All the dislikes must be from people who are never pleased with anything. The detail and forethought that went into this is unbelievable. This piece is amazing!
Could be that its just run of the mill CNC machining. Nice and beautiful but nothing out of the ordinary. Handmade would be another story. And using the name Hattori Hanzo is kind of cheap since the product has zero affiliation with the name other than the design. Kind of like me painting my car red and calling it a Ferrari. Still, it looks very nice and is cool. Not his fault people dont know what they are looking at really so nothing at him.
@@Sexgneur Not exactly "everything". Getting those two parts match each other perfectly is tad tricky, as wood is not an uniform material. Then when you apply a water based glue you get another "distortion factor" thrown into the mix. So yes, the router does the most cutting, but there's more to it than just cutting wood.
@@MrKotBonifacy Negative. V-carve inlays are actually very easy once you learn the (simple) CAM set-up parameters. Probably the hardest part is cleaning out all of the debris after the milling. He was doing this with an Exacto knife -- I usually just do it with a soft wire brush.
@@jsu1995 I wasn't talking about CAD, I was referring to "the other part". Like: - It's just a machine doing everything; - Not exactly "everything". See the gist now? Machine does not do everything. Human does something. That something requires some skills. That's it. Granted, that "other part" is tad less demanding than cutting lettering for an inlay (overlay?) chessboard like here: ruclips.net/video/INVDSINj9l0/видео.html but some skills nonetheless. Cheers.
@@captainducky7816, yeah, and it's good that the picture was made effortlessly by machine. I wouldn't be ok using such board for cooking if it was carved by hands)
Man, I've watched thousands of videos on RUclips without dropping a comment but this is some amazing work! Never thought this amount of detail was achievable with wood inlays.
I'm utterly speechless. Absolutely hands down the finest work I've witnessed being created on any site. You have inspired me to get off my ass and get back into my shop.
There’s nothing more satisfying and beautiful than wooden inlay! I’ve always wanted to make a wooden storage box to store game components (cards, dice, chips, etc.) or a coin collector/antique collector box with an intricate design on it with high quality wood to display the wood grain and color!
With the software they have today you would be surprised how quickly you would be able to make this part. It's all about finding or making a good model.
I have seen many cutting boards in my life - and I have built a few. But this... How cool is this! I've never seen anything like it. What a master piece.
Funny, I only now after watching this vid realize that Broinwood is Brothers in Wood LOL. Excellent work! I strive to do things even half as nice as that.
I cannot imagine this to be hand made. But precise CNC cutting like this is a serious skill for the person and even the mashine. The final result is just pure awesomness. I would not dare to cut anything on it as it would be a shame to scratch it. Perfect and amazing job.
I was thinking the same thing. It’s so amazing. To use it and ruin it. Now if you have a hattori hanzo sword, more than likely you can afford to buy several of these. And use the to just cut random crap.
@@alickroberts5194 that's what I'm saying. There's a lot of people (myself included) that bust their ass to figure carve and chip carve original works with little more than a knife or two.
@@timmyianni2309 yup i mean kudos to the guy for actually getting off his ass and making something but its still not the same as the skills that are being lost as we speak due to machines like this removing the need to actually go learn it also why is this beutifull but the factory that using this exact same machine and shits 40 of theese out a hour isnt given the same respect? infact bizarly if you look into the skill and expertise and craftmentship that goes into injection molding and creating the molds why do people not respect the craftmenship there but this guy cads out a design and has a machine make it and suddenly people are dripping over him
@@Sarge92 thats super crazy you mentioned injection molding because i was thinking the exact same thing! Lol. I thought about all the programming and design that has to be fed to the machine for it to do what it does.
Can someone please explain to me how (at the time of posting this comment) there are 1,000 people who dislike this video/process?? They've gotta be jealous. Surely there's no other reason? Anyhow my thoughts are that this is one of the most amazing pieces of work I've ever seen produced. I wouldn't know where to start. SUPERB.
Stunning piece. As someone already said, the only thing I'd cut on that magnificent work of art is a deck of cards. Whoever owns it is well and truly blessed. 🙏
I have made and sold many end grain cutting boards in my career. Dude. Fantastic job. And I'm honestly a little surprised. Your prices are fantastic. I know every bit of how much effort and time goes into these. Especially the sanding. I'm legitimately surprised your cutting boards are so affordable for the quality I can see. I mean... If you are making money then that's awesome and I'm happy for you. But if I'm being honest with you man... I would have expected this board to be $1000. I know you can't charge that much for production work, but for a custom piece like this of your quality that's a fair price. I've sold in laid end grain boards and figured end grain boards for $750 and they weren't on the same quality level as what you just made here. Like I said, when someone is just browsing and choosing at random by pictures and reputation, lower prices are appropriate to make cash. But dude... For custom beautiful work like this... I would hate to see you let this go for less than $850. You gotta charge more for your custom pieces brother. I hope I'm not offending you. But you have earned that wage for custom work with your skill and investment in tools
if he actually designed the graphic... i know people and/or companies that pay well over what you are suggesting for just the graphic itself. to charge somebody $1000 for a cutting board with artwork created by somebody else is a joke.
@@mcalixtro82 lol you may not pay it. But you're talking to someone who has had multiple people pay lots of money for cutting boards. I've made in layed end grain cutting boards less quality than he is making them and charged more money and my clients were super happy. I haven't gotten someone to say no because of the price of a custom board. If they are asking for a custom one of a kind piece (no matter who made the art work) then they are expecting for it to be expensive. I understand you wouldn't pay for that. Well then you wouldn't be my customer which is OK. but many people are. And broinwood is an amazing craftsman and I would like him to get compensated for that appropriately.
@@armentumhominum9931 i already know you have no experience in any professional design field by that response. the ones that pay that much are paying actual designers that make it from scratch and the one that hired the artist is expecting a one-off with exclusive rights. to suggest that this should cost around $1000 is absurd.
@@андрейкучерявый-с8г какую франшизу? Ты имеешь ввиду какие-то авторские права? Авторские права на что? На имя исторической личности Хаттори Хандзо? Это тоже самое самое что имя допустим Дмитрий Донской, не у кого нет прав на это имя это мировое историческое достояние...
watching this video im sitting here wondering where the hell it is going. but when the router shaves away the wood insert my jaw dropped. this was awesome and has given me some pretty cool ideas. Thank you!!
At first I didn't think it would be possible to merge the blonde with the brunette but you guys did it. Amazing you kept those slivers from breaking and keeping the tool paths on the correct side. Monumental piece of work. Take a bow.
lol. this guy didnt bother putting in fine details either, the machine did all the hard work. if you had that expensive c&c machine he does, you too could do the same quality work
@@schiltz371 The machine didn't do the design or planning for the inlays, nor did a computer do the gluing or sanding/polishing work. He is still the artist....a CNC machine is just one of the tools.
All that beautiful work and if I did it I would misplace the decimal in the final finish pass from .2 mm to 2 mm right in the middle of the pass.... beautiful work, excellent craftsmanship, thank you for sharing this!!!!
I figured you were going to pour it with resin but when you flipped the cut & mashed it up I was like shut the F-up & totally wowed. Fantastic work even for CNC. 😍😍
@@dercsenyilaszlo733 Theres so much more to what he did than simply "printing" something. So what if he used a CNC machine? It takes vision, patience attention to detail and talent to make what he did.
mind = blown... The inlay technique was a ah-hah moment Awesome to watch, the cnc work.. Very satisfying to see the full transformation when you cleaned up the board and added the finishes at the end. Great job.
Im amazed that you were able to get the tolerances so close. Whenever I do an inset like that with a 3D Printed piece, I always have to decrease horizontal expansion on the inset, even then it's seriously tight in some areas and loose in others.
Jeffery Chavez Edge grain is the long side of the wood, end grain is, well, the end. Take a 1x1x8 fir strip, cut it into 1x1x1 cubes, stand them on end and glue, that’s end grain. Take another 1x1x8 strip and cut into a 4 ~1x1x2 and glue laying flat on their edge, that’s edge grain. Fewer joints, fewer points of failure.
@@Lab-Rat wood grain is like a bunch of straws held together, you have the long edge grain and the "end of the straw" end grain. Like a straw, wood soaks up water and finished through the end grain. This board has the end grain facing up, which will cause it to absorb moisture overtime. But with proper care and endgrain cutting board can last a lifetime. Chefs like end grain cutting boards because they do not dull knifes as quickly as edge grain. They are more labor intensive because you have to mill small blocks and flip them up to expose the end grain, then you have to glue all the small blocks together. Hope some of that helps.
Probably only for Sushi Chefs (or something similar), where the customers could actually see the cutting technique and the cutting board.. He won't chop thick skin an bones in this board, so it'll probably last forever..
@@TakTakSub yeah, like carving stations or a display with cuts. But nothing just sits there unused, very few chefs go decorative only like a grandmother with copper pans in the shape of roosters.
@@montauta I have owned a custom guitar shop for 35 years. I was stating a fact. I could see taking the top 1/2" with the inlay and making a top, but that whole board would weigh a lot
@@2AChef-n-BBQ it would still look badass and thats all that matters. 99 percent of players aren't giggers so the weight is almost irrelevant. Plus some les pauls weigh 11 to 12 pounds or even more 3 pounds isn't that much of a difference.
That is art in its own purest form. Your catalog doesn’t mention a price for this particular board. I would really be interested in purchasing this. I would not cut a piece of toast on this masterpiece!
I know its mostly done by computer but it still takes a fine knife to clean up the pieces and make it suitable for assembly, thank you for sharing. I think its a wonderful bit of technology and craftsmanship working together.
just because you have the tools, it does not diminish your craftsmanship. I would not consider it art, but artful craftsmanship that turns out to be beautiful. Well done!
@@CardSharkGermany i consider it about as artfull as me printing out something on my inkjet and calling myself vangough i respect his want to get off his ass and make something but i dont see this as some amazing piece of art and craftmenship and i suspect he also sees it as just a fun little hobby and doesent take himself so seriously as people seem to want to make him
I have never commented on a video, but your work is amazing....I wish I could like this video more than once. Keep up the great work and inspiring others.
How to find inlay parameters. broinwood.com/products/how-i-am-finding-inlay-parameters Most of my videos are a small report to my clients about their cutting boards and how they were made. I believe that it is very satisfying to watch it. And I really happy when you ask me to make a video because it is a special gift. Also, I want to say "Thank You!" to everyone who watches, liked, and comments on my video. I love your comments and always read them! I just do not have enough time to answer all of them. Sorry:) If you don't like the music, please turn off the sound :) Thank you! Answers for some frequent question: The board size is 24*18*3 inch. The board was made of walnut inlaid with maple. The time frame for a board like this is 3 weeks (if I'm not making other boards). I use a lot of different types of bits from 6 degrees to 90 degrees. (read in description) In this project, I have used 1/8, 1/2, 1/4 flat nose, and 15-degree v bit. Feed rate 60 ipm for V bit. For most projects, I use fusion 360, but also I use Ai, Vectric, Corel Draw, Inkscape, Ps. For finishing my boards, I use that wax and oil broinwood.com/collections/cutting-boards-care Why do I use a 1/4 flat nose bit for cutting inlay and surface? Because it does not make small chips.
Wow, actually here after 1 year. In my case I prefer to listen the tools and while you work on wood, the carving, cutting, smashing, all that stuff. Nice work! Keep it up!
this would take weeks to do by hands..... and super craftsman with technology most basic carpenters could achieve this WOW so amazing how far technology-wise we got
Most basic carpenters would _not_ be able to set up a CNC operation like that, I can guarantee you that. Sure, pressing the GO button in the end? Everyone can do that. But that's not where the work goes in for this kind of project.
@@Runoratsu but once u understand how to setup the cnc machine u could do that I mean... Ok it would take u leta say 2? Days to learn that? Compare to the lifetime it would take u to learn ti di it with a chizel... Nit to mention the time u could do it by cnc compare to the machine who does it for u while u sit and drink your morning coffee..until it finishes
Bro, that is some crazy beautiful work. I would have never thought a CNC could get those tiny details so consistently. Do you have any footage of the clean up or maybe suggestions on working in such fine detail?
@Wow Really? i knew a lady who had fine expensive Porcelain China and cultlery, that she allowed no one to use. She passed, and during the wake, people went look "where did she keep her wares... oh here it is!" and all her expensive China went passing around..little children running with the tea cups. Point being the artisan intended it as a cutting board so use it and enjoy it.
People's opinions are subjective, in the case of materialistic tools they have an objective regardless of their quality. They are made for a certain purpose. I understand what you're saying but let me ask you, if a murderer corners you and your only option is to use a katana (sword) that is on display. Would you?
Beautiful work. More than a chopping board, a work of art. Love the calibration tool. As a former CNC machinist, we sure could have used one of those back in the day.
The detail has blown my mind. Your machine has to be dialed in perfectly to get the male and female inays to match on the super fine cuts! Very well done, sir! You have a new Sub! Could I trouble you for a question? I am assuming you are using Vcarve or the like. If you are using Vcarve, do you use the inlay feature? Or do you use a normal V carving tool path?
Amazing indeed. If you're interested in the demystification on the tolerances.. It's due to the bit being tapered (smallest at tip, and wider as it gets closer to the collet) so it cuts a v-shape. When this is done on both sides the gap is much bigger than you think. When they are pressed together there are subtle gaps randomly between the two pieces, primarily at the tips, but you'll never see it, as he shaves it JUST enough below the surface of the main piece of wood. All to say, it's not blocks, it's wedges.
Wauw If you have a bad day or some stress from work?! Watch this! It helps you to relax and it just looks amazing. This is art Greetings from the Netherlands (William)
I would definitely use this. Then when a great great grandchild, who has a sharp perception discovers what lies beneath all the years of slicing, decides to clean it up, think of the magical surprise they will have?
Absolutely spectacular the modern technology has made this possible to make in such a small amount of time with even more accuracy compared to past when it would have taken months and months to complete. Great to watch the process thank you sir
Did i search for this? No
Did i watch the whole thing? Yes 😂
Was it worth it?
Yessss
Me 2.
Me 3
will I try this?
yes!!!
hhh
All the dislikes must be from people who are never pleased with anything. The detail and forethought that went into this is unbelievable. This piece is amazing!
Could be that its just run of the mill CNC machining. Nice and beautiful but nothing out of the ordinary. Handmade would be another story. And using the name Hattori Hanzo is kind of cheap since the product has zero affiliation with the name other than the design. Kind of like me painting my car red and calling it a Ferrari. Still, it looks very nice and is cool. Not his fault people dont know what they are looking at really so nothing at him.
Chef for 2+ decades.
This is the greatest chopping board I have EVER seen.
Incredible work!
I have been eating even longer and will continue to do so. Also, this is cool.
"incredible work". It's just a machine doing everything. Must be a profitable business when you see the price they sell it.
@@Sexgneur Not exactly "everything". Getting those two parts match each other perfectly is tad tricky, as wood is not an uniform material. Then when you apply a water based glue you get another "distortion factor" thrown into the mix. So yes, the router does the most cutting, but there's more to it than just cutting wood.
@@MrKotBonifacy Negative. V-carve inlays are actually very easy once you learn the (simple) CAM set-up parameters. Probably the hardest part is cleaning out all of the debris after the milling. He was doing this with an Exacto knife -- I usually just do it with a soft wire brush.
@@jsu1995 I wasn't talking about CAD, I was referring to "the other part". Like:
- It's just a machine doing everything;
- Not exactly "everything".
See the gist now? Machine does not do everything. Human does something. That something requires some skills. That's it.
Granted, that "other part" is tad less demanding than cutting lettering for an inlay (overlay?) chessboard like here:
ruclips.net/video/INVDSINj9l0/видео.html
but some skills nonetheless. Cheers.
The only thing I would cut on that is a deck of cards. That is gorgeous!
that would be perfect
Definitely too good to use for food processing. After all it's a work of art!
I'm not a cook but with this I'd try. All eyes on the cutting board. Yes it is gorgeous
Or a line of coke.
My yakuza friend uses it to cut thief fingers.
That isnt a cutting Board. This is a piece of Art.
the machine litterly did everything...
@@captainducky7816, yeah, and it's good that the picture was made effortlessly by machine. I wouldn't be ok using such board for cooking if it was carved by hands)
Man, I've watched thousands of videos on RUclips without dropping a comment but this is some amazing work! Never thought this amount of detail was achievable with wood inlays.
Thank you 👍
I'm utterly speechless. Absolutely hands down the finest work I've witnessed being created on any site. You have inspired me to get off my ass and get back into my shop.
Thank you! Enjoy your shop time👍
@@Broinwood how much?
Sweeping statement not accurate and also it's done by a CCC computer controlled machine you halfwit
INSANE! This cutting board is going to break the internet. Awesome awesome.
Thank you!
break?like trying to smash it?
No. Break like... everyone is watching this awesome video so much that the internet is going to stop working. Excellent work.
Wow! Just amazing craftmanship, work of art.
It would decorate my kitchen but if I caught somebody cutting something on it I'd lose my shit, looks too badass to actually use.
There’s nothing more satisfying and beautiful than wooden inlay! I’ve always wanted to make a wooden storage box to store game components (cards, dice, chips, etc.) or a coin collector/antique collector box with an intricate design on it with high quality wood to display the wood grain and color!
First time I’ve actually wanted a CNC after watching this. Can’t imagine how long this took to master and refine. Well done. 👏🏻👏🏻👍🏼
Thank you!
With the software they have today you would be surprised how quickly you would be able to make this part. It's all about finding or making a good model.
I’m 15 and just dumped ALL of my savings into a cnc, I’m broke but happy
@@Broinwood what CNC are you using
The computer learned instantly how to cut this out
I have seen many cutting boards in my life - and I have built a few. But this... How cool is this! I've never seen anything like it. What a master piece.
Thank you
This is the most beautiful thing I have ever seen made on a cnc. U sir are a grand master!
Thanks!
Funny, I only now after watching this vid realize that Broinwood is Brothers in Wood LOL. Excellent work! I strive to do things even half as nice as that.
I cannot imagine this to be hand made. But precise CNC cutting like this is a serious skill for the person and even the mashine. The final result is just pure awesomness. I would not dare to cut anything on it as it would be a shame to scratch it. Perfect and amazing job.
Not sure I would ever use this. More likely to display it.
I agree! I would have to put this on the wall somewhere in the livingroom or maybe the kitchen
Is it possible for sell?
like a table to clean your katanas?
I was thinking the same thing. It’s so amazing. To use it and ruin it. Now if you have a hattori hanzo sword, more than likely you can afford to buy several of these. And use the to just cut random crap.
This is not a cutting board. This is a piece of ART.
WoW hands down the most beautiful wood product I have ever seen.
You should watch someone make something themselves. This was made by a computer :(
@@alickroberts5194 that's what I'm saying. There's a lot of people (myself included) that bust their ass to figure carve and chip carve original works with little more than a knife or two.
Timmy Ianni I know brother them there robos dun taking over
@@timmyianni2309 yup i mean kudos to the guy for actually getting off his ass and making something but its still not the same as the skills that are being lost as we speak due to machines like this removing the need to actually go learn it
also why is this beutifull but the factory that using this exact same machine and shits 40 of theese out a hour isnt given the same respect?
infact bizarly if you look into the skill and expertise and craftmentship that goes into injection molding and creating the molds why do people not respect the craftmenship there but this guy cads out a design and has a machine make it and suddenly people are dripping over him
@@Sarge92 thats super crazy you mentioned injection molding because i was thinking the exact same thing! Lol. I thought about all the programming and design that has to be fed to the machine for it to do what it does.
Whoever gets this cutting board is lucky. It's badass af.
I'd love to see an unboxing and test of this
Awesome!!!!
Can someone please explain to me how (at the time of posting this comment) there are 1,000 people who dislike this video/process?? They've gotta be jealous. Surely there's no other reason?
Anyhow my thoughts are that this is one of the most amazing pieces of work I've ever seen produced. I wouldn't know where to start. SUPERB.
Stunning piece. As someone already said, the only thing I'd cut on that magnificent work of art is a deck of cards. Whoever owns it is well and truly blessed. 🙏
I have made and sold many end grain cutting boards in my career. Dude. Fantastic job. And I'm honestly a little surprised. Your prices are fantastic. I know every bit of how much effort and time goes into these. Especially the sanding. I'm legitimately surprised your cutting boards are so affordable for the quality I can see. I mean... If you are making money then that's awesome and I'm happy for you. But if I'm being honest with you man... I would have expected this board to be $1000. I know you can't charge that much for production work, but for a custom piece like this of your quality that's a fair price. I've sold in laid end grain boards and figured end grain boards for $750 and they weren't on the same quality level as what you just made here. Like I said, when someone is just browsing and choosing at random by pictures and reputation, lower prices are appropriate to make cash. But dude... For custom beautiful work like this... I would hate to see you let this go for less than $850. You gotta charge more for your custom pieces brother. I hope I'm not offending you. But you have earned that wage for custom work with your skill and investment in tools
I will think about it. Thank you :)
if he actually designed the graphic... i know people and/or companies that pay well over what you are suggesting for just the graphic itself. to charge somebody $1000 for a cutting board with artwork created by somebody else is a joke.
@@mcalixtro82 lol you may not pay it. But you're talking to someone who has had multiple people pay lots of money for cutting boards. I've made in layed end grain cutting boards less quality than he is making them and charged more money and my clients were super happy. I haven't gotten someone to say no because of the price of a custom board. If they are asking for a custom one of a kind piece (no matter who made the art work) then they are expecting for it to be expensive. I understand you wouldn't pay for that. Well then you wouldn't be my customer which is OK. but many people are. And broinwood is an amazing craftsman and I would like him to get compensated for that appropriately.
@@MaydaysCustomWoodworks so you take advantage of people that dont know any better? ok. do you.
@@armentumhominum9931 i already know you have no experience in any professional design field by that response. the ones that pay that much are paying actual designers that make it from scratch and the one that hired the artist is expecting a one-off with exclusive rights. to suggest that this should cost around $1000 is absurd.
The box you shipped it in is nicer than my cutting board.
Yea I'd use the box as the cutting board. I'd hang that on a wall
Такую потрясающую вещь даже поцарапать жалко, а резать на ней продукты - это вообще преступление! Очень красиво, супер!👍👏
Торцевые доски весьма устойчивы к появлению царапин, так что не стоит переживать за внешний вид.
@@Broinwood сколько стоит такая доска?
@@Broinwood да только не ханзо а хандзо и на английском тоже через D...
@@Хаттори-р6ч надо купить франшизу на D букву
@@андрейкучерявый-с8г какую франшизу? Ты имеешь ввиду какие-то авторские права? Авторские права на что? На имя исторической личности Хаттори Хандзо? Это тоже самое самое что имя допустим Дмитрий Донской, не у кого нет прав на это имя это мировое историческое достояние...
It is soooooo satisfying when the mineral oil is poured and wiped at the end. Favorite part of any project.
watching this video im sitting here wondering where the hell it is going. but when the router shaves away the wood insert my jaw dropped. this was awesome and has given me some pretty cool ideas. Thank you!!
I watch A LOT of these Channels on RUclips. You absolutely win sir. Holy cow.
What a piece of art. A knife should never touch it.
I agree, that is absolutely beautiful.
I was saying the same thing. That would be on my wall, not my counter.
Thanks👍
although beautiful, if its too nice to use, its too nice to own.
@@bobnoble6476 that's the difference between a user and a collector...
My God.... This takes inlay to another dimension. I saw you gluing up the whole thing, i was like "no no no gel never get it all in time". Good work
At first I didn't think it would be possible to merge the blonde with the brunette but you guys did it.
Amazing you kept those slivers from breaking and keeping the tool paths on the correct side.
Monumental piece of work. Take a bow.
Craftsmanship like this is almost extinct. Truly a work of art
@Marc Leblanc TOUCHÉ MARC.
I’ve never wanted to hang a cutting board on my wall until now. I would feel so guilty using this as it’s original intention. Great work!!
Haha u read my mind xD Really great job. Looks awesome :)
I've come back so many times over the last year to watch this masterpiece. Great work. The music selection is awesome.
this is one of the coolest woodworking projects i've ever seen
Even though the CNC did most of the work, this is very impressive, I want a CNC even more now.
this is probably the most beautiful wood works i've seen on youtube.
amazing!!!
I would've never tried putting such fine details on an inlay. This is amazing and gives me something to aspire to. Shared!!
Thank you. New boards coming soon.
lol. this guy didnt bother putting in fine details either, the machine did all the hard work. if you had that expensive c&c machine he does, you too could do the same quality work
@@schiltz371 The machine didn't do the design or planning for the inlays, nor did a computer do the gluing or sanding/polishing work.
He is still the artist....a CNC machine is just one of the tools.
If this fantastic art done by hand... then ....
Its feeling like heaven on earth
This comment is amazing!
Not really done by hand, but very good work! The result is amazing!
Bhai ku baizti kaarwa rahay ho angrezon kai samnay ?😂
Lol it would take years to do this by hand
@@phillipmitchell2254 depends on the carver
This is amazing. I'm just getting into inlay pieces, basic shapes and such, but this gives me motivation for the future. Thanks for sharing your work.
clicked on this video not having a clue what was going on. still watched till the end and im immensely satisfied
incredible work. When you thing the CNC's are boring, some guy came and play another level.
Never knew I'd be able to feel love for a cutting board.
This is some of the most incredible CNC cutting I've ever seen
I need one. That’s the coolest cutting board I’ve ever seen
Half way through i wondered wtf was actually going on the realised it was an inlay. One hell of a piece of art. Well done mate.
Thank you
i will do the same one day. hope i can do as good as you. nice work. i like this work very much. one of the greatest ninja in japanese history
Thank you! I appreciate it!
All that beautiful work and if I did it I would misplace the decimal in the final finish pass from .2 mm to 2 mm right in the middle of the pass....
beautiful work, excellent craftsmanship, thank you for sharing this!!!!
I figured you were going to pour it with resin but when you flipped the cut & mashed it up I was like shut the F-up & totally wowed. Fantastic work even for CNC. 😍😍
Dillon Corwin thats what I thought as well. The detailing and woodwork is beyond insane.
That artistic masterpiece would be on my wall. Wouldn't dream of using it
Thank you👍
@@dercsenyilaszlo733 Theres so much more to what he did than simply "printing" something. So what if he used a CNC machine? It takes vision, patience attention to detail and talent to make what he did.
Not a masterpiece if it can be mass produced
it is the only board.
I will never make the same one
@@scottlyon8206 so you would say a Bugatti is not a masterpie because is mass produced, great logic. Lol
The love and care that wend into that was incredibly satisfying to watch through to the end, even down to the packing.
mind = blown...
The inlay technique was a ah-hah moment
Awesome to watch, the cnc work..
Very satisfying to see the full transformation when you cleaned up the board and added the finishes at the end.
Great job.
Im amazed that you were able to get the tolerances so close. Whenever I do an inset like that with a 3D Printed piece, I always have to decrease horizontal expansion on the inset, even then it's seriously tight in some areas and loose in others.
How well does something like that hold up over time? Do the different woods expand/contract at different rates? Cracking? It's utterly stunning!
It will last basically forever if its cleaned and cared for with conditioner
It would last longer if it was edge grain rather than end grain.
Adam Jones
I’m new at woodworking what is the difference?
Jeffery Chavez Edge grain is the long side of the wood, end grain is, well, the end. Take a 1x1x8 fir strip, cut it into 1x1x1 cubes, stand them on end and glue, that’s end grain. Take another 1x1x8 strip and cut into a 4 ~1x1x2 and glue laying flat on their edge, that’s edge grain. Fewer joints, fewer points of failure.
@@Lab-Rat wood grain is like a bunch of straws held together, you have the long edge grain and the "end of the straw" end grain. Like a straw, wood soaks up water and finished through the end grain. This board has the end grain facing up, which will cause it to absorb moisture overtime. But with proper care and endgrain cutting board can last a lifetime. Chefs like end grain cutting boards because they do not dull knifes as quickly as edge grain. They are more labor intensive because you have to mill small blocks and flip them up to expose the end grain, then you have to glue all the small blocks together. Hope some of that helps.
I don’t how I came across this but watch the whole thing! I want and need one but I don’t if I can afford it haha! Amazing work!
As a martial artist and budo love I am overwhelmed by this beauty and I want to purchase it!!
Visually stunning!! Your cnc machine will be proud.
The cheffs probably never use it, more like art.
You would be surprised, Chefs are not afraid of using things that are pretty. But it would probably be more for the occasion than the duty.
Probably only for Sushi Chefs (or something similar), where the customers could actually see the cutting technique and the cutting board..
He won't chop thick skin an bones in this board, so it'll probably last forever..
@@TakTakSub yeah, like carving stations or a display with cuts. But nothing just sits there unused, very few chefs go decorative only like a grandmother with copper pans in the shape of roosters.
I would use the other side then display the art side when not in use after prolonged use of the non art side just sand and stain and wax again
If it got cut up or scratched you'd be able to take 1/16th in off a few times and still have inlay left.
Now imagine this piece of art in a guitar body
It would weigh 15 lbs
@@2AChef-n-BBQ really? Use your common sense, I mean the art it self, common
@@montauta I have owned a custom guitar shop for 35 years. I was stating a fact. I could see taking the top 1/2" with the inlay and making a top, but that whole board would weigh a lot
montauta oh hush up, he was stating fact, don't get butt hurt.
@@2AChef-n-BBQ it would still look badass and thats all that matters. 99 percent of players aren't giggers so the weight is almost irrelevant. Plus some les pauls weigh 11 to 12 pounds or even more 3 pounds isn't that much of a difference.
That is art in its own purest form. Your catalog doesn’t mention a price for this particular board. I would really be interested in purchasing this. I would not cut a piece of toast on this masterpiece!
Please contact me
Broinwood@gmail.com
Or Instagram @broinwood
You’re looking at around $400-$500 probably.
Brian Hill I may have spoken prematurely. That’s a bit expensive for me but still worth every penny if that is the price.
I think the price is in the thousands range due to the fact that it is made out of wood
@@DarknessEagle90 Easily. A plain, but high quality cutting board can already run between $100 - $200.
I know its mostly done by computer but it still takes a fine knife to clean up the pieces and make it suitable for assembly, thank you for sharing. I think its a wonderful bit of technology and craftsmanship working together.
I am blown away by this incredible work of art. I could never let any knife touch it.
3:55 what tool bit is that? seems effective
NARKISDUDE Tapered Angle Ball Nose bit
I be afraid to use that as a cutting board because that things is nice, I’ll would be one of those people that would use it as a wall decoration 😂
Elchuy - yeah, I’d lean towards it being art too. Beautiful.
Those inlays were thick. You could resurface it many times.
Absolutely fascinating
How much would something like that cost to buy?
How can I order the exact board?
@@feisalrasras2173 broinwood.com/
You cant find any info on that anywhere that'll will mean very expensive
@@boomerhgt the uncustomized maple wood cutting board shows up at 250$
the customization tool seems to be under maintenance.
This is where we need a love it button! A real work of art!
Nice work, that machine does. That machine has some real talent !
As beautiful as this is, its no longer about what the wood worker can do with his hands. its about what you can program into a machine
just because you have the tools, it does not diminish your craftsmanship. I would not consider it art, but artful craftsmanship that turns out to be beautiful. Well done!
Programming is also a viable skill.
@@CardSharkGermany i consider it about as artfull as me printing out something on my inkjet and calling myself vangough
i respect his want to get off his ass and make something but i dont see this as some amazing piece of art and craftmenship and i suspect he also sees it as just a fun little hobby and doesent take himself so seriously as people seem to want to make him
@@seekerrild4629 yes...
3d model are much viable to be crafted by hand than machine. Cnc does have its limitations
Artwork like this changes the frequency of your mind. Thank you for the energy boost. Back to my workshop 🗿⛏
Yes, this is that kind of cutting board that will cut you back in self defence.
i would give my biggest respect to the machine..
and a high five for the guy
I have never commented on a video, but your work is amazing....I wish I could like this video more than once. Keep up the great work and inspiring others.
How to find inlay parameters.
broinwood.com/products/how-i-am-finding-inlay-parameters
Most of my videos are a small report to my clients about their cutting boards and how they were made. I believe that it is very satisfying to watch it. And I really happy when you ask me to make a video because it is a special gift. Also, I want to say "Thank You!" to everyone who watches, liked, and comments on my video. I love your comments and always read them! I just do not have enough time to answer all of them.
Sorry:)
If you don't like the music, please turn off the sound :)
Thank you!
Answers for some frequent question:
The board size is 24*18*3 inch.
The board was made of walnut inlaid with maple.
The time frame for a board like this is 3 weeks (if I'm not making other boards).
I use a lot of different types of bits from 6 degrees to 90 degrees. (read in description)
In this project, I have used 1/8, 1/2, 1/4 flat nose, and 15-degree v bit.
Feed rate 60 ipm for V bit.
For most projects, I use fusion 360, but also I use Ai, Vectric, Corel Draw, Inkscape, Ps.
For finishing my boards, I use that wax and oil broinwood.com/collections/cutting-boards-care
Why do I use a 1/4 flat nose bit for cutting inlay and surface? Because it does not make small chips.
Wow, actually here after 1 year. In my case I prefer to listen the tools and while you work on wood, the carving, cutting, smashing, all that stuff. Nice work! Keep it up!
Well i like the music. Artist?
And what a fantastic job. 👍
music is great...can you give a name pls?
@@igm7710 i want too
Mani and I are going
this would take weeks to do by hands..... and super craftsman
with technology most basic carpenters could achieve this WOW so amazing how far technology-wise we got
You right.
Most basic carpenters would _not_ be able to set up a CNC operation like that, I can guarantee you that. Sure, pressing the GO button in the end? Everyone can do that. But that's not where the work goes in for this kind of project.
@@Runoratsu but once u understand how to setup the cnc machine u could do that
I mean... Ok it would take u leta say 2? Days to learn that?
Compare to the lifetime it would take u to learn ti di it with a chizel...
Nit to mention the time u could do it by cnc compare to the machine who does it for u while u sit and drink your morning coffee..until it finishes
it is still good point
@@ShayVidas Let's see you try. We'll talk the day after tomorrow. :)
Bro, that is some crazy beautiful work. I would have never thought a CNC could get those tiny details so consistently. Do you have any footage of the clean up or maybe suggestions on working in such fine detail?
Thanks, I have no any tutorials yet.
Me personally I would just love to see your software layout for this project. Is that a 20 degree engraving bit for the detail?
This video was like medicine to my brain. Love it. Went to shop but all sold out.
削ってはめ込んでまた削ってよくもここまで綺麗に隙間なく仕上がるもんだ
機械の精密さが素晴らしいね
Даааа,резать капусту на такой доске просто кощунство! Это же произведение искусства!!!
Для капусты можно т.с. рисунок выжечь лазером за 15 минут.
Stunning work in the inlay was that a first time fit? Either way I'm impressed alot of talent.
That is correct first time fit.
What good is a cutting board if you can't use it? I would never, I'd have that thing on my wall like a masterpiece.
excatly would feel pain to use a knife on it
Is this exclusively for the ceremony of chopping off heads. 🙈🙉🙊
This is a real work of art and a thing of beauty. 🤩😉😎
Use it
@Wow Really? i knew a lady who had fine expensive Porcelain China and cultlery, that she allowed no one to use. She passed, and during the wake, people went look "where did she keep her wares... oh here it is!" and all her expensive China went passing around..little children running with the tea cups. Point being the artisan intended it as a cutting board so use it and enjoy it.
People's opinions are subjective, in the case of materialistic tools they have an objective regardless of their quality. They are made for a certain purpose. I understand what you're saying but let me ask you, if a murderer corners you and your only option is to use a katana (sword) that is on display. Would you?
That is an absolute work of art that I would never have the heart to take a knife to, I’d want to display it!
Lovely work 😎
Wow....simply a masterpiece. I feel like such a beginner on my CNC. Now I have to go in my shop and feel inadequate....thanks. lol
I would like to see the customer's face when he gets the chopping board!!!!
He/she will use the box shipped for cuting board
What song is that? it's incredible
Man i feel like that board is the one who's gonna chop me instead of me chopping on the board...
The most sickest woodworking I have ever seen!!! Wow!!!
Beautiful work. More than a chopping board, a work of art.
Love the calibration tool. As a former CNC machinist, we sure could have used one of those back in the day.
background music 's really dope. can so tell me the name of the song please
me too.. 🙏
The detail has blown my mind. Your machine has to be dialed in perfectly to get the male and female inays to match on the super fine cuts!
Very well done, sir! You have a new Sub!
Could I trouble you for a question?
I am assuming you are using Vcarve or the like.
If you are using Vcarve, do you use the inlay feature? Or do you use a normal V carving tool path?
Thank you!
You are absolutely right I use vcarve. For all inlays I use a normal V carving tool
Holy hell! No way did that just slide right in there xD oh my god!
That's what she said :)
thats what she said
Amazing indeed. If you're interested in the demystification on the tolerances.. It's due to the bit being tapered (smallest at tip, and wider as it gets closer to the collet) so it cuts a v-shape. When this is done on both sides the gap is much bigger than you think. When they are pressed together there are subtle gaps randomly between the two pieces, primarily at the tips, but you'll never see it, as he shaves it JUST enough below the surface of the main piece of wood. All to say, it's not blocks, it's wedges.
@@Exhalation19 that's a real trade secret, folks. Write it down somewhere
WOW thats NUTZ, such precision and craftsmanship
Wauw If you have a bad day or some stress from work?! Watch this!
It helps you to relax and it just looks amazing.
This is art
Greetings from the Netherlands
(William)
I love "Kill Bill" movies.
BTW what would Sonny Chiba say about this cutting board. 🤩😁
masterpiece
Hi, amazing! How long did it take on the computer to get everything right?
Depends on model average about week.
Most beautiful work I've ever seen done. Such a wonderful skill to have. I can only admire those that do. Congratulations!
This is the coolest use for a cnc I've seen.
I would definitely use this. Then when a great great grandchild, who has a sharp perception discovers what lies beneath all the years of slicing, decides to clean it up, think of the magical surprise they will have?
Some Old Japanese Wood Carver Shaking His Cane: "Kids these days with their CNCs and EXacTOs!....."
Exactly! It's beautiful but not art *waving my fist*👀 why I oughta!
FUUUUUUUGH ME! That was impressive.
Thank you!
Absolutely spectacular the modern technology has made this possible to make in such a small amount of time with even more accuracy compared to past when it would have taken months and months to complete. Great to watch the process thank you sir
Congratulations on helping the machine with her artwork