Woodworking Projects For the Home || Bathroom Vanity
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- Опубликовано: 16 ноя 2024
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Your voice… you are the BOB ROSS of fine carpentry. Nice work
I had to giggle a little when you were routing the back rabbit. Looks like me when I used my router. Covered all over with wood chips. There is so much precision in your work on this.
I hadn't seen anyone use a wedge on the mortiser before. Great idea!
Plans are great but don’t really go by specific dimensions once I start. You’re doing a great job.
Good morning 🌅, Honey B , well worth the effort, well done, looking 👀 forward to seeing it finished, ❤ from France.
13:04: Love the new frosted highlights in your hair! 😁
The project is looking great, and it's nice to see old materials being repurposed.
Good morning 🌅, Honey B, I haven’t finished watching yet, but if you are having trouble squirting it up, put a ratchet strap from opposite corner, if possible top and bottom, it will allow you to adjust the square of the cabinet, from France
Another Saturday with a very interesting furniture build. I like your thought process in putting all the pieces together. Great explanation of the process as well.
Thanks
I love your work Caitlin, it's like a puzzle where one piece fits with the other without a problem, and seeing how it is put together with the solutions you take, Congratulations again, have a nice week and we look forward to a new video!¡¡¡ 👌😉
I wish I had a radial arm saw! Looks like they make your woodworking so much faster! Thank you again for making videos of your talent. Your teaching is just a pleasure to watch and listen to.
Thanks! You can find great deals on these second hand. I’ve seen them on Facebook marketplace for as low as 25.00. And the old models like mine still work great.
Oooh!!! Love the wedge under the hold-down on the tenoner. I’m going to try that. I hate how they are designed.
Beautiful work and I love that you use a radial saw,so many woodworkers say that there are no place in a wood shop for them because they are dangerous but I would never give mine up and I love that you use yours frequently looking forward to seeing your next video and have a great week caitlin
You have a great week too. I don’t find the RAS to be any more or less dangerous then other tools. I think 1.) pulling a spinning blade towards you is always going to be an issue if you aren’t careful. 2.) people put the wrong blades in them making them more likely to jump cuts and lurch forward 3.) people try and do insane cuts with them like ripping boards, I stick to cross-cutting and dados and never had an issue. Next to the table saw it’s my most used tool in the shop, and bonus it was free.
Superb structural design. The splines do help a lot in alignment, I can see why you like them so much. The final assembly should turn out pretty stiff.
The piece is going to look magnificent when the finish goes on.
Thanks, I’ll cross this bridge when I get to it in the build series, but this customer wanted zero finish on this.
Great progress and looks verybsturdy. Clamps, more clamps are really an issue. Radial Arm Saws are very versatile. Thank you for sharing. Everyone stay safe, happy and healthy. From Henrico County Virginia
I'm very impressed how you were able to build this from so much recycled material. Very nice!!
Good afternoon H. B. Been following this series on building these cabinets. I love the way you used the process of tenons and splines putting together the carcass. Especially along the length of the front and back with the vertical stiles. Great way of making a very strong connection to top to bottom. Kinda like dove tail joint, long top and bottom rails can’t flex inward after completion. I’ll be using that way of connection if I build a long length cabinet in the future. Liked how you used that shim while using the Mortiser, probably that wouldn’t have occurred to me to do that. I don’t have one but I just might have to pull the trigger and get one. Great job girl ! Looking forward to next Saturday for your next upload. Work safe and enjoy your weekend especially with the nice weather.
Nice build. Can you comment on why you chose to make splines vs cut a tongue on the plywood? Thanks!
Great progress, the glue up part is always better when watching someone else do it and a dry fit must always help on a bigger build, as always looking forward to the next part and have a great weekend😁
Glue ups suck. Big glue ups really suck.
Although the specific dimensions are unusual for creating plans all the methods are useable and I'm struck by the open tenons which I've never thought to use before like this. So thanks for even more great suggestions. I've been binge watching your recent videos after being off-grid for weeks and am struck by how much time and effort you give to them for our benefit - thank you HB, it is really appreciated.
Thanks. I had different ideas on how to build this and after piecing the long rails together I changed gears because the glue up would have been close to impossible with my original plan. Happy I caught it in time.
Thanks for another informative video. A well thought out dry run certainly reduces stress, particularly on such a large piece. With oily species such as teak, epoxy is the best choice.
Thanks for mentioning that. I meant to point out in the video that I googled what glue is best for teak because of the oil content. Across the board people with experience in working with teak said epoxy and Titebond 3.
Very nice job looking very good!!!💯👍👌
Looks awesome, but I’d sure hate to install it on an upper floor! Happy Saturday!
Hahahaha, luckily it’s a first floor install and I didn’t have to do it, just had to deliver it to site. The carcass is huge, but and easy two person carry.
Great looking solid build on this cabinet. Love your methodology in making this really strong and your recycling of the teak.
Is the plywood you used on this AA, cabinet grade? (finished both sides)
Thank you Caitlin, I look to your Saturday morning videos.
👍👍👍😘😘😘❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉
You don't need another radial arm saw do you? I have my dad's and no one wants it, as well as I have no space or need.
I’ve thought about getting a second one for a dedicated stack, but I don’t have the space for it right now. The one in my shop was someone’s father’s who also didn’t have space for it.
@@HoneyBadgerWoodWorks Understood. It would be free, along with some moulding left me by homeowner that was a union carpenter. If you even have to come up to Willard Bros again... I'm 15min away
Cabinet is coming on nicely, nothing beats a strong back panel, in this case it will add so much strength especially with to vanities and pipe work cutting away large parts of the unit, apart from the fact it squares everything up, it’s great to see what joints you choose to use especially as you explain why you chose them 👌👌👌👍👍👍🇦🇺