These programs are such great inspiration. I watched them on tv when they originally aired and now at 70 yrs old I’m watching them again to give me some motivation.
I remember watching these on the weekends when I was kid in the early 90's. He was the reason I took woodshop in high school and why I have woodworking tools stuffed in my condo garage :)
Damn it Norm-you are the shizzle!!! In all seriousness, this guy inspired me to build and I still love it! You do more to improve humanity than any politician or entertainer!
I'm surprised that the pantry door can handle that interior shelf attached to it with such small tenons in the rails (not full through mortise + tenon).
These later episodes we don't use any AI to clean them up as the cameras were much better :) For some of the older ones marked as "AI HD" we use TopazLabs video AI. We do it in house and it takes about 12 hours to render a 24 minute episode.
@@brettyoung8328 I am, but I am a screenwriter who is also interested in audio and video work. I assume the OP also has multiple interests. I detected a slight note of condescending rudeness in your post. If I am wrong, I apologize.
@@fredwatson383Sorry if I sounded condescending. It was just after I came across another questioning another wood worker about something unrelated to Woodworking I appreciate your quest for knowledge. Best Regards,
Here in the UK we had to put up with some editing so each project fit into the allocated slot on the TV listings so watching the originals has been great. Most times the things excluded were minor but once or twice it was something quite important in the build process, one consistent edit was that no mention was made about a measured drawing being available or how to get it.
These programs are such great inspiration. I watched them on tv when they originally aired and now at 70 yrs old I’m watching them again to give me some motivation.
I remember watching these on the weekends when I was kid in the early 90's. He was the reason I took woodshop in high school and why I have woodworking tools stuffed in my condo garage :)
Damn it Norm-you are the shizzle!!! In all seriousness, this guy inspired me to build and I still love it! You do more to improve humanity than any politician or entertainer!
Norm, I don’t know you. But I watch a video of you in 1980 or so and it’s cool to see how far you’ve come man. Makes me to learn more.
I see he is using the Porter Cable dovetail jig. Past seasons he was using a different brand.
“Refrigeratah” caught that Massachusetts accent lol
I'm surprised that the pantry door can handle that interior shelf attached to it with such small tenons in the rails (not full through mortise + tenon).
👍👍👍👍👍
My pantry like that has fully extendable drawers
Good job!
What is the AI program that was used on several episodes, and how much does it cost per episode (if you are paying someone else to do it)?
These later episodes we don't use any AI to clean them up as the cameras were much better :) For some of the older ones marked as "AI HD" we use TopazLabs video AI. We do it in house and it takes about 12 hours to render a 24 minute episode.
Are you watching these episodes for the wood working?
@@brettyoung8328 I am, but I am a screenwriter who is also interested in audio and video work. I assume the OP also has multiple interests. I detected a slight note of condescending rudeness in your post. If I am wrong, I apologize.
@@fredwatson383Sorry if I sounded condescending. It was just after I came across another questioning another wood worker about something unrelated to Woodworking
I appreciate your quest for knowledge.
Best Regards,
Are measured drawings available for the pantry?
Another good'n.
24:11 If Norm says "they may be a challenge to build", it means it's impossible.
Has Norm’s wife ever done an interview? I’d be curious to know what it was like to be married to Norm.
He was married once before
This is a beautiful pantry upgrade, Norm! I mean version 2, specifically!
Do the home videos offered for the project differ from the episodes we saw on tv ?
Here in the UK we had to put up with some editing so each project fit into the allocated slot on the TV listings so watching the originals has been great. Most times the things excluded were minor but once or twice it was something quite important in the build process, one consistent edit was that no mention was made about a measured drawing being available or how to get it.
Back then the only way to watch the show again was to buy a DVD :) We are just posting them to RUclips now.
I remember watching all these on PBS. It’s my favorite woodworking show and the one I recommend to anyone starting the hobby.
I miss watching the NYW shows. PBS has pretty much done away with these types of woodworking shows now.
Pocket holes FTW
Putting that full box on the door adds so much weight. Couldn’t you make a shelf frame that screwed directly to the 1” thick rails and stiles?
Fully agree.
There's several kinds of pantries I guess.
So dated. 30 years ago they were tolerably interesting, now have been superseded by much more stylish and just as skilled makers