Milling Black Walnut for Figure TTS

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
  • Logs with 'flaws', like sweep or crotches may exclude them from commodity use but, milling with attention to detail, we can maximize the figure potential of these logs.

Комментарии • 518

  • @lars277
    @lars277 2 года назад

    Someone is just waiting to get their hands on those great looking walnut slabs to make a nice table. Walnut has to be one of the greatest woods that God ever created. Kudos. Great video.

  • @johnsobj
    @johnsobj 8 лет назад +51

    I enjoy the video of sawmilling but really appreciate the discussion of the how and why you're cutting in the order you are. Very helpful and interesting. Thanks!

  • @patbrown2227
    @patbrown2227 6 лет назад +1

    I want to add my thanks for the commentary. Knowing the rationale for the cuts add to the educational aspect of your videos. In 1975 and 1976, my late father took my brother Mike and I to a 100 year old Walnut orchard that was being converted to a business park. We harvested many logs the old fashion way. Lots of work with the 1 man and 2 man bucksaws. Thank You for reviving those memories. With Best Regards, Pat

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  6 лет назад

      Hopefully you still have something made from that walnut. I often mill sentimental logs. Maybe not the greatest lumber, but if a relative planted the tree, or it was from your childhood home, nothing else can match it.

  • @ronniekotler9265
    @ronniekotler9265 2 года назад

    This is probably one of my favorite videos of all time.

  • @Madmun357
    @Madmun357 6 лет назад +6

    When I saw that log on the forklift I thought, THAT'S GONNA BE A GREAT LOG. Your experience really shows, and we appreciate the educational aspect of this video. Well done!

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  6 лет назад +4

      I have watched videos where I couldn't figure out why something was done a certain way, and I have received questions like that from viewers. I try to explain what I am doing, hopefully it is more entertaining, or educational than listening to background music or the rumble of the sawmill engine.

  • @davidglaum2538
    @davidglaum2538 6 лет назад +2

    It is easy to see that you love your job and have respect for the wood you are working on. I do sculptures in wood and love the way it feels and smells and the wood tells you what it wants to be. You become part of the wood.
    You really understand the wood you are working on and do an excellent job. Thank you.

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  6 лет назад

      Thanks for your compliments. Sawyers have different backgrounds; I wasn't a logger, or a commodity lumber producer ; my background was as a woodworker , working with urban wood. You learn to seek out the best you can get from every log. Milling 2x construction lumber wouldn't be near as rewarding.

  • @mcpaplus
    @mcpaplus 5 лет назад +5

    The explanatory comments were really helpful. Thanks for including them.

  • @sbrayer1135
    @sbrayer1135 7 лет назад

    You are a true craftsmen, your knowledge, thought and expertise that went into milling this tree. I'll never look at a beautiful wood door or piece of furniture without thinking about this. Thank you.

  • @paulrward
    @paulrward 7 лет назад +10

    Thank you for not wasting an ounce of that beautiful walnut.

  • @tomthesawyervids
    @tomthesawyervids  7 лет назад +93

    Thanks for the very nice comments. The intent of most of my videos is to educate people about portable mills, and to inspire them to take on acquiring a log and having it milled into the best lumber it will yield. There are many benefits to milling you own lumber. Of course, it is significantly less expensive but, you can also find species that are not commonly sold in hardwood lumber stores, You also find grain patterns that would be a 'problem' for conventional sources. No, you can't order 100 boards just like it, these are natural and unique treasures. I don't produce commodity lumber, I craft character lumber. What industry sees as flaws, I consider facets. Furniture, not firewood; lumber, not landfill. It is a mindset, and meme, that uses American products, crafted by American craftspeople, for American homes.

  • @19rick44
    @19rick44 6 лет назад

    This is the most expert, visually pleasing, wood sawing I have seen to date. Thank you.

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  6 лет назад

      Thanks. Most of the logs I get present a bit of a challenge. I'll always get boards but I try to get the best ones I can, depending on how the client is planning to use them.

  • @tonyj2216
    @tonyj2216 5 лет назад +8

    What a incredible machine to have and to use. The book mached pieces look incredible....beautiful stuff.

  • @Buzbikebklyn1
    @Buzbikebklyn1 5 лет назад

    It's the knowledge of how to cut the log that counts.
    I'm a woodworker that makes custom rifle stocks, usually of wallnut.
    At the end of the video, it was a treat to see the bookend planks, especially planks "G" and "H".
    I rarely get to see such excellent milling.
    Very nice!
    Thumbs up!!!

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  5 лет назад

      Tom, thanks for the compliments. I don't have much experience milling for gun stocks, most of my clients intend to make furniture. The world's largest maker of gun stocks (American Walnut) is about an hour north of here. They process about 4 million bf of gun stock material each year.

    • @Buzbikebklyn1
      @Buzbikebklyn1 5 лет назад

      Wow! 4 million board feet for gun stocks?
      That has me beat by a mile.
      It's fitting that you mentioned furniture,
      Of course I can build furniture.
      But I like guns, I can almost hear my Grandpa yelling at me saying-
      "Why waste your work on something so small, no get over here and help me with this table"
      I knew an older man in California that had to cut down 6 large walnut trees and he asked me if I wanted any!
      I showed up the next day with 2 chainsaws and several steel wedges, axe's and a big broom to sweep away all the twigs and walnuts so we wouldn't trip on them.
      He was kinda older, I didn't want him to be injured, so I asked him if he could " teach" me how to down a tree, so I did all the climbing.
      Well, it took us 3 days work to do it.
      I got to choose the best grain boards.
      Over 500 bf rough cut on his mill and loaded on my old Ford flatbed with a small crane I usually used for engines.
      It was like gold to me.
      He insisted on me staying there in his home.
      The old man and I were made friends because of those trees.
      I did build him a 8'x4'x3"
      Dining table with the select bookend grain. And 6 large chairs out of
      "dark heart wood"
      When his time was short he asked for me.
      As he look out the front window he said-
      " Thank you for helping me with the trees ( knocking on that table) now I can see my land"
      "Your a good kid"
      (35 at the time)
      I'll never forget the
      "Dark heart wood"
      T.

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  5 лет назад

      @@Buzbikebklyn1 Of course, some of my clients are just interested in marketing their logs for a profit; but most of them have a personal story that goes with the lumber we create. So many of the logs I mill have a specific memory associated with them. I try to track where the logs i buy come from so that the craftsperson who ends up with that wood has a history to go with the project they are making. Not all of the logs I get are good candidates for lumber but I'll do what I can to get them the material for a project. It doesn't have to be 'furniture', even a small box crafted by someone you care about becomes a keepsake.

  • @lechandler4041
    @lechandler4041 5 лет назад +1

    You guys are true artists. I would have no idea how to process that gorgeous piece of timber.

  • @Baumscheibenkunst
    @Baumscheibenkunst 8 лет назад +3

    First time watching one of your videos and I really like the annotations where you explain why you are cutting the way you do. Very helpful for understanding the process. Thanks!

  • @michaeladamcaira9174
    @michaeladamcaira9174 6 лет назад +18

    That is a gorgeous piece if lumber,I've built many guitars and guitar tops using Walnut,I love it

  • @davel9015
    @davel9015 4 года назад +1

    Great video and very informative. What I would love to see next is the process to build and finish the table for which it was intended.

  • @bothylad1
    @bothylad1 8 лет назад

    Thoroughly enjoyed the video with the explanation as to what each cut was designed to achieve. Beautiful log to mill. Thank you.

  • @Tongieone
    @Tongieone 4 года назад

    Always a pleasure to work with Tom! From oak pilings out of the Missouri mud, to worm hole oak and Osage orange hedge from my back field!

  • @carlkrebs1
    @carlkrebs1 5 лет назад +8

    some beautiful walnut slabs . excellent work

  • @JOHNMORIN100
    @JOHNMORIN100 5 лет назад +10

    BEAUTYFUL what the Lord has grown. thnks for sharing. the Magoo's in Milo, Maine

  • @usd25674
    @usd25674 6 лет назад +8

    Very well done. Would like to mention the camera work was good. I liked the closeups of the grain.

  • @wecandobetter9821
    @wecandobetter9821 5 лет назад +3

    Hi Tom,
    I purchased the Timber King 1600 about 3 years ago and it sure makes milling so much easier.
    Beautiful black walnut. Thanks for sharing

    • @danielfronc4304
      @danielfronc4304 4 года назад

      In case you read this, how much did it cost you and is there any real savings to be had over the long run if you buy it used (mildly used & treated with TLC)? I'd appreciate knowing and ballpark figures from sonmeone who knows is just fine. Thanks.

  • @MrEst1953
    @MrEst1953 4 года назад +1

    Great video, thanks to you and your team, beautiful wood and work .

  • @talegunner115
    @talegunner115 4 года назад +2

    Wow those book matched are beyond words. Great Job

  • @MrRackinroll
    @MrRackinroll 5 лет назад +3

    Great video Nice wood grain and the book match was awesome. less talk is always better , Have a good one RC

  • @jackreeves3001
    @jackreeves3001 4 года назад +1

    Very talented. There's art in every aspect of life. Thanks for sharing!

  • @Ibaneddie76
    @Ibaneddie76 6 лет назад

    Wood is the most amazing product of nature, There is nothing better than milling your own wood and building something people can enjoy for many years, it's the real American way. Thank god there are people keeping the wood working industry alive.

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  6 лет назад

      Thanks for commenting. I bought the mill hoping to be able to supply my woodworking needs after I had retired. Once the word got out, business kept coming in, growing rapidly each year. I don't have much time for woodworking but I really like what I can do to salvage the wood, and help out other woodworkers.

  • @davidmorgan7522
    @davidmorgan7522 4 года назад

    I turn a lot of black walnut ( boxes, bowls, Christmas ornaments, etc.) and love it. It's gonna be beautiful no matter what you use it for!
    Take care, Dave

  • @jthanksitwaswhatineededkno2955
    @jthanksitwaswhatineededkno2955 7 лет назад +1

    WOW that book match is art and u sir are an artist. Anyone can run a mill but the placement is the wisdom. I've always said burning walnut is a sin. thank you for your time.

  • @rolandosanchez3664
    @rolandosanchez3664 4 года назад +1

    Thanks for sharing your knowledge and letting us see the end product it’s beautiful.
    God bless! 💯🙏🏻👍🏼😊

  • @rso1411
    @rso1411 5 лет назад +3

    Love the ticker tape explanations/ Very interesting. Thanks for posting.

  • @tedrowland7800
    @tedrowland7800 4 года назад +1

    I have 2 black walnut trees, and thanks to you, I now know what I want from them. It is 2019, and I enjoyed your video

  • @stevenroth5424
    @stevenroth5424 6 лет назад +4

    That is some spectacular milling,
    beautiful stack of of
    well matched slabs.
    Thank you for making this video.

  • @drainmonkeys385
    @drainmonkeys385 5 лет назад +3

    I live I central Mn...about as far north as you’ll ever see black walnut....I know where there are huge acreage of super nice black walnut trees.... too bad I don’t own any of that land... but I did help cut 6 miles of snowmobile trails thru it.. we marked all the black walnut trees as to not cut any of them... one can dream though

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  5 лет назад

      I seldom mill logs from trees that were taken down for their timber value. Most of what I mill were taken down due to disease, construction, storm damage, or landscape hazards. Large standing walnuts, and other species, can be impressive in the forest but, like us, they all reach their peak of maturity and decline quickly afterwards. Even if you were only able to obtain a storm blow down from that woodland, it would have a lot of sentimental value to you.

  • @willieray9938
    @willieray9938 4 года назад

    Great video beautiful wood love watching saw milling . Watch several every week your good at explaining whats going on .

    • @TomHogard
      @TomHogard 4 года назад

      I appreciate the compliment, Willie Ray. I enjoy watching sawmilling videos and I do it almost every day.

  • @lee169177
    @lee169177 5 лет назад

    Tom nice job maximizing the beauty of the grain patterns and explaining what you were doing Great and timely .. The captions were really helpful !
    I appreciate the educational aspect of this video !

  • @bunk822
    @bunk822 Год назад

    Beautiful log nice job love your mill setup

  • @donbomer5630
    @donbomer5630 6 лет назад +6

    EXCELLENT! I learned a lot and thoroughly enjoyed your video, Tom.

  • @louiswarmoth7354
    @louiswarmoth7354 5 лет назад

    Those 8/4 boards will yield some beautiful book matched 4/4 boards when resawed after a period of resting. Enjoyed the video, very entertaining and educational.

  • @tommyherbert3931
    @tommyherbert3931 6 лет назад

    A great job of cutting. Beautiful piece's of matching boards. Will make some wonderful furniture for someone.

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  6 лет назад

      Tommy, thanks. All of the pairs have been sold, hopefully they'll send me photos of the finished projects.

  • @shopstuff5
    @shopstuff5 5 лет назад +5

    Beautiful wood, going to make some lovely furniture I hope! Nice job.

  • @gmoore6166
    @gmoore6166 5 лет назад +3

    Absolutely beautiful! Great job guys!

  • @tedjasiewicz514
    @tedjasiewicz514 5 лет назад +7

    Fascinating,beautiful and educational. Thank you!

  • @Rokonroller
    @Rokonroller 4 года назад +1

    Absolutely excellent
    Thanks for the explanations
    Love watching milling

  • @robertgoss4842
    @robertgoss4842 4 года назад

    Fantastic sawyering! The detailed explanations were excellent, and greatly appreciated. I learned a lot!

  • @yummboy2
    @yummboy2 7 лет назад +1

    Very nicely done! Good job maximizing best figure. I counted 4 pairs of book-matched 8/4 slabs. Sure made for some beautifully grained material!

  • @danielginther4879
    @danielginther4879 4 года назад +1

    Great video and awesome skillset.

  • @lyndamcardle4123
    @lyndamcardle4123 5 лет назад +9

    As a musician and "knowledge nerd", this has been fascinating.

  • @edwardjonez6615
    @edwardjonez6615 6 лет назад +13

    YOU HAVE A GREAT FEEL FOR WHAT YOU DO AND MAKE FINE USE OF THE WOOD. THANKS FOR SHARING.
    (NOT "SHOUTING" GOING BLIND)

  • @northcackalacky4694
    @northcackalacky4694 2 года назад

    You are Truly an Artist!!
    Very nice 👌

  • @lesliewatts2878
    @lesliewatts2878 4 года назад

    Wow ! Extraordinarily beautiful . Well done, well done.

  • @sevenmile
    @sevenmile 4 года назад

    Excellent video -- well done!
    That is quite a whiz-bang saw with all the hydraulic controls flippng that log about!

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  4 года назад +1

      Hydraulics make the process safer, and much quicker.

  • @larrylaird3576
    @larrylaird3576 3 года назад

    The book matched pair is gorgeous...

  • @chrish2685
    @chrish2685 7 лет назад +3

    Great video,didnt know George Kennedy was a woodwork expert and film star!

  • @snakebait5118
    @snakebait5118 3 года назад

    Awesome job! Always love to see videos like this! Would love to have my own sawmill, but there's no room! Keep up the good work!

  • @WoodsleeSummercraftwoodturning
    @WoodsleeSummercraftwoodturning 7 лет назад

    Thanks for taking the time to do this video, I love the lumber from locally sourced wood.
    Take care
    Rob

  • @stoveboltlvr3798
    @stoveboltlvr3798 6 лет назад +5

    Wow, that grain is beautiful!

    • @ddd228
      @ddd228 4 года назад

      I didn't see any lube on the blade during the bark cuts.

  • @billr6811
    @billr6811 6 лет назад +2

    Tom nice job maximizing the beauty of the grain patterns and explaining what you were doing. The captions were really helpful. The only thing that could have shortened the video length was to increase the play speed of the actual cut. Thank you. Bill

  • @brucewatson8451
    @brucewatson8451 2 года назад

    Great video. Beautiful results. Not sure I'll be able to find a black walnut that big here in WA but I'm gonna try. Keep sawing, be safe. Bruce

  • @mrbakerskatz
    @mrbakerskatz 5 лет назад

    Beautiful ......I had some suggestions to make this a better video but I’ll keep them to my self . Wonderful video. Great job

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  5 лет назад

      Well, I am a sawyer, not a film maker but always open to suggestions. Send to TomTheSawyer@gmail.com

  • @rolandhuydecoper4090
    @rolandhuydecoper4090 7 лет назад +1

    Great video, very well explained. Thank you for making and sharing this

  • @snowfirel7108
    @snowfirel7108 6 лет назад

    Those sure are some beautiful boards, we are growing Black walnut, Black Cherry, Sweet Cherry, White and Red Oak, and English Walnut trees for the future.

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  6 лет назад

      Thanks for planting your trees. It isn't something we do for ourselves, it is for future generations.

  • @thomaszaccone3960
    @thomaszaccone3960 6 лет назад +3

    Those are beautiful man. You are indeed an artist with that saw!

  • @PeteHowlett
    @PeteHowlett 7 лет назад

    Great introduction. I could watch stuff like this all day and night!

  • @donwoods9835
    @donwoods9835 5 лет назад

    Very good my man! I bet it will make beautiful table's. I've seen guys screw up some beautiful logs cause they didn't Know what they where doing, but you guys do! Very nice job my friend's!

  • @bsouza1675
    @bsouza1675 5 лет назад +1

    Beautiful hardwood, great job! 👍

  • @fuelexeter1
    @fuelexeter1 4 года назад

    beautiful work mate, i can see the years of experience in your easy movements...

  • @rickardobravo4654
    @rickardobravo4654 5 лет назад

    I remember my old Jr high school wood shop classes those were fun days.

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  5 лет назад

      I, too, was an alumni or a wood shop class in junior high (about 1964). I've been a woodworker since then. My dad didn't do any woodworking, or other crafts, but my maternal grandfather built a couple of sheds, workbenches, etc., and I got to help with that - he took me to my first sawmill. We went to pick up freshly cut oak boards to build a well house. I still have some of his tools, along with some from my wife's dad, he had been an amateur cabinet maker.

  • @sswallace1
    @sswallace1 7 лет назад

    Really nice job taking advantage of the characteristics of that log.

  • @ilfarmboy
    @ilfarmboy 6 лет назад

    my dad's dad loved to work with black walnut and he did great work with it

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  6 лет назад

      Walnut is a very nice wood for making cabinets, furniture and all types of projects.

  • @jacksonmagriplis6617
    @jacksonmagriplis6617 6 лет назад +2

    Absolutely fantastic Tom👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @eltonholtjr.7591
    @eltonholtjr.7591 5 лет назад +1

    Very very nice, great job.

  • @sgtcrtrdnl
    @sgtcrtrdnl 5 лет назад

    Talk about a money making business right there. Those slabs go for high dollar. Great work, and great job on the vid, very informative!

  • @willstroff7483
    @willstroff7483 5 лет назад +1

    Man that is gorgeous wood work

  • @johnproffitt3272
    @johnproffitt3272 6 лет назад

    I love black walnut - that is a great table ready to be assembled!

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  6 лет назад

      Thanks John, I know that this one log made at least 3 tables.

  • @martinlanders
    @martinlanders 5 лет назад +1

    That’s just beautiful,, wonderful skills 👍👍

  • @gravelydon7072
    @gravelydon7072 6 лет назад

    Back about 10 years ago, our neighbor did some tree thinning for us on our Ohio farm. It had been 60 years since it was last done. Many, many Oaks. And a large number of Black Walnuts. Nothing under 2' in diameter 2' above ground level was allowed to be cut. When the lumber company ( hardwood furniture use ) came, they paid the second highest ever per board foot in Ohio. But it did not go directly to the mill. Instead it went on display in a neighboring county at a technical college and at the National Forest office. In Ohio, Black Walnut was used for just about anything in buildings. Even our neighbor's chicken coop had an 8X8" 16' Black Walnut ridge beam. It grows like weeds in the bottom lands. And they are good eating too. But try getting the stain out of your hands.;-)

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  6 лет назад +1

      In my home town in southern Missouri, barns and sheds were built of oak. Around Kansas, we have old barns that were built of walnut and cottonwood. Locally sourced lumber wasn't a choice, it was the only option. If you needed a barn, and you had walnut trees, you'll build a walnut barn. Once in a while, a client will bring me timbers that had been salvaged from an old structure and it often walnut. Early on in my milling career, a client brought some old walnut timbers that had been salvaged from a 150 year old mule barn in Missouri. Those trees appeared to have been at least 100 years old when the trees were cut down to mill the barn. That was some old, tight-grained, walnut - now living on as an entry door for his son's home in Chicago.

    • @gravelydon7072
      @gravelydon7072 6 лет назад

      The three biggest tree populations in our area were Oak, Walnut, and Poplar. So as you said, they used what was available. There were smaller populations of Hickory, Chestnut, and Cherry. Those got used if that is what was close at hand.

  • @apaulothegreat1581
    @apaulothegreat1581 5 лет назад

    I had 8 black walnut trees in Pittsburg Texas growing in Iron ore probably over 1,200 years old they had like 68 inch bottoms and some sorry son of a b**** stowed my trees if I find this person it ain't going to be good brother thanks for this video but it did bring back bad memories of a few years ago that happened to me

  • @mattben
    @mattben 5 лет назад

    It was fun watching you work Tom. Kingcha

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  5 лет назад

      Thanks, Kingcha. I am retired and, fortunately, I don't have to work but I enjoy milling so much that I'll keep doing it until it is longer fun, or until I can't physically do it. Most of my clients have never had a log milled and teaching them about the milling process, and seeing the looks on their faces when they see what we get, is very rewarding.

  • @kennethnave9748
    @kennethnave9748 5 лет назад +6

    Martin could make some Beautiful guitars with that wood.

  • @seasonedseasons
    @seasonedseasons 4 года назад +1

    out of all those combinations i prefered the I-J the best .... and i know they werent from the 3 hearts ... still the prettiest to me ... but loved watching as you cut her open and looked inside !!

  • @Ibaneddie76
    @Ibaneddie76 6 лет назад

    Look at all that amazing walnut, I'm a guitar builder in California and use that stuff a lot on my builds it's great stuff. You really know what you are doing there I would love to purchase some crotch walnut.

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  6 лет назад

      Every log I open is a new experience. Sure, sometimes my plans don't work out as well as expected - I'll get some nice lumber, just not the spectacular grain I was shooting for. But when you hit it just right, it can exceed expectations. I have about a dozen clients who have started out with the wood we milled and have built part-time or retirement business making wood products or custom furniture. It is very rewarding.

    • @scotgarland7526
      @scotgarland7526 6 лет назад

      Have you ever used sassafrass Inn a guitar

  • @faithrada
    @faithrada 5 лет назад +2

    It blows my mind how that mill can manipulate that huge log around.
    Fascinating.
    Yea.. don't shoot trees.

    • @turkeycreekknives133
      @turkeycreekknives133 4 года назад

      I had chance to turn a peace of 150 year old black walnut I made a bowl and 5 sets of BBQ fork and knives the bowl had a mini ball from the civil war in it so I left it it was on the family farm they owned for 70 years thank you for your post enjoyed it

  • @markdiephouse
    @markdiephouse 3 года назад

    I used to be part of a milling operation in north Alabama.
    We hit a few bullets. I was told that they were in the trees from the civil war.

  • @rogerbenton2354
    @rogerbenton2354 5 лет назад +1

    Beautiful cuts of lumber

  • @toolspayless
    @toolspayless 5 лет назад +1

    Very nice, I watched this when you first posted it still a good video to like minded individuals.

  • @3Sphere
    @3Sphere 5 лет назад

    Great job! Nice Walnut! I use a large sheet-rock knife to scrape off the sawdust as I go. Less equipment needed and faster than air... :)

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  5 лет назад

      I have tried using a drywall knife but, for me, a brush (air is only when there are several of us working) does a more effective job of cleaning the surface. I'm not someone who splashes water on wood to highlight the grain.

    • @3Sphere
      @3Sphere 5 лет назад +1

      @@tomthesawyervids Hey, 6 dozen one way, 72 the other, right? Lotta ways to skin a cat. Oh i frequently splash water when clients come around. People often do not have good imaginations... LoL... (although most woodworkers do!) I do this a lot too and I very much enjoyed watching your video because you know what the fuck you are doing! No brag, just the beef! :) It was a pleasure! And I learned things. Thanks! (oh, and I LOVE the play on Tom Sawyer! Very clever!!!)

  • @raymondcote6669
    @raymondcote6669 5 лет назад

    Ok now i see why you cut a straight edge on one side.
    Bookmatched pieces look awesome

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  5 лет назад +1

      It is just the nature of trees that crotches are usually at the end of a log. When I get a log that has had a crotch in the middle of the log, I try to orient the log so that the figure is optimized. Of course, there is a limit to how wide any mill can cut and I have to mill logs considering the capacities of my particular mill. It is not unusual for me to refer clients to other sawyers if what they want from their log could not be done on my mill. Since my cuts are limited to 24" wide, book matching means that I can generate material for a 2 piece table top up to 48" wide... plus I really like symmetry.

  • @rrve9998
    @rrve9998 6 лет назад +8

    Very nice lumber , will be beautiful if make it dining tabletop I think .

  • @maxhole2
    @maxhole2 7 лет назад +7

    Unfortunately I've discarded more black walnut crotch wood than I can remember. Wish I had it all back, and a Timber King.

  • @harveygussow7913
    @harveygussow7913 4 года назад +1

    You did really good tommy!

  • @diversifiedacreshomestead102
    @diversifiedacreshomestead102 6 лет назад

    New sub, fairly new sawyer, as well as RUclips creator. Thanks for sharing, I'm always trying to learn something.

  • @zippy3711
    @zippy3711 5 лет назад

    I must be a nut. I could watch slabbing all morning. Good work.

    • @tomthesawyervids
      @tomthesawyervids  5 лет назад

      Zippy, that sounds like sawdust fever. It can be contagious, many of clients have it, too.

  • @davidjanuszewski5020
    @davidjanuszewski5020 6 лет назад +1

    Man and machine as one, a very pretty picture..

  • @crappo8459
    @crappo8459 5 лет назад

    Gorgeous slabs great job

  • @julz4u2
    @julz4u2 5 лет назад +1

    Beautiful work‼️👍🏻🇨🇦

  • @cancelchannel3394
    @cancelchannel3394 Год назад

    Fantastically beautiful 😃

  • @drainmonkeys385
    @drainmonkeys385 6 лет назад

    That’s beautiful wood... I can hard;y wait to harvest what I have inherited

  • @barrysimmons5489
    @barrysimmons5489 5 лет назад +2

    WOW ! (Not anything else, just WOW!).