pounding & peeling

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  • Опубликовано: 20 окт 2024

Комментарии • 49

  • @darrella3217
    @darrella3217 4 года назад +3

    Peter, I enjoy your style of woodworking. Thank you for your willingness to share.

  • @btblou
    @btblou 2 года назад +1

    I have never seen that done before, brilliant! How can you have more fun than that :)

  • @davemartin1534
    @davemartin1534 Год назад

    You sir are a hard working master. Of all the videos I've watched in this series the work was easy to follow by example. Great videos!!!

    • @MrFollansbee
      @MrFollansbee  Год назад

      Thanks Dave - glad you like them.

    • @Timberbeartrail
      @Timberbeartrail Год назад

      @@MrFollansbeewhere are you located if I may ask

    • @MrFollansbee
      @MrFollansbee  Год назад

      @@Timberbeartrail southeastern Massachusetts USA

  • @jeffsimpson9232
    @jeffsimpson9232 4 года назад +1

    What a treat! Thank you.

  • @irishcottagerenovation9900
    @irishcottagerenovation9900 3 года назад

    Hi , maybe it's a simple question but what time of year do you cut wood for processing. Your basket videos are great. Thank you

  • @petecooper3701
    @petecooper3701 Год назад

    From one Peter to another, thankyou. On the Isle of Wight.

  • @christiblackley3820
    @christiblackley3820 Год назад +1

    Did you use an axe to cut up log into billets or a bandsaw? And how did you get the billet sides so smooth?

    • @MrFollansbee
      @MrFollansbee  Год назад +2

      There’s a companion video called splitting riving & shaving that shows the previous steps

  • @mattmoore1311
    @mattmoore1311 3 года назад +1

    Any others I've seen do this, pound the log. I think beating a billet like this makes a lot more sense. I think you'd get a lot more correctly sized strips. Thanks for posting.

  • @wsflather
    @wsflather 2 года назад +2

    Since Ash is among the walking dead of species on the US east coast, are there other species that this can be spit and processed in the same way?

  • @michaeldonahue2308
    @michaeldonahue2308 3 года назад

    like your baskets great craftman ship

  • @CaptCanuck4444
    @CaptCanuck4444 Год назад +1

    I had no idea this was even possible. Wow!

  • @asmith7876
    @asmith7876 3 года назад +1

    I'm wondering if using a strap cutter used in leather work might not be a great way, easy and accurate, to split the pieces out rather than scissors? Love your channel! (Edit) Never mind, using a strap splitting device at the end!

  • @mburnsoh
    @mburnsoh Год назад

    I learned so much in this video.

  • @geraldinerobertson3481
    @geraldinerobertson3481 2 года назад

    Thanks for the video I love your work 😊

  • @martinriley106
    @martinriley106 4 месяца назад

    I’m just hooked to your channel and am fascinated by your techniques?

  • @ralphhunt3337
    @ralphhunt3337 2 года назад

    Hi Peter. Where did you get the cutter you used in the strip cutter you made?
    I’ve searched far and wide and I can’ find them.

    • @timothylongmore7325
      @timothylongmore7325 Год назад

      looks hand-made to me. x-acto blades it looks like. Look up lace or strip cutter for leather. Ive seen people use them.

  • @makenchips
    @makenchips Год назад

    It fascinates me that someone came up with this idea I'm taking a bill of wood and separating through the large grains and to parallel pieces! I wonder who originated this process?

  • @budskillman7510
    @budskillman7510 3 года назад

    I have an ash log that I can’t work with now shall I paint the ends now and put in the creek before working?

  • @surfearth1
    @surfearth1 8 месяцев назад

    What if you took your box and added the blades from the hand tool in the hole. Then just pull the wood through the blades. This would keep your pieces even and would be less hard on your risks.

  • @Timberbeartrail
    @Timberbeartrail Год назад

    Where are you located if I may ask

  • @wesmartin937
    @wesmartin937 3 года назад +1

    Thanks so much! I never knew you could pound white ash, I only had heard of people using brown/black ash. I am assuming this should be done in the spring for best results? I am going to try this for chair seat material, and make longer strips.

    • @MrFollansbee
      @MrFollansbee  3 года назад +4

      It doesn't have to be spring, but the log has to be freshly-cut; I try within a month or so. They tell me black ash works easier, but white ash still works.

    • @timothylongmore7325
      @timothylongmore7325 Год назад +1

      I used white ash.... once , by mistake. I've heard white ash was doable but as our host said several time do it green. Don't let it dry out . Like I did, once , lol. I also tried soaking black ash in a pond and then tried to pound them and they seazed up pretty good to.

  • @paulk6509
    @paulk6509 3 года назад

    Amazing, Never occurred to me.

  • @JarlSeamus
    @JarlSeamus 3 года назад +1

    Living in the area where the "Adirondack Pack Basket" originated, I always wondered how they split those out. Now I want to go beat on a log with a hammer, LOL

    • @timothylongmore7325
      @timothylongmore7325 Год назад +1

      I'm just east of "the park" and I pound on logs. Or rather billets like Peter does. Beware , , it's like eating potato chips , once you start you can't stop. I told my wife I almost like produceing the raw materials more than the weaving. I sold some , but it's really not worth it. Selling the splints I mean. To much work to do for a living.

  • @Snarkey777
    @Snarkey777 9 месяцев назад

    Can oak be separated in a similar pounding style?

    • @MrFollansbee
      @MrFollansbee  9 месяцев назад +1

      Ash is the only wood I've ever heard of that works this way. In the eastern US, white oak saplings are split apart along the growth rings to make basket material. Not pounded. And only the saplings - not a large tree.

  • @jayeharris3793
    @jayeharris3793 4 года назад +2

    How green is your billet?

    • @MrFollansbee
      @MrFollansbee  4 года назад +4

      As fresh as can be. I pounded this whole 7’ log in spare time over about 5 weeks.

  • @onZampie
    @onZampie 3 года назад

    Can this only be done with ash? Are there any other woods you know of that this method can be used on?

    • @MrFollansbee
      @MrFollansbee  3 года назад +2

      I've only ever heard of ash being used this way.

    • @onZampie
      @onZampie 3 года назад +1

      @@MrFollansbee Ok, thank you for the response!

    • @asmith7876
      @asmith7876 3 года назад +2

      I thought I'd seen Roy Underhill use white oak to make baskets. I've never tried any of it so no first hand experience.

    • @timothylongmore7325
      @timothylongmore7325 Год назад +1

      @@asmith7876 they are not pounded. there are videos on the process

  • @Johndoe-hk1sy
    @Johndoe-hk1sy Год назад

    Wisdom use a piece of wood on each side of your strip the length of your product that way you can't mess up with another guy did a video where he used a tree cut down and notched the top in half then crosscut the groove and pushes his knife down into it and that's how he use it as a gauge And used as a slither like a table saw o and thank you for the ancient knowledge

  • @WIReeder12
    @WIReeder12 4 года назад

    Sorry, I think I would be searching for a Little Giant trip hammer.

    • @MrFollansbee
      @MrFollansbee  4 года назад +2

      Nothing to be sorry about. If I did this work a lot, I might look for ways to streamline it, but as it is, I pound basket stuff maybe once a year or every other year. So not a big deal. An anvil would be my first choice for improvements...

  • @skitzochik
    @skitzochik 3 года назад

    i can use any wood to do this?

    • @MrFollansbee
      @MrFollansbee  3 года назад

      Nope - the only wood I've ever heard of doing this with is ash (Fraxinus).

  • @maxpolaris99
    @maxpolaris99 7 месяцев назад

    too much work!

  • @darkphoenek
    @darkphoenek 2 года назад +1

    Salut

  • @erictaylorbasketry6814
    @erictaylorbasketry6814 2 года назад

    We are in the 21st century. Eric Taylor basketry