Woodworking, Top 5 Most Incredible Japanese Hand Tools That Will Open Up Your Mind!

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  • Опубликовано: 3 янв 2025

Комментарии • 283

  • @avryptickle
    @avryptickle 4 года назад +14

    Thank you for your insights, Internet robot voice. I’m glad to see that you have taken an interest in traditional Japanese woodworking. I can see how it appeals to you, given your young age and the issues of longing for simpler, less digital lifestyles, not to mention your lack of hands or a physical body. Nevertheless, your enthusiasm is heartwarming, and I can tell you’re genuinely excited to learn about new things, which is super-cool. See you in the trenches! Haha lol. I know I won’t.

    • @nealbeard1
      @nealbeard1 4 года назад

      Longing for simpler lifestyles. That's the path I am trying to guide my children to take. After my own super stressed working life I wish I had the eyes to see , that I have now, before setting off on my career.

  • @karenvergara7300
    @karenvergara7300 6 лет назад +4

    Fashion and patience is what japanese craftsmanship is all about👌

  • @pmjcdteam
    @pmjcdteam Год назад

    Thank you so much for such amazing inspiration and knowledge I am so grateful for your Chanel.

  • @robertbrunston5406
    @robertbrunston5406 6 лет назад +2

    I think all the tools are very interesting but I especially like the ink line and the ink layout! Thank you.

    • @davidputnam4629
      @davidputnam4629 6 лет назад

      the bonus thing about the black ink is that your eyes aren't so tired at the end of the day. the black is easier to see.

  • @Kunfucious577
    @Kunfucious577 4 года назад +1

    That ink and string tool is smart

  • @frankz4900
    @frankz4900 4 года назад

    Fantastic

  • @keithpetersen4920
    @keithpetersen4920 7 лет назад +21

    Watching Japanese craftsmen using those tools, is like watching Michelangelo paint! I am in awe of their skill.

    • @User0000000000000004
      @User0000000000000004 4 года назад

      It's nothing like that. Watching Japanese craftsmen is EXACTLY like watching Japanese craftsmen. Don't cheapen what they do with your comparison to some hack Italian painter.

    • @nealbeard1
      @nealbeard1 4 года назад

      Please go elsewhere. Your ignorance is pretty obvious.

  • @MrVDG-nk1xx
    @MrVDG-nk1xx 3 года назад

    Very fascinating sight! I'm thrilled!!!

  • @Montrovantis
    @Montrovantis Год назад +1

    Ahh, yes. Planes and chisels. I don't know why anyone ever thought of this before.

  • @lonniebryant8572
    @lonniebryant8572 6 лет назад +4

    Such attention to detail. Perfect joints and pride in his work. I am truly impressed.

    • @hugoakerlund5114
      @hugoakerlund5114 4 года назад

      You can find equally good joinery in western woodworking.

  • @DavidHuber63
    @DavidHuber63 2 года назад

    One must become one with wood ❤️👍

  • @OsoyOunpatito
    @OsoyOunpatito Год назад +1

    Dios mio la habilidad de estos artesanos NIPONES mis respetos dedicación y maravillosa obras de arte!!!!

  • @dmack1443
    @dmack1443 6 лет назад +3

    Love the Japanese...and their approach to mastering an art.

  • @Kareszkoma
    @Kareszkoma 5 лет назад +2

    One very important thing about the tools, is that they are very sharp. Carpenters generally use very very sharp tools.

  • @americanwoodworkingtrickss6543
    @americanwoodworkingtrickss6543 6 лет назад

    Wow.. Nice

  • @craftsmanm4697
    @craftsmanm4697 2 года назад +2

    these tools work very well - on perfectly straight grained material with very few and very small knots - only softwoods too - cedars mostly by the look - wonder how they would work on a piece of knotty pine or irregular grained oak or even Ash.

    • @gazpal
      @gazpal Год назад

      Japanese tools function equally as well as western style tools...... Western carpenters were still using laminated steel chisel blades and plane irons up until the adoption of their homogenous steel counterparts during the mid C20th.

  • @randallmccorquodale3290
    @randallmccorquodale3290 3 года назад

    Now I want a set of Japanese Hand Planes. ;-)

  • @clandunlop
    @clandunlop 7 лет назад +4

    The sharpness of these tools are mind boggeling

    • @Errol.C-nz
      @Errol.C-nz 6 лет назад +1

      clandunlop just good steel, & the best stones & strops

    • @davidputnam4629
      @davidputnam4629 6 лет назад +1

      it took me years to truely some -what master waterstone sharpening. only THEN could I go to greater hights with the work.......... and there is no checkered flag.

  • @friedegg1936
    @friedegg1936 5 лет назад +1

    just wish i could have 1% of there skill and 100% of there dedecation to there craft.

    • @peterpavelka5011
      @peterpavelka5011 5 лет назад

      You must training , practicing and very big patience and I believe , you will craftman .

  • @MrMopar413
    @MrMopar413 4 года назад

    Great video, vary interesting no wonder their buildings last hundreds of years I see why.

  • @hansdampf640
    @hansdampf640 6 лет назад +9

    Japanese woodworking skills are the best on this world by far, i´m kind of jealous :)

    • @ardvarkkkkk1
      @ardvarkkkkk1 6 лет назад +1

      Hans Dampf
      Not really.

    • @hansdampf640
      @hansdampf640 6 лет назад

      not? explain please :)

    • @ardvarkkkkk1
      @ardvarkkkkk1 6 лет назад +2

      Hans Dampf
      You will find amazing craftsmanship all over the world.

  • @Robert-xp4ii
    @Robert-xp4ii 5 лет назад +7

    "Holy crap. I'm in love. Beep. Bop. Boop."

  • @Iankmuin
    @Iankmuin 6 лет назад

    Nice

  • @c4pnk1rk
    @c4pnk1rk 6 лет назад

    Nice looking little boat you got there, brother =P

  • @Neithersilvernorgold
    @Neithersilvernorgold 3 года назад

    I believe your list is very comprehensive and very good however I believe the slick would probably be a little bit more important than the Aleze

  • @paulb2092
    @paulb2092 3 года назад +1

    You forgot to mention an important point with the Japanese saw--like the plane, it cuts on the pull stroke. Actually, these days, when I cut meat with a kitchen knife, I tend to concentrate on the pull stroke. It may be just in my mind, but I think it's effective.

    • @WoodworkingEnthusiasts
      @WoodworkingEnthusiasts  3 года назад

      good point!!

    • @nurabdul1436
      @nurabdul1436 3 года назад +1

      I heard /read somehwere that since japanese blade are made thinner, it is best to pull since the blade will reach max strength and lower tension . Compared to pushing, the thin blade will not warp due to exertion but straighten under the pulling motion. That's how i understood it anyway😅

  • @NorduvalDelmondes
    @NorduvalDelmondes 6 лет назад

    parabens video top chow sumitsobo e sumitsaschi bacana

  • @wilhelmtaylor9863
    @wilhelmtaylor9863 3 года назад

    Interesting take on tools. I would add the thin, flexible framing square. I wonder, though, isn't the adze a VERY old tool used by many other ancient and more recent cultures?

  • @jthadcast
    @jthadcast 7 лет назад +1

    it's amazing that a culture so dysfunctionally modern still produces exceptional traditional craftsmanship.

  • @randallpachoud1230
    @randallpachoud1230 6 лет назад +9

    Holy crap, I'm in love. Lol. Us builder, ( hurry up with that 2 ba 4). They build beautifully because they have patience and are allowed it. It's necessary to develop such a high degree of skill. It shouldn't be just all about gettin er done! Quality creates less waste.

    • @bigbattenberg
      @bigbattenberg 6 лет назад

      Ranbecca Pachoty -agreed a 1000%! The amount of waste from poor education and lack of skills in our "modern" western societies is truly appaling. On a personal level me and my family have been moving towards the counter movement of "slow living" - revaluing things lost. My next job will be 24 hrs/wk max.

  • @ats440you
    @ats440you 3 года назад +1

    Excellent content....however I had to watch without sound due to the nauseating robot computer voice.

  • @wagsman9999
    @wagsman9999 4 года назад

    Anyone know what kind of wood they use (long timbers)

  • @lumberjaxe8910
    @lumberjaxe8910 6 лет назад

    Thankyou for the Toyota.

  • @Miaflower-w1c
    @Miaflower-w1c 3 года назад

    Perfektion in hohem Maße. Sehr schön. Nur bei 13,10 Minute wäre einfaches Stift sehr viel besser geeignet. Sonst alles WOW

  • @phpn99
    @phpn99 7 лет назад +24

    "Holy Crap, I'm in love", said the robot

  • @randycurtis1176
    @randycurtis1176 7 лет назад +110

    How hard is it find a human to read. We're watching a video about traditional tools and a robot is talking. I stopped at 1:31. I'm done.

    • @WoodworkingEnthusiasts
      @WoodworkingEnthusiasts  7 лет назад +6

      im so sorry for it mate..Can you mute the sound and read the text?

    • @Gantzz321
      @Gantzz321 7 лет назад +6

      your loss

    • @janjanssen7663
      @janjanssen7663 7 лет назад

      Randy Curti

    •  7 лет назад +3

      Get over it randy. It is more accessible for people to use an ai voice.
      Within 2 years the difference between an ai voice an a human will be negligible.

    •  7 лет назад

      ok after saying that, the robot voice did not differentiate between japanese and english words and pronounced hagane and jigane wrong.

  • @kimchee94112
    @kimchee94112 6 лет назад +1

    I like to see CNC vs Japanese craftsman.

    • @ardvarkkkkk1
      @ardvarkkkkk1 6 лет назад

      kimchee94112
      From a practical standpoint, there is no reason to do things this way. Modern methods would beat them in speed, accuracy and efficiently. The only reason to do things this way is because they want to. Fine if you can make a living that way. If they were to mechanize though, their productivity, and thus profit, would increase substantially.

    • @davidputnam4629
      @davidputnam4629 6 лет назад

      why would you go to a gym to do a cycling workout when you can ride a lovely italian made one through the countryside?

  • @Neznisgip
    @Neznisgip 6 лет назад +4

    While I respect tradition and craftsmanship in a fine piece of furniture, I don't have the patience for the same skill applied to timber framing, or candle making.

  • @bandplop6162
    @bandplop6162 7 лет назад

    Die Edeka-Roboterwerbung ist echt niedlich.

  • @bigbattenberg
    @bigbattenberg 6 лет назад

    Remarkable how only hand tools produce very little dust, which must be much better for worker's health.

  • @michaelbyrd2043
    @michaelbyrd2043 4 года назад

    I personally believe happy Japanese and swiss have the best woodworking capabilities

  • @solfeinberg437
    @solfeinberg437 7 лет назад

    What are we looking at at 0:17?

  • @naihanchi7725
    @naihanchi7725 6 лет назад +78

    What could have been a great video was cheapened by the robot voice. Ironic that a video about tried and true craftsmanship was voice-overed by a cheesy and annoying robot. For me, became unwatchable after a minute or so.

    • @johnkmcgregor5209
      @johnkmcgregor5209 5 лет назад +2

      Phil Imperial I turned the sound down.

    • @jlinkels
      @jlinkels 5 лет назад +8

      It would have been SO much nicer without music, a human voice and sounds from the woodworkers. How can someone spoil a video in such a stupid way?

    • @T3hJones
      @T3hJones 5 лет назад +3

      This is just one of many stolen videos cut up and put on a robot voice...

    • @johanneslinkels1486
      @johanneslinkels1486 5 лет назад +3

      @@T3hJones This idiot channel is full with this kind of spoiled videos. Any chance the originals are posted as well?

    • @Steen6319
      @Steen6319 5 лет назад +2

      total agree, so I blocked the channel.

  • @rmcdaniel423
    @rmcdaniel423 4 года назад

    3:23
    That thing is gonna CRUSH the competition at the Cub Scout Pinewood Derby.

  • @Lifes-a-Commute
    @Lifes-a-Commute 7 лет назад +3

    God knows how these people make any money!

  • @jerrynonofbss2588
    @jerrynonofbss2588 5 лет назад

    Where is OSHA @ 4:29?!

  • @johncamp7679
    @johncamp7679 4 года назад +1

    Those thin sheets coming off that planer , doesn’t just happen by accident.

  • @fidelvalenzuela8461
    @fidelvalenzuela8461 4 года назад

    Woodworking Enthusiasts
    Hindi mo lang na kikita Yan sa kinalikihan mo
    Rich kids ka kase😆😆

  • @victorstalick5528
    @victorstalick5528 2 года назад

    The most important part of tools is keeping them VERY sharp!!

  • @TomsTechniques
    @TomsTechniques 5 лет назад +7

    There is probably a lot of good information here, but I just can't deal with the artificial voice.

    • @nealbeard1
      @nealbeard1 4 года назад

      Put some decent music on and turn subtitles on and mute video. Opens who a few small worlds.

  • @HelloKitty-ed5cy
    @HelloKitty-ed5cy 4 года назад

    I loved watching this video but had to turn the sound off....

  • @738polarbear
    @738polarbear 6 лет назад +2

    Must take forever to complete a job.

  • @andyvan5692
    @andyvan5692 Год назад

    what?, at 4:50 that guy is working like a welder, in the vertical position, haven't seen that before, most western woodworkers turn the wood in the vice!!

  • @missionron
    @missionron 5 лет назад

    Hard to believe that these master craftsmen are paid very little and it is not a very resoected job...being a Japanese carpenter. Ive always said, just move over to Canada or the US and set up shop! I think they woukd do VERY well here making traditional tea houses.

  • @drrsc
    @drrsc 6 лет назад

    interesting way of doing things, especially on camera. I was amused to see the guy using that strange, short handled hoe-like implement when in the background, in plain sight there is a circular saw (18:38). I'm sure that as soon as the camera was switched off, he picked up that Ryobi saw and finished the beam using that.

    • @davidputnam4629
      @davidputnam4629 6 лет назад

      he wouldn't have used a saw. he would have used a 6" hand planer.

  • @tarasbulba7114
    @tarasbulba7114 5 лет назад

    i didnt understand anything but i clicked "like" the same....

  • @Silverone858lol
    @Silverone858lol 5 лет назад

    I wonder how many legs were hobbled with #5

  • @Aymiikeeganmelb
    @Aymiikeeganmelb 6 лет назад

    I wish the whole video was sped up and not just the last part ..

  • @CaptnJack
    @CaptnJack 7 лет назад +3

    bet that super thin wood they are planing off would make a craft crafting medium.

    • @phishguy5230
      @phishguy5230 7 лет назад

      CaptnJack the shavings can be as thin as 1 micron

    • @phishguy5230
      @phishguy5230 7 лет назад

      Oh Asis it’s true

    • @phishguy5230
      @phishguy5230 7 лет назад

      ruclips.net/video/zs9X-XzFGHI/видео.html

    • @phishguy5230
      @phishguy5230 7 лет назад

      Oh Asis ok. Cool.

    • @738polarbear
      @738polarbear 6 лет назад

      Mr. Phishy Not true.

  • @ยุภาสีดํา
    @ยุภาสีดํา 7 лет назад

    ขอบคุณสำหรับคลิปค่ะ

  • @commonconservative7551
    @commonconservative7551 7 лет назад +16

    something tells me japan will be the first country to rebound after a EMP throws the world into turmoil

    • @20cashdotxyz76
      @20cashdotxyz76 6 лет назад

      Check out these great woodworking plans here: RunFixPlan.xyz

    • @gokukakarot309
      @gokukakarot309 6 лет назад

      They did in Dark Angel.

    • @waynerainey2606
      @waynerainey2606 6 лет назад

      no they wouldn't, while they still have a few old timer master craftsman around the bulk of Japanese society relies heavily on technology, more so than any other country imo. The US is fucked because all our infrastructure is ancient and was computerized in the last century also

    • @TheSighphiguy
      @TheSighphiguy 6 лет назад +1

      no...our infrastructure is new, just poorly made.
      tell most of Europe that our infrastructure is "ancient" and they will laugh in your face.
      hell...some of their towns newest buildings are hundreds of years older than our oldest.

    • @ardvarkkkkk1
      @ardvarkkkkk1 6 лет назад

      Sigh Phi Guy
      What do you see in Europe? Stone buildings, stone bridges, cobble stone roads, ect. Compare that to the materials used in the US. None of our stuff will be around for centuries.

  • @bpetnoi1472
    @bpetnoi1472 6 лет назад +9

    Agreed, I very informative video with the most inaccurate and irritating computer voice possible. Would have been better with simple text over the video.

  • @MrShanghai34
    @MrShanghai34 7 лет назад

    1:34 aka: nut buster plane

  • @edadpops1709
    @edadpops1709 6 лет назад

    No robo voices

  • @brinjoness3386
    @brinjoness3386 7 лет назад +1

    4.53. is a job for the apprentice.

  • @matthewcampbell7836
    @matthewcampbell7836 5 лет назад

    I did not intend to use this woodworking book, “Bαzοmο Tdy Plαn” (Google it) but instead curious about it. I was really amazed after trying it. I was seeking to find out more about the art of woodworking, and was not disappointed. I discovered many topics such as wood types as well as designing your workshop. .

  • @martindilly4040
    @martindilly4040 6 лет назад

    To those who complain about the irritating computer voice, try turning the sound off and READING. Is the world going word-blind?

  • @duncantaylor3558
    @duncantaylor3558 5 лет назад +2

    What’s with the robot voice! This is a woodworking video not military technology video!

  • @brinjoness3386
    @brinjoness3386 7 лет назад

    13.10 robots have taken over when they start falling in love

  • @oldyeller9849
    @oldyeller9849 6 лет назад

    I made it to :37.

  • @walterpickford3204
    @walterpickford3204 7 лет назад

    It seems to me to be a standard draw knife or spokeshave or draw plane technique. The basic tool is the same: the technique is changed from push to pull.

  • @Texaca
    @Texaca 6 лет назад

    why are they wearing hard hats indoors, there are no overhead cranes in their shop 🤔😃

    • @davidputnam4629
      @davidputnam4629 6 лет назад

      it needs to be a habit. I've been wearing a helmet for 42 years of cycling and had my first crash 2 yeas ago and I survived because I was wearing my helmet. a nasty crash.

  • @TheTubeTube2
    @TheTubeTube2 7 лет назад +13

    This automated commentary and the usual unnecessary musak completely ruine an otherwise interesting video. The sound track insults both the craftsmen and the viewers

    • @stiffupperlip
      @stiffupperlip 6 лет назад +1

      Stuart Nimmo . Completely agree

    • @richardwieder885
      @richardwieder885 5 лет назад

      Wholeheartedly agree. In a time when there's a desperate need for skilled tradesman in the workforce, it's sad to hear that many people found an incredible video off-putting by having it narrated by a Speak-and-Spell

  • @tomharrell1954
    @tomharrell1954 6 лет назад +2

    A movie with a robot talking about traditional tools. Well ok, whatever.
    The movie can say whatever the photographer wants but the Kanna tool, the plane is simply a poor tool it should have a handle on it to pull instead of grasping the wood base. It's just a very old outdated design.
    I thought the snap line tool was interesting. The west uses exactly the same tool. We use chalk to make the line and they use ink. The idea of what and how it works is the same principle. To see how the tool evolved in diffirent cultures is cool.

    • @ardvarkkkkk1
      @ardvarkkkkk1 6 лет назад

      Thomas D Harrell
      I agree that their plane are garbage compared to western ones. They do fine on strait grained softwood but they fail badly on more challenging woods. The ink line though, does give a superior line compared to the western chalk line.

    • @davidputnam4629
      @davidputnam4629 6 лет назад

      MLB switching over to the Pitching machine?

  • @mynameisray
    @mynameisray 6 лет назад +2

    Yes, respect the tools that make it take up to 10 times longer and less accurate than modern day tools.

    • @davidputnam4629
      @davidputnam4629 6 лет назад

      this way is not for everyone. I'm glad I fell head over heels into it back in 77. full throttle and had a great time of it with several Stanford grad students as apprentices and even a Harvard law grad for a couple of years. taught many how to sharpen and helped a couple guys decide to give it up because they just wouldn't/couldn't shake their attitudes.

  • @johncamp7679
    @johncamp7679 4 года назад

    People will miss a great message, because they don’t like the messenger. What else have you missed in your life because things weren’t presented to you how you thought they should be??

  • @1244taylor
    @1244taylor 7 лет назад +1

    nice video but the f'n music is so loud you can hardly tell what the speaker is sayiing

  • @tonberryplushy
    @tonberryplushy 7 лет назад +3

    Apart from reverse planes this is all just stuff that we stopped using years ago.

  • @GodotWorld
    @GodotWorld 4 года назад

    I would not want to use ink to do layouts. I'd have it all over my hands then have it all over the work and tools. It'd just be a really big mess.

  • @reiyen4761
    @reiyen4761 7 лет назад +15

    voice over ruined it!

    • @nealbeard1
      @nealbeard1 4 года назад

      Mute video, check sub titles play own decent music in background. Open bottle of wine etc

  • @pw3543
    @pw3543 7 лет назад +4

    I refuse to learn from a robot.

    •  5 лет назад

      may I join the club?

  • @ucool9735
    @ucool9735 4 года назад

    Not so sure when you said it was Japanese tools. All these tools were invented and being used in China before introduced to Japan. . But I had to said the Japanese preserved them well, some tool used in China were more westernised. The ink pot does no changed and many still using them China.

    • @nealbeard1
      @nealbeard1 4 года назад

      Thank you for that. The more you study Japanese culture the more you realise that China had a huge influence.

    • @ucool9735
      @ucool9735 4 года назад

      @@nealbeard1 Exactly right, actually you known the other Chinese dialects such as Fujian and Chaoshan region, their word sound the same and it was not only too the Japanese, it was also the same as Korean and Vietnamese.

  • @judgesan9542
    @judgesan9542 4 года назад

    No electric planers to see here please move on, yet again beautiful workmanship.

  • @lukewarmwater6412
    @lukewarmwater6412 6 лет назад +2

    content is great. voicover makes it un watchable

  • @viscache1
    @viscache1 6 лет назад +1

    I REEEALLY wanted to love this video, as many of my main tools for my custom cabinetry bus rely on traditional Japanese tools, BUT...then you had to put that HORRIBLE computer voice in the narrative instead of your own or a friends... i gave a like out of curtesy but you it was like using a power-saw to cut tiny dove-joints to my soul!

  • @australianbloke3934
    @australianbloke3934 6 лет назад +2

    Great visual content. Please not use a robot voice. Had to stop watching.

  • @gala1ish
    @gala1ish 6 лет назад +25

    ROBOT VOICE DISRESPECTFULL OF CRAFTSMAN SKILLS - great with sound OFF

    • @738polarbear
      @738polarbear 5 лет назад

      How on earth is a voice explaining things disrespectful you idiot?

    • @mobrien7128
      @mobrien7128 4 года назад +1

      @@738polarbear because it is not a voice but a sound made by a computer. People know!

  • @markgoddard2560
    @markgoddard2560 6 лет назад +5

    I can’t listen to a wooden talking robot.

  • @richardglass5573
    @richardglass5573 5 лет назад

    Would be nice if the robot voice pronounced Japanese correctly.

  • @malcolmoxley1274
    @malcolmoxley1274 7 лет назад

    I wouldn't like my bollocks hit by the plane like that ,the man sure has a toughness about him

  • @MIJAPLEX
    @MIJAPLEX 5 лет назад

    Making the bamboo pen or any other Japanese craft should always be played at real frame rate. That was disrespectful.

  • @boneman1868
    @boneman1868 6 лет назад +1

    Aaahh! Scary robot voices are coming to get me. Help!!!

  • @Automedon2
    @Automedon2 6 лет назад

    The combination of the Youtuby background music and electronic voice completely ruined a video that could have been great. I doubt that many of the views this video got even went past the 2 minute mark.

    • @davidputnam4629
      @davidputnam4629 6 лет назад

      the high road is to cherish the info and tune out the narration.

    • @Automedon2
      @Automedon2 6 лет назад

      @@davidputnam4629 The high road - ROFLMAO

  • @vaughnblaylock6069
    @vaughnblaylock6069 6 лет назад +2

    A really decent video, I think (I didn't finish it). The computerized voice is way too annoying. I can't stand it. If you want to do another video some time and would like someone with a decent voice who reads well, send me a PM and I will be happy to do it.

  • @Rattletrap-xs8il
    @Rattletrap-xs8il 7 лет назад +7

    yeah, i listened to about 2 minutes and turned it off. Narrate it live or this just goes into the click chum bin.

  • @MrClaudiopb
    @MrClaudiopb 6 лет назад

    Show

  • @pedrosilvaslva2625
    @pedrosilvaslva2625 6 лет назад +1

    Where are the amazing tools?
    When I was a kid i went with my grandpa to a portuguese building shipyard, and I remebner have seen all these strange tools and other even more strange. I keep two or three here with me.
    He used to make a lot of things by that time, even a bed to me, he called, Louis IV bed,,, :))) and it was beautifull and amazing confortable, slept always like a baby.

  • @MrChipBryant
    @MrChipBryant 6 лет назад +2

    Geeeez.. Computer voice. No thanks

  • @Til-It-Goes-Click
    @Til-It-Goes-Click 3 года назад

    Please switch from a computer generated voice to a real voice. This awesome video is absolutely hijacked by this computer voice. It mispronounced every Japanese word.

  • @nicparker3809
    @nicparker3809 6 лет назад

    Best I can do is 1 dollar. Ricks Pawn Shop.