My husband and I got a great deal on a new mahogany door for a house we bought in 1983. I did a glossy finish on inside and regular spar varnish on outside. We live in LAS VEGAS, NV. The door and finish has lasted for 35+ yrs of slams and 2 kids. Still a beautiful door.
From someone spent 20 odd years making “mahogany” joinery, including door frames & entry doors- that was very nicely done! With your mortise and tenon joints, some “mahogany’s” grown on acidic soils, have moisture content that’s equally acidic & over time will break down PVA glues. It’s always preferable to use a epoxy resin, because they create a far stronger glue joint, that’s impervious to acid attack. Strength is often greater than the surrounding parent timber. The reason for the mortise & tenon joints was to creat a mechanically strong joint, because in the old days when glue was made from tallow (rendered down horses hooves etc), the acid attacked the glue & broke it down over time so glue couldn’t be relied upon long term for a permanent joint. In order to make the mortise & tenon joints “mechanically strong” they used to be drilled through the style completely, then the tenons were sawn with slit / slits and the tenons were wedged from the outside to spread the tenon, to lock the joint. Downside of that was the through mortise hole allows moisture in over time to rot the joint. Upside was - you could pull the wedges once the glue joint broke down & pull the door apart, clean all the joints, re assemble & re glue to rejuvenate the door. With today’s inert epoxy resins that have a half life over 200 years, stopped mortise joints do keep the moisture out way better, and the glue joint is unlikely to fail within 4 or 5 generations. That said, I still used to stop drill and hardwood dowel my tenons to create a mechanical “lock” to the joints in addition to the epoxy resin. I would “pellet” plug the dowel hole with a plug cut from the excess length on my styles & insert them to cover the hole with the grain aligned with the grain in the style, then sand off afterwards. Unless you knew they were there you wouldn’t see the pellet plugs because being cut from the same piece of wood, the colour & grain were a perfect match. Probably overkill but unless the house burns to the ground the doors should still be there in 200+ years time! I’d still give yours a 99/100 score! 👍👍👍🇦🇺
I built custom entry doors for many years. They can be unbelievable time consuming and this video is a great example of the how complex they can get.... great looking door.
That door is ballin. You must feel real good looking at that. I got to say, you didn't have to film all that, thank you very much for taking the time and sharing it with us. I'm definitely inspired by this. Especially the way you drilled the mortises for the top piece. I'm designing a kid bed and couldn't figure how to attach to top rail to the side posts. I'm gonna flip them and drill them like that. Again, thank you.
Beautiful job Kyle! I just built a door for a customer here in San Diego, I find that the Rails and stiles Are more stable when laminating them together, I joined 4/4 and 6/4 boards together and milled it down to 1 3/4 thick, then did my milling. Beautiful craftsmanship dude.
This is truly amazing work! I only recently started woodworking and am centuries away of making such a beautiful piece. The only thing I was “worried” about was your use of the table saw. Are there not better/safer ways for when you were making those inserts? Seemed rather dangerous and too close for real comfort to the saw blade. Would be interested to hear your (or someone else’s) opinion!
I'll chime in since no one else has or maybe you've been e-mailed, I don't know. Anyway, I don't know of any other way to do it. I've been working on a tablesaw comfortably since 2001. Once you've gained the respect of the machine you are operating and no longer fear it, know exactly where the blade is in conjunction with your hands and have worked on it long enough you will know if you will be able to successfully make those cuts without sustaining life threatening injuries.
Very nice job! When I work with mahogany, I usually brush it with a fine steel or brass brush after sanding to remove the dust that gets imbedded in the grain from sanding. I find that this allows more of the natural characteristics of the wood (grain) to show.
How in the hell can you have any thumbs down on this video! Jesus Christ brother you are a straight beast with the right knowledge and tools it's amazing what we can do. Damn sure wish I had a mentor like you congratulations that is a profound video and a great piece of artwork
Unbelievable work Kyle! Your woodworking skills are definitely top notch. Beautiful door that anyone would be proud of.............Great job...............
Very nice work. Thank you for sharing. I would hate to see you get seriously injured on the table saw, and would advise making jigs for cuts like those panels. Even the panel ripping could be a lot safer. After my table saw injury I imagine what would happen if the would suddenly disappeared at any moment in a cut as it did on me. Several of those cuts would have had your hand in the blade if binding or kickback or any number of things happened.
That is an amazing door! The time and effort that went into designing, planning, and building the door sure shows in the finished project. Subscribed for sure!
A lot of parts and pieces but just a beautiful job. I have worked with Mahogany before one time and that was enough, it tore my sinus's up really bad even with a mask.
Excellent craftmanship, but how did you make bevel on the back side of the inlays, or are there 2 layers? If so, would it be possible to did you insulate btw layers (I live in Norway and a door without insulation will always be just a crap door).
That’s a beautiful door man. Awesome craftsmanship. My own personal opinion is the door knob and latch should be in the center of the stile though. It appears in the video it’s off to the side of the stile towards the center panels of the door.
Thanks! I tool out the framework from the other door so I still need to add new framework to the top and sides. That'll take care of the gap. Then there is a insulated rubber piece that goes on that to fill any other gaps.
Everyone is a critic! Lol I'm not that kind. That has to be the most beautiful door I have ever seen. Just seeing the time, effort and creativity that went into it makes me appreciate it even more. 👍👍👏
Wow blown away i am new to working with wood. For me its the smell of fresh wood and the end result still a newbie but maybe one day i could make some thing like this. You have definitely got alot of talent :-)
have to agree if you look at the top of the frame there's easy a 10mm gap letting daylight through and that frame does not give that door the compliment it deserves. nice worth Toth but meet us half way if your gonna give us all damp spots in our jeans with amazing skills at least do the full job :)
hehe,not just the frame but the molding...Is this a rental?...man, to put that amount of work into either a rental or a cheap house- which this looks like.....I mean the door seems really out of place.... but very good workmanship...I hope he takes the door when he leaves,and puts the home depot door back!
First off, amazing piece. Just wondering though, from the video it looks like the door is abour 2-3 inches too short? I thought you just hung it there for a good closing shot. Is that the permanant location? Is it just the camera angle? Awesome work regardless.
Stern Fan Its about a half inch short but There is frame work that goes on the top and rubber padding to seal the air off. I just haven't done it yet. When its done it'll be sealed
Smart to use the yacht varnish on that beautiful wood. Sister had a mahogany door on house she bought and after a year the polyurethane, yes polyurethane finish was cracking and ruined
Kyle Toth the visible side of the door with the pyramids before you hang it ends up being the inside of the door. and if you doubled up the pyramids front to back in the build, not seeing it. am I missing something?
That is a beautiful door and I know you are proud of the work you did on it. That door is top shelf in any woodworkers book. You did everything just as it should be done, the construction technique is all first class, there are no compromises. I shudder to think what the mahogany cost you, but your door is certainly well worth it.
Beautiful door dude! I'm just wondering why you spent that much time & that much money on a door only to place it in that horribly painted pine door jamb? Think it would have made the project 100%... kinda putting lipstick on a pig. Either way, can't take anything away from your talent. Very nicely done. ☺
Well Its not done yet. It still needs to be trimmed out and I've been trying yo get this door up for a month and I just decided to do it. I have added trim work and the rubber padding. I hear what your saying though. When i'm all done it'll look like it belongs there
never made one of these cuts before, is there a safer way of doing it if I didn't fancy doing it on the table saw like that? A specialised jig on the band saw perhaps?
make a sled that rides on top of the rip fence and use a zero clearance throat plate. also, cut across the endgrain first, then cut with the grain. if any tearout occurs at the ends of the cut, it gets eliminated with the waste on the tangent edge which runs with the grain.
What he said and if it were not split too much wood would have been removed from the rail and weekend it. I was taught not to let a tenon get over 4-5 inches long.
Kyle ! I’m a 70 yr old woodworker up here in Anchorage, AK and have to say that is the most AWESOME residential entry door I have ever seen ! You are a talented young man ! Keep up designing as I can see its in your blood ! May the grain be with you as the famous Woodwright Roy would say !
Дверь красивая,но я бы монтировал короткие горизонтальные детали дверного полотна на шканты,это было бы проще и быстрее и конечно для такой двери нужна красивая дверная коробка с красивыми наличниками с канелюрами или объёмным фрезерованным профилем и карнизом. Спасибо за видео!Успехов в творчестве!
Has numerous details in this woodwork book *TopFineWoodworking. Com* . The book also displays several designs and descriptions on the materials used for various woodworking processes and also the guidelines on completing various procedures appropriately. In other words, I`m happy using this book, especially in the process of learning about wood working.?
Beautiful Door Kyle. You continue to amaze me with the craftsmanship you demonstrate! Very nice, would like to have seen how to other side turned out. Great video
Not bad. Nice seeing someone cutting proper tenons. That 'freehand' beveled cut on the table saw can go very wrong very quickly, as I'm sure you know (and I've done it myself many times - and worse ! Still got all 10, thank god), but if you are planning on making more doors like this, maybe you should consider making a holding jig ? Cheers !
This is the type of door that deserves a complete home upgrade - that door frame looked so sad with this beauty in it! Amazing craftsmanship.
I was going to say the same thing. Almost seems like a shame to put such a beautiful piece in a stock framing job.
You need a new house now
My husband and I got a great deal on a new mahogany door for a house we bought in 1983. I did a glossy finish on inside and regular spar varnish on outside. We live in LAS VEGAS, NV.
The door and finish has lasted for 35+ yrs of slams and 2 kids. Still a beautiful door.
From someone spent 20 odd years making “mahogany” joinery, including door frames & entry doors- that was very nicely done!
With your mortise and tenon joints, some “mahogany’s” grown on acidic soils, have moisture content that’s equally acidic & over time will break down PVA glues.
It’s always preferable to use a epoxy resin, because they create a far stronger glue joint, that’s impervious to acid attack. Strength is often greater than the surrounding parent timber.
The reason for the mortise & tenon joints was to creat a mechanically strong joint, because in the old days when glue was made from tallow (rendered down horses hooves etc), the acid attacked the glue & broke it down over time so glue couldn’t be relied upon long term for a permanent joint.
In order to make the mortise & tenon joints “mechanically strong” they used to be drilled through the style completely, then the tenons were sawn with slit / slits and the tenons were wedged from the outside to spread the tenon, to lock the joint.
Downside of that was the through mortise hole allows moisture in over time to rot the joint. Upside was - you could pull the wedges once the glue joint broke down & pull the door apart, clean all the joints, re assemble & re glue to rejuvenate the door.
With today’s inert epoxy resins that have a half life over 200 years, stopped mortise joints do keep the moisture out way better, and the glue joint is unlikely to fail within 4 or 5 generations.
That said, I still used to stop drill and hardwood dowel my tenons to create a mechanical “lock” to the joints in addition to the epoxy resin.
I would “pellet” plug the dowel hole with a plug cut from the excess length on my styles & insert them to cover the hole with the grain aligned with the grain in the style, then sand off afterwards. Unless you knew they were there you wouldn’t see the pellet plugs because being cut from the same piece of wood, the colour & grain were a perfect match.
Probably overkill but unless the house burns to the ground the doors should still be there in 200+ years time!
I’d still give yours a 99/100 score! 👍👍👍🇦🇺
Ian - great to know! I am about to build a furniture piece for my mom and I'm using mahogany. Thanks for the advice
Thanks for taking the time to share your experience with us, knowledge like that is hard to come by.
Great information. Thank you!
I built custom entry doors for many years. They can be unbelievable time consuming and this video is a great example of the how complex they can get.... great looking door.
I need a custom entry door it is arch top
That’s absolutely beautiful! Would love to have a door like that
It's an absolute pleasure watching you craft things out of wood. That door is beautiful.
worked absolutely brilliantly ... great woodwork .... I am thrilled ... the door will make generations happy ... Greetings from Germany
Stunning door for sure.... It appears to be too short for the frame considering all the light that can be seen passing through the top of the door.
I'll never question why a door cost so much money! Amazing
no doubt
@@truthhasnoagenda3785 by
That door is ballin. You must feel real good looking at that. I got to say, you didn't have to film all that, thank you very much for taking the time and sharing it with us. I'm definitely inspired by this. Especially the way you drilled the mortises for the top piece. I'm designing a kid bed and couldn't figure how to attach to top rail to the side posts. I'm gonna flip them and drill them like that.
Again, thank you.
Awesome! Glad you pick up something from the build. Hope your bed comes out well!
"I need a new frame door", mahogany door said. Beautiful job.
Beautiful job Kyle! I just built a door for a customer here in San Diego, I find that the Rails and stiles Are more stable when laminating them together, I joined 4/4 and 6/4 boards together and milled it down to 1 3/4 thick, then did my milling. Beautiful craftsmanship dude.
Huh thats a good idea.I didn't think of that, I guess it would be a lot more stable. I just moved out of San Diego
yeah I was checking out you website and seen you were out of Temecula I think.
I’m a huge fan of you work dude, keep it up and let the haters hate ;-)
love the door! need some weather stripping though!
A lost art... and a dying breed not too many will be this type of craftsman in our future generation.
This is truly amazing work! I only recently started woodworking and am centuries away of making such a beautiful piece. The only thing I was “worried” about was your use of the table saw. Are there not better/safer ways for when you were making those inserts? Seemed rather dangerous and too close for real comfort to the saw blade. Would be interested to hear your (or someone else’s) opinion!
I'll chime in since no one else has or maybe you've been e-mailed, I don't know. Anyway, I don't know of any other way to do it. I've been working on a tablesaw comfortably since 2001. Once you've gained the respect of the machine you are operating and no longer fear it, know exactly where the blade is in conjunction with your hands and have worked on it long enough you will know if you will be able to successfully make those cuts without sustaining life threatening injuries.
There is a jig for that.
im glad there were no haters !! ive been making furniture for over 30 years !! well done,
Boy I am humbled by the talent here. I’m reminded I don’t know jack about woodworking lol...
ruclips.net/video/1jjbpyOkEK0/видео.html
Very nice job! When I work with mahogany, I usually brush it with a fine steel or brass brush after sanding to remove the dust that gets imbedded in the grain from sanding. I find that this allows more of the natural characteristics of the wood (grain) to show.
How in the hell can you have any thumbs down on this video! Jesus Christ brother you are a straight beast with the right knowledge and tools it's amazing what we can do. Damn sure wish I had a mentor like you congratulations that is a profound video and a great piece of artwork
Jesus Christ was also a carpenter. I agree with you on your statement, thought. Thanks for sharing the video Kyle.
Gerardo Slow Burn time
WowW
Unbelievable work Kyle! Your woodworking skills are definitely top notch. Beautiful door that anyone would be proud of.............Great job...............
Thanks! I love this door
Да, руками сделана дверь!
Прекрасная работа.
Very nice work. Thank you for sharing. I would hate to see you get seriously injured on the table saw, and would advise making jigs for cuts like those panels. Even the panel ripping could be a lot safer. After my table saw injury I imagine what would happen if the would suddenly disappeared at any moment in a cut as it did on me. Several of those cuts would have had your hand in the blade if binding or kickback or any number of things happened.
That is an amazing door! The time and effort that went into designing, planning, and building the door sure shows in the finished project. Subscribed for sure!
Unusual design Kyle. I would make bottom transom wider at say 8 inches. Also for a big exterior door, use through tenons on the 3 main transoms.
Beautiful work. I would love a door like that for my house. Unfortunately, it seems like motivation and skill are prerequisites. haha.
You can do itttttt!!!
You could make it, it just takes a little bit of time.
Awesome door, as everyone thinks. Very critical for the complexity of this door was the fit of the M&T's which I noticed you mastered. Excellent.
8:26 big gap between top of door and frame molding
Somebody start a slow clap for this guy☝️
C
L
A
P
A lot of parts and pieces but just a beautiful job. I have worked with Mahogany before one time and that was enough, it tore my sinus's up really bad even with a mask.
Nice work, but what's with the big space at the top of the door? I see a lot of sunlight coming in there.
A true pro ...best job I haven't ever see ...100% perfect quality and craftsmanship
What does it look like from the exterior? Flat rather than raised panels? Awesome door
Toby Kathan Thanks! Its the same as the front
Excellent craftmanship, but how did you make bevel on the back side of the inlays, or are there 2 layers? If so, would it be possible to did you insulate btw layers (I live in Norway and a door without insulation will always be just a crap door).
Its two layers that are glued together. And yeah you could insulate the interior, you'd just need to leave room to do so.
thx for clarification,,, just a 2nd comment -- i hope i can use some other species than mahogany,,, its illegal to import to my country,,, seriously
@@SteifWood
Khaya, Sapele, Spanish cedar, and sipo
That’s a beautiful door man. Awesome craftsmanship. My own personal opinion is the door knob and latch should be in the center of the stile though. It appears in the video it’s off to the side of the stile towards the center panels of the door.
Why is there such a big gap between the door and the frame?
Mate, that is one solid piece of kit. Magnificent, should last a lifetime.
I am in love with this door, its real smart
siempre me pregunté como se hacía el rebaje y pensaba en un tupi ahora que lo he visto me sacaste la venda de los ojos gracias maestro por su aporte.
Don’t know why RUclips brought me here but glad they did. Amazing work.
खूपच छान दरवाजा बनवला आहे मी तर फक्त एकच शब्द बोलेल "अप्रतिम"
Excelente, sólo creo que esa puerta merecía otro marco.
Beautiful work kyle! Brought back memories of all the custom doors i have made over the years for clients. Thanks again!
whitewolf8758 Nice! Thanks man
@@WoodByToth Why wouldn't you at least laminate the stiles and rails out of 1x for stability?
Beautiful work, belongs in a craftsman restoration house.
I dont get it! What is it to dislike about this project? That was the most beautiful entry door that I saw!
Mahogany, more like Maheaveny! Beautiful work Toth!
ha ha...yes!
Dude so heavy!!
Holy cornball comment Batman
Really exceptional! Glad to see a proper mortise and tennon as well.
Yeahhh! So rewarding
Nice door, but a little bit to small in the high Mr. Tooth? Can See ligth wenn the door ist closed, isnt it?
Thanks! I tool out the framework from the other door so I still need to add new framework to the top and sides. That'll take care of the gap. Then there is a insulated rubber piece that goes on that to fill any other gaps.
Just asked the same question and realised the door stops were removed doh me !
that rubber stuff is called Q-lon. they sell it at home depot for 3068 (36x80) doors. Very nice door btw.
Everyone is a critic! Lol I'm not that kind. That has to be the most beautiful door I have ever seen. Just seeing the time, effort and creativity that went into it makes me appreciate it even more. 👍👍👏
Such skill and beauty!!!!
HootWood. com - The best woodworking plans online.
The door is nice too tho
Real nice craftsmanship. You are an artist.
coming up on the next episode: the making of the OTHER SIDE!!
Schöne Arbeit, ich würde mir wünschen solche Videos mit mehr Sicherheitsvorkehrungen zu sehen. Immer wieder kommt es zu schweren Verletzungen
One question. Did you make it to short? I see a lot of light on the top after the install.
I removed the old framework from the door. New frame work will go in and fill that gap
Kyle Toth nice! I was win being that too. Awesome door. I would put some hardware to make it look more medieval.
onedieingsoul
Nice work
Yea, also a bit of a wobble when it closes. Looks flimsy.
You sir are a true Craftsman!! Awsome build.
I love the door a true masterpiece. Do you have the plans for this door anywhere.
This type of doors are very common in my place and mostly made handmade .U did an awesome job dude .
I adoor this.
Nick Cliffe .
Ver diseño d tirante
Wow blown away i am new to working with wood. For me its the smell of fresh wood and the end result still a newbie but maybe one day i could make some thing like this. You have definitely got alot of talent :-)
Очень красиво👍💪
I have a love hate with these videos, because you make it look soooo easy. Really beautiful work.
$4000 door on a $100 frame??? WTF build an amazing frame to go with your amazing door.
Karozans
..
have to agree if you look at the top of the frame there's easy a 10mm gap letting daylight through and that frame does not give that door the compliment it deserves. nice worth Toth but meet us half way if your gonna give us all damp spots in our jeans with amazing skills at least do the full job :)
hehe,not just the frame but the molding...Is this a rental?...man, to put that amount of work into either a rental or a cheap house- which this looks like.....I mean the door seems really out of place.... but very good workmanship...I hope he takes the door when he leaves,and puts the home depot door back!
@@delz3501 you can always take your door with you.
he sold the door, hung it just to show it off im guessing.
Nice work......simple but elegant. Unreal how people just blow off with comments before reading the rest of them. Keep making brother!
Those gaps have me wondering... Is he building the frame next?
Those gaps goonna waste a lot of electricity
Now THAT is a proper door. Mortise and tenon heaven!!
The whole time I was thinking “wow he is really going all out for this client !” Then I saw who you made it for
Collin Mullahy haha yeahhhh! I've always wanted a front door that I made.
exactly my thought. i was about to say where a project like this fails most of the time? "how much?"
First off, amazing piece. Just wondering though, from the video it looks like the door is abour 2-3 inches too short? I thought you just hung it there for a good closing shot. Is that the permanant location? Is it just the camera angle? Awesome work regardless.
Stern Fan Its about a half inch short but There is frame work that goes on the top and rubber padding to seal the air off. I just haven't done it yet. When its done it'll be sealed
From where to buy in Pakistan
Smart to use the yacht varnish on that beautiful wood. Sister had a mahogany door on house she bought and after a year the polyurethane, yes polyurethane finish was cracking and ruined
Well... when you move. Gotta take the front door with ya
Kevin Johnson Dude that is my plan!! I saved the old door for this reason haha
smart!
Hahaha facts
I was thinkin the same thing
Primero que todo, gracias por compartir su conocimiento.
Y segundo, que clase de sellador utiliza antes de aplicar el acabado?
i watched this thinking the pyramid panels would point *outside*, not in. what's the other side look like?
Both sides loom the same. You can see the exterior of the door before I hang it.
Kyle Toth the visible side of the door with the pyramids before you hang it ends up being the inside of the door. and if you doubled up the pyramids front to back in the build, not seeing it. am I missing something?
look at 5:55. You can see that the pyramids are on both sides.
That is a beautiful door and I know you are proud of the work you did on it. That door is top shelf in any woodworkers book. You did everything just as it should be done, the construction technique is all first class, there are no compromises. I shudder to think what the mahogany cost you, but your door is certainly well worth it.
Beautiful door dude! I'm just wondering why you spent that much time & that much money on a door only to place it in that horribly painted pine door jamb? Think it would have made the project 100%... kinda putting lipstick on a pig. Either way, can't take anything away from your talent. Very nicely done. ☺
Well Its not done yet. It still needs to be trimmed out and I've been trying yo get this door up for a month and I just decided to do it. I have added trim work and the rubber padding. I hear what your saying though. When i'm all done it'll look like it belongs there
Gwalior
Rome wasn't built in a day my friend
Beautiful door. You need to make a beautiful frame. The frame does not do the door justice. You are a very talented woodworker.
That beveled cut on the table saw always scares me
Matt44275 It can be a bit harry
never made one of these cuts before, is there a safer way of doing it if I didn't fancy doing it on the table saw like that? A specialised jig on the band saw perhaps?
make a sled that rides on top of the rip fence and use a zero clearance throat plate.
also, cut across the endgrain first, then cut with the grain. if any tearout occurs at the ends of the cut, it gets eliminated with the waste on the tangent edge which runs with the grain.
I was thinking the same thing
Thank you for the technical response/tips. Much appreciated!
Very nice work and design AND my favorite varnish!
What a monster! Absolutely gorgeous! Can I ask why you made the split tenon in the top rail?
I would guess it is a larger piece of wood and that it provides more stability. Ends get more stress as they are not supported in all directions.
What he said and if it were not split too much wood would have been removed from the rail and weekend it. I was taught not to let a tenon get over 4-5 inches long.
Kyle ! I’m a 70 yr old woodworker up here in Anchorage, AK and have to say that is the most AWESOME residential entry door I have ever seen ! You are a talented young man ! Keep up designing as I can see its in your blood ! May the grain be with you as the famous Woodwright Roy would say !
As always, beautiful craftsmanship! Thank you for taking the time to shoot and post these videos. They are inspirational.
Tjalling
Excellent work and so much attention to detail....thanks for sharing.....from Houston Texas
4:14
That is really dangerous !
Дверь красивая,но
я бы монтировал короткие горизонтальные детали дверного полотна на шканты,это было бы проще и быстрее и конечно для такой двери нужна красивая дверная коробка с красивыми наличниками с канелюрами или объёмным фрезерованным профилем и карнизом.
Спасибо за видео!Успехов в творчестве!
Сундук можно заказ.
Has numerous details in this woodwork book *TopFineWoodworking. Com* . The book also displays several designs and descriptions on the materials used for various woodworking processes and also the guidelines on completing various procedures appropriately. In other words, I`m happy using this book, especially in the process of learning about wood working.?
Гроб))
The nicest door a studio apartment will ever have
yuo aré fantastic sending hugs congratulations for yuo
MootFixPlans.xyz - The best woodworking plans online.
Wow amazing work! In south Florida that door would probably sell for over $2,000
Excellent job Kyle. Beautiful door.
That is one of the best build videos I have seen. Congrats
Beautiful Door Kyle. You continue to amaze me with the craftsmanship you demonstrate! Very nice, would like to have seen how to other side turned out. Great video
Thanks! The other side is the same as the front, you can see it when its leaning up against the wall before I hang it in place
Looks great and thank you for your response. Enjoy watching you create!
Amigo, That was SAVAGELY good stuff...what an experience from my side.
Beautiful Kyle! You never cease to amaze. Standing ovation!!!
Well thank you!
As Someone who Builds interior and exterior custom doors For a living. And you basically Using a table saw. Very Nice Work. 👍
What a master craftsman you are, beautiful door & great video
Beautiful construction and details on the door! Congrats man!
Thankkss!!
Very nice work, highly skilled. Next time plan for the door handle and lock to be centered on the stile. Wish I had your skill though!
Nice work! Simple, yet complex look.
Off the charts beautiful. Excellent work
Not bad. Nice seeing someone cutting proper tenons. That 'freehand' beveled cut on the table saw can go very wrong very quickly, as I'm sure you know (and I've done it myself many times - and worse ! Still got all 10, thank god), but if you are planning on making more doors like this, maybe you should consider making a holding jig ? Cheers !
Nice job mate
Question
I'm planning to build one
How long will take to do one from acclimatization of the wood to completely cured finish
Thanks
I was wondering when we were gonna get to see this. Awesome work, Kyle. Door came out sweet looking.
Thanks buddy, Was a bit intimated to mess it up when installing it so I put it off for a bit
For sure. I'm not a fan of the installs. I just want to stick to whats in the shop.
That door is amazing! Excellent work
Also love the general Canada machines in your shop
My hands started nervously sweating on your behalf during that glue up. Killer job.
The glue up made sit up in my chair lol
What a gorgeous door! It's a showpiece!
Absolutely jaw dropping. Congratulations on completing such a great piece. So talented!
Thanks buddy!!
this is absolutely the most awesome door ive ever seen
Jacques Aalders Well thank you!