkwell for the ink. A step forward from my father’s village school with slate tablets and slate pencils I suppose.
I have got one my grandfather made in school in 1938. My grandfather, father,and I did his homework on it
I love that you got your daughter involved in the build! Great design! Great video!
Where I worked we had three geological specimen collections which were started in the mid 19th century. Catalog entries were made by hand in large leather bound registers. These sat in and on a large 19th century ledger desk. Much more refined than your desk. It was heavily built with massive turned legs along with the lift up top with storage underneath. The cataloguing is now done via computer for ease of searching. Some of us don't like putting Al our eggs in the one computer basket so the registers are still used to record basic information
I love your woodworking, literary criticism, not so much.
Good use of the hand-off for continuity between cuts
Loved your description of Walden. About three years ago I walked the lake. Then, bought the book. I think i'm 50 pages in. It is a slog to read it for sure.
I read Walden for fun in high school, and I'll have you know I find it much more enjoyable than, say, The Last of the Mohicans, which was required reading.
So you're a glutton for punishment? lol
@@danielbackley9301 Nah, I just like Thoreau's poetic descriptions and philosophical meanderings. On the other hand, I find James Fenimore Cooper unbelievably dull.
It is not literature in the truest sense, but if you want to beat Walden try reading the Journals of Lewis and Clark. They can make you cry with pain. Great build Rex.
Just like to say although I am not a woodpecker but you explain really well and enjoyable
Ok, so "Walden" was on my reading list and I'm doubly excited to read it now =D
Nice design, don't forget a small rounded groove on the top edge to stop pencil from rolling off. Easy with a router, but a scraper piece of rounded tin/steel on a stick of pine would do it too. (Probably what they would have used 200 years ago!)
Totally agree with your assessment of Walden. I’m still laughing about it!
I personally have an issue when it comes to clutter. I've been thinking about making furniture with sloped tops to curb that tendency. This is perfect for eliminating stacks and piles. The sloped top will position laptops in a more ergonomic position.
I was really looking forward to the finish, but we never got there. I think milk paint would look good on this, the light blue example was nice. Overall, great work as usual REX!!!
Was also gonna say milk paint would look great for this.
He's done milk paint before, and has a video about it if you're interested. I'm betting he won't be using milk paint though.
WOW! Love the Soft Wood Bundle ! BRAVO!
Hey Rex,
very much enjoyed this project for your daughter. also super nice to see her in the shop with dad. watching the process of furniture being made solely with hand tools is a pleasure. You and Gillis Bjork.....birds of a feather!
Thank you! Love that you made this for your daughter!
Real talk, Rex. I don't know if your entire past year of projects has deliberately led up to this, but the way you present it has made it very intuitive.
If it's accidental, you're a lucky cuss. If it was done on purpose, you're brilliant.
Love your stuff, man. Stay safe.
With slightly taller legs to make it standing-height (maybe a cross-brace if needed for wobbling), this looks like it would be an awesome drafting desk for plans/planning in the workshop.
My thoughts exactly…. I see a new project in my future
I was thinking this too. Make it standing height, add cross braces on the legs at a height to rest a foot on, and maybe a shelf or drawer below the body but high enough not to hit the knees... This would be a really handy piece in the shop!
I really love the direction your channel , I am about to build a chopping block, and a Mallet, from your book- Everyday Woodworking.
Remember: It's very, very important to sit and work in a chair at the correct height, for children as for adults! Luckily most kids like to stand up when working, and that is good for body and mind, if the table has the correct height! Damn, it's complicated! :D
I wish you had posted this last week! I just built a desk myself!
Really cool piece! I have a feeling my wife will commission a few of those when she starts homeschooling our kids in a couple years.
I have nothing to say really, but I appreciate your content, and wish to help with the yt-algorithms.
This channel is so refreshing
nice story chikodi... what a style...
Inspiring, fun, smiling, delicate. What a joy to watch!
Thanks,
Luca (from Italy)
OMG shooting plane! Didn't even know one existed!
Love it, how you combine a bit of history and woodworking. Might build such desk a bit taller, so I can stand at it and it can hold my tools and plans. After I build my workbench, and possibly a saw bench, and that garden furniture I promised .... Nice work and another great video, Rex. I hope your daughter is pleased as well :)
If you’re in the northern hemisphere, the need for garden furniture is diminishing for a while now, so it can wait until spring ;)
Can confirm getting plans for free this morning.
Thank you Rex! I’m currently reading “Country Furniture” by Al Watson. Thank you for recommending this book. It’s a fascinating read. Your narration of your desk build for your daughter ties in well with the images characterized by Watson’s book of early settlers he describes making their own furniture. I love it and I can’t wait to tackle some of these primitive furniture pieces myself.
You been killing it these last few videos
All these years I was afraid I was deficient in my mental abilities with my inability to appreciate Walden. I have always put it into the same category as that old Russian writer everyone always talks about. I did enjoy your desk build very much. I think I will make one using IPE or maybe Ironwood in order to give it a chance to survive my nephews use. Have a great day!
There are very few things you need to know about Russian literature. They are 1. it's always cold .2 everyone is miserable .3 everyone either dies young or is old or becomes old and miserable .4 you will never ever want to read anything that is Russian literature and if assigned to do so you MUST buy the CLIFF NOTES as Russian literature is not meant to be read. No I am not joking and I am not being completely sarcastic either. If anyone tells you that they have read WAR and Peace in it's entirety or that they enjoyed it ---THEY ARE LYING.
@@danielbackley9301 Lying or they are sick and wrong like me and got a grad degree in Russian lit. I've read War and Peace several times, both in Russian and in English. 🤣
@@VeretenoVids Congrats on the degree I know I couldn't have done it but then again I'm half Polish by ancestry. The Jesuits made me read an excerpt from War and Peace in High School there is no way I could have read the entire book and I'm someone who likes to read. God bless and please don't take my remarks too seriously.
@@danielbackley9301 No worries. I thought it was hilarious--I know I'm the weirdo in the crowd. 😁
Cool stuff Rex. Hope the kiddo enjoys it.
You are so full of great ideas and knowledge- thanks for sharing!
Sprung joints - super smart 👍
Really nice project. Last weekend I bought a jar of cut/square nails at an antique store for a few dollars with no project in mind. Maybe I'll build my daughter a desk too
Love the Thumbnail moulding
I've learned so much from watching your channel you've helped me in my woodworking journey. Very awesome desk.
This is lovely. I think I'll make one for my daughter - but in a contemporary style with plywood and dowels. Thanks!
What can be said that hasn't already been said? Anyway, great project. I'm sure she thinks you're Superman. It's great when your kids say "Dad, can you make something for me?" It's even better when they ask "Dad, can we make something together?"
Thank you for your incredible research work. Awesome - all thumbs up! The knowledge you are mining from the past is what makes this channel outstanding and very interesting and very trendy. And, as sustainability is the key for the future, I can see, you are far ahead with your wood furniture. It can be used for ages, can easily be modified and at the end with a natural coating it can even be energized in the oven without any chemical pollution. It's a real deal. It is what I like to see.
Absolutly busted a gut on the Walden line.
Awesome Schoolhouse Desk !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
You can still see these in junk shops now and then in Australia. Seems to be a pretty widespread design- suggests that it was very practical. Nice project!
Hi Rex, great video!
I have a small request to you. Maybe you will make a video about card/cabinet scrapers for wood? That will be interesting.
Cheer man!
Of course your daughter was pretty good with the saw, she is a girl, way smarter than us, men. Great video! I hope she enjoys the desk very much! Thanks for the content!
Yup. My observation with my kids (3 and 5) in the shop and my classmates in school rowing on the river. Boys tend to use too much force and not enough control.
It looks very nice. I would love to made it. I was thinking of using carriage bolts instead of nails.
Have you considered doing a video where you make a nice wooden handle for that 4 in 1 HF screwdriver? I love those things. They had them for around 50¢, a while back. I bought a bunch. Gave some to my kids and several to my church for the Operation Christmas Child shoe boxes. I've been thinking about making a London Pattern handle for one, just to see how it goes. The desk turned out great, btw. Another great video. I love your channel. Keep up the good work.
I've been getting ready to build a desk for my kids for months... thank you for this video Rex!!
That into is the most Rex thing of all time
Wow. That desk is beautiful. I’ve done many of your projects, although most don’t come out even close to as nice as yours. That’s why I know if I were to try planing the little lip piece with the upside down plane, I’m leaving pieces of my knuckles in the shop
Been there done that, but I've found that a modeling plane works pretty good on really small stock like that maple, and with much less blood letting takes a little getting used to working with a plane that's only a bit bigger than your thumb
It's Squidward's arch enemy uni-brow for the decoration!
Absolutely love it. Thinking of making one with legs a bit shortened to set on top of my kitchen table that I do my work on to use as an elevated standing desk with storage
The commentary about Walden made me laugh. Rex needs to do more book reviews.
I'd like to hear more about the new shooting plane.
what an impressive video ! this looks like a lot of work done very efficiently. this is just great.
Your desk looks wonderful!
Make an Erismann's desk for your daughter -- this is quite in the spirit of your channel. Traditional carpentry with deep historical roots.
Сделай для своей дочери парту Эрисмана - это вполне в духе твоего канала, традиционная столярка с глубокими историческими корнями.
I am making this this weekend!! Thanks Rex
Really really love those "simple" projects: they teach so so much. Thank you. Very happy to be in Patreon.
Loved it, a beautiful simple design. Thanks
Great job. My SON has a hand full of girls all very young and this along with the mission bench would be good Grandfather gifts. Square nails where do you get them?
Das ist wirklich ein schönes Stück das Baue ich nach mir gefällt es wirklich sehr.
What he said even if I don't read German
@@danielbackley9301 for you (This is really a nice piece that I build after me, really like it a lot.)