Love this book! ruclips.net/user/postUgkxpCNxqmAkyjN6NPx1fyB7QiEFWyO5mUWL it is simply one-of-a-kind! I really love it, because karah explained all tools required to have the job done, not mentioning the fabulous diy pallets ideas. I'm pretty sure this will be a fresh start in my new endeavour. Amazon was great, they delivered on time. Thank you!
+Jeremy Schmidt Thanks Jeremy. Sometimes its just so liberating to do something 'artsy fartsy' and play with nice prime lenses rather than VO/etc. No retakes either ;)
I just found your channel and i would say thank you so much for sharing those Videos! You are showing how to work clean and save! Let me say this as an organ builder, your work is so beatiful. I just can't stop watching your videos....and as a guy how try to make some Videos let me say this: your angles, settings and allover compositions are great! Thank you for inspiring!
woohoo! can't wait! good to see an Australian woodworker making some brilliant stuff! Frankly I was getting sick of associating woodworking with American accents!
Nice video - definitely one of your best yet.....I think reducing the narration, and relying on the video to tell the story is much more powerful.....Jimmy Diresta reckons this is one of the key reasons for his success......content crosses the language barrier. Well done.
+Greg Kieser The crux of the problem is am I telling a story or teaching? In this case its more a story, but in general I try to be more educational. While you can gleam some knowledge from a story, its more about the journey than the how or why, so to speak. In this case, I wanted to build the project, have a bit of fun with the cinematography, and not be bogged down by narration (and setting the shots up for narration to make sense). There would be good arguments for either way, I'd imagine.
I'm looking at making my own tasmanian oak queen bed base. Hoping my father can help as I have little experience with wood working. Do you get your wood from bunnings or a lumper yard? I can get the same brackets online; any tips for making sure they create a flush finish, Also what finish do you use? I prefer the look of the beautiful natural colour, but still want a smooth clear finish to protect the wood.
Ah yes, the old crooked jigsaw laser that's impossible to fix. I feel that pain. One of these days I'll get that special mixture of bored and ambitious and crack mine open to replace the laser with an led light that might actually be useful.
+chrisbinnie I'm not 100% sure its the laser at fault so much as the somewhat terrible guides and highish-vibration on this particular jigsaw. The company no longer makes/sells it, so probably a good indication it wasn't a real winner.
Sorry for the stupid question Paul. But what you call the drill bit thing you used after you used the self centering drill bit. In the 9th min of the video. The red bit
+Marnis Maritz it's a pilot hole + counter sink bit in one, with a large "no marr" depth stop. I set the stop to before the countersink as I didn't need a counter sink. My camera broke, but once i figure out what to do with it I'll try and do a close up/talky Tuesday on it
+Paul “TheWoodKnight” Jenkins okay thank you. I have a craftsman miter saw and I've seen people add the festool one to there saws. I want to add something like that because dust goes everywhere.
+Bryan Tidwell If it makes you feel any better, the very expensive Bosch mitre saw has awful dust collection (which is a surprise given their other tools). Its dust collection is consistently rated as one of the worst by a handful of magazines. Apart from that, its a good saw though..
Nice design. Question about the bed hardware: are you happy with this type? Does the bed squeak at all? Is it sturdy if you lay on it and try to rock it? Thanks.
Great build Paul and beautiful video as always. One Q. Did you fix the horizontal boards into the bed head 'frame' or are they 'floating' somehow? And if fixed, how have you avoided the horizontal expansion of those boards opening up the top joints. I ask because I built the same design last year and didn't allow for enough expansion and am regretting it now. Cheers. Matt.
Great editing. I was watching this because I have to make a queen bed. However once you got the Festool Domino out you lost me. You put 101 in the title so I assumed this would be instructive for relative beginners but I guess not. I'll watch again but the Festool is a deal breaker for us hobbists.
Love this book! ruclips.net/user/postUgkxpCNxqmAkyjN6NPx1fyB7QiEFWyO5mUWL it is simply one-of-a-kind! I really love it, because karah explained all tools required to have the job done, not mentioning the fabulous diy pallets ideas. I'm pretty sure this will be a fresh start in my new endeavour. Amazon was great, they delivered on time. Thank you!
Not to take away from the project, which is awesome, but your editing is just outstanding! Very enjoyable to watch.
+Jeremy Schmidt Thanks Jeremy. Sometimes its just so liberating to do something 'artsy fartsy' and play with nice prime lenses rather than VO/etc. No retakes either ;)
I just found your channel and i would say thank you so much for sharing those Videos! You are showing how to work clean and save! Let me say this as an organ builder, your work is so beatiful. I just can't stop watching your videos....and as a guy how try to make some Videos let me say this: your angles, settings and allover compositions are great! Thank you for inspiring!
Great project build and video Paul. Keep up the great work.
Beautiful bed and brilliantly made video. Loving all the Tassie oak projects!!
+Abdullah Khan I'm sorry that the next one will be redgum :(
woohoo! can't wait! good to see an Australian woodworker making some brilliant stuff! Frankly I was getting sick of associating woodworking with American accents!
Enjoyed the story telling and mood! nice project1!
Very nice piece of work!
wow @PaulJenkins , that was a fantastic video, your editing and woodworking skills are great, keep up the great work mate
Oddly relaxing. Thanks dude. Nice build.
Beautiful work and great edit!
Nice video - definitely one of your best yet.....I think reducing the narration, and relying on the video to tell the story is much more powerful.....Jimmy Diresta reckons this is one of the key reasons for his success......content crosses the language barrier. Well done.
+Greg Kieser The crux of the problem is am I telling a story or teaching? In this case its more a story, but in general I try to be more educational. While you can gleam some knowledge from a story, its more about the journey than the how or why, so to speak.
In this case, I wanted to build the project, have a bit of fun with the cinematography, and not be bogged down by narration (and setting the shots up for narration to make sense).
There would be good arguments for either way, I'd imagine.
Great video to chill out in the afternoon :)
Great looking bed. A healthy amount of Black Sabbath in that play list :-) but I'm glad you went with local talent!
+Denis Minuz I usually go with Tom Waits in the workshop, but needed something a little bit more upbeat to get through the drudgery of sanding!
Great video! Lovely bed too!
Very nice video
Beautiful work.
Paul goot to see a little of the iner workings of the domino. thanks mate
Very enjoyable to watch
I'm looking at making my own tasmanian oak queen bed base. Hoping my father can help as I have little experience with wood working. Do you get your wood from bunnings or a lumper yard? I can get the same brackets online; any tips for making sure they create a flush finish, Also what finish do you use? I prefer the look of the beautiful natural colour, but still want a smooth clear finish to protect the wood.
I feel serene now.
With a.woman like that u gonna need it for sure. Nice job my friend keep it up
great work!
Cool !
Good sturdy work. Video for Omegle.
Ah yes, the old crooked jigsaw laser that's impossible to fix. I feel that pain.
One of these days I'll get that special mixture of bored and ambitious and crack mine open to replace the laser with an led light that might actually be useful.
+chrisbinnie I'm not 100% sure its the laser at fault so much as the somewhat terrible guides and highish-vibration on this particular jigsaw. The company no longer makes/sells it, so probably a good indication it wasn't a real winner.
Sorry for the stupid question Paul. But what you call the drill bit thing you used after you used the self centering drill bit. In the 9th min of the video. The red bit
+Marnis Maritz it's a pilot hole + counter sink bit in one, with a large "no marr" depth stop. I set the stop to before the countersink as I didn't need a counter sink.
My camera broke, but once i figure out what to do with it I'll try and do a close up/talky Tuesday on it
Thank you so much. Have seen them on other videos also. But in South-Africa ive never seen them. So will have to get some on ebay. Thank you
Very nice. Did your dust chute on your miter saw come with your saw or did you add that? It looks like a festool dust chute. Thank you.
+Bryan Tidwell its the standard bosch one with some masking tape added to the bottom
+Paul “TheWoodKnight” Jenkins okay thank you. I have a craftsman miter saw and I've seen people add the festool one to there saws. I want to add something like that because dust goes everywhere.
+Bryan Tidwell If it makes you feel any better, the very expensive Bosch mitre saw has awful dust collection (which is a surprise given their other tools). Its dust collection is consistently rated as one of the worst by a handful of magazines. Apart from that, its a good saw though..
that centre leg will buckle as soon as the bed is in use
2 years or so in use without issue begs to differ
You have all the tools like you building a fucking space ship bruu they should hire you Bru
nice
I don't get the triple-J reference except for some relationship to Skyhooks :(
+Rick Measham It has to do with the clients. edit: specifically the clients names :)
Nice design. Question about the bed hardware: are you happy with this type? Does the bed squeak at all? Is it sturdy if you lay on it and try to rock it? Thanks.
Yes, I'm happy, no squeaking from the hardware. The type that just clips in (rather than bolt in) may squeak.
@@TheWoodKnight What hardware specifically is this, I have looked and cannot find it.
Maxilock. Available from Bunnings in Australia, no idea elsewhere
Nice lukig beyd
Great build Paul and beautiful video as always. One Q. Did you fix the horizontal boards into the bed head 'frame' or are they 'floating' somehow? And if fixed, how have you avoided the horizontal expansion of those boards opening up the top joints. I ask because I built the same design last year and didn't allow for enough expansion and am regretting it now. Cheers. Matt.
+Matt Sarre The panels are floating. They're simply just not glued in.
+Paul “TheWoodKnight” Jenkins perfect. Thanks Paul
Great project Paul, but Jukebox in Siberia? :-)
You don't have a problem with Shirley do you?
Paul, what type of wood is this? Great build. Probably one of my next projects.
+vistacruiser Victorian Ash (also known as Tasmanian Oak, Mountain Ash, and a few other names). Local (AU) timber.
+Paul “TheWoodKnight” Jenkins splendid. Thank you. Keep up the nice videos.
Great editing. I was watching this because I have to make a queen bed. However once you got the Festool Domino out you lost me. You put 101 in the title so I assumed this would be instructive for relative beginners but I guess not. I'll watch again but the Festool is a deal breaker for us hobbists.
+DaveXBTube 101 refers to the episode number. This wasn't an instructional.
wow and the spelling award goes to...
i had to watch x2 speed because those matchines too slow to watch