It is VERY humbling when a guy who has every single possible tool available (and some that aren't!) to human kind at his disposal uses a drill, a hand plane, a band saw and a table saw to make this beautiful chair. This is why he's the Godfather!. Thanks for the inspiration man!
Very enjoyable and inspiring. Brass screws are absolutely unforgiving. Best to use a steel screw first to cut the thread and then back it out and slip the brass one in - much less chance of munting the brass screw head. Thanks for the video. Cheers, David
So relaxing to watch while waiting for a meeting, your flow is amazing I wish I had the space to indulge my creativity like this. You remind me of my dad who on weekends would disappear into his workshop with his cache of scrap wood and a myriad of glass food jars full of assorted new and salvaged hardware. Eventually a few weekends later a beautiful piece of furniture would emerge. If it was a chair sit on it once a table run his rough hands over it with one eye he gave 99% of the pieces away as it was the process that was the reward.
Stumbled on your channel. Wow. Your narration is superb. You choice vocabulary is vast, clear and thoughtful. Camera and editing, perfect. The best has to be, this can be anyone’s workshop, although very nice, nothing super flashy. You show the middle of the build. To me, the most important part of any build. The place where many mistakes can be made and ideas are formed or changed.
That’s what I always love traditional woodworking so much to learn and so much talent goes in to each project you build. Thanks for all your fine woodworking lessons
Watching this video makes me feel steam bending is actually quite satisfying because you're able to get the shape you're looking for and the end product being exactly what you want. Great video Jimmy 👍🏽 👌👏
I noticed you have a Do All machine in your shop! Years ago the steel company i worked for shut down the pattern shop which was used to make molds for pouring steel. A crazy guy i worked with in the fab shop bought all the machines. Everyone thought he was nuts because they were all 3 phase. He was crazy as a fox because he got them for cheap and sold it all for $25,000! Today they would be worth three or four times that much. They were all in excellant condition and built like tanks !
Great build. The chair is great. One microscopic detail that rang my OCD bell. My father always made me line up the screw head slots. Really they all had to be in a straight line. I think I will make for of these for my patio. After all they only take 20 minutes apiece to build!
I just found you and I feel like I just hit the jackpot I love how you explain your thought process and your honesty I’m a retired veteran taking up this wonderful world of woodworking you are inspirational 🇨🇦
What a cool car in the background ! What make and model, 1950’s rocket ship styling. The woodwork going on is pretty good too. I teach Design Technology at Diploma and Middle Years programme. I would love to do this as a project etc. I was a fine antique conservator / cabinet maker in London before teaching in Jordan and now S Korea. I am pleased to see you using push sticks. I cannot show students videos with hands going close to saw blades as it sends mixed messages on safety.
that really is beautiful. i was going to ask about your legs, Im sure putting an additional bend in the wood so it bends down toward the ground would help out with the legs.
That was a very interesting video. I've never seen hot glue used in a form like that before but it certainly worked in this case. Food for though. Thanks for sharing
I am Roberto from Italy. I like very much your chair and i like your hand working. I have only a little thing to say, the hand screws looks very much better if all the cuts in their heads are all in the same direction.
I like your style, not into totally planning out a project. When I did that as a builder I paralyzed myself. I would have a remodel and literally know how many screws I'd need,. much less the framing, sheet goods, etc. Everything from start to finish - and at times I'd do EVERY STEP OF THE PROJECT excepting HVAC and carpet. (which I dislike with vigor, give me a wood floor!) Then I was subbing and almost lost my job because that slowed me down SO MUCH! Hell, at times I'd find myself literally tensing up OVER EVERY FORKING NAIL! Can you say "constipated? Anal retentive? OCD? Lol). So one scary day I somehow just dropped all that crap and just winged it all. With my OCD history I found I could easily and accurately estimate material of all stripes. By not going into a baby panic because I fell off the plan or schedule (this job uses another tradesman and they get sick, or materials are backordered...) I would have to solve the inevitable problem popping up. I actually developed a local reputation for fixing the impossible, and found a huge miscarried point load that WOULD have caused catastrophic failure when Colorado mountain winter snows hit. Eleven tons of misplaced load. Million $$$ house. I pulled the problem area apart and the engineer stared at it for almost 2 days. I'd figured what I'd do to fix it within literally 45 seconds of opening it up. Told engineer that there may be some reason it couldn't be done this way, but I'd do these 10 steps and he looked at me sort of empty faced. Then said, "I'll write it up." It got to the point I was flown back there from the wife's family ranch in N California to Colorado to fix the impossible remod. I ended up running the whole thing. So I love your style of using your experience, knowing what you want, and adjusting to get there.
What!?!?!?! 1950 WHAT!?!?!!? That Cadillac Hearse is absolutely awesome. What's the condition? Man I freakin love that. I'm a woodworker but man my dream is to have one of those. Just like Radio Werewolf.......... "I'm in love with my baby but she knows what comes first cuz I'm in love my 1960's CADILLAC HEARSE!!!!!!" "She's a hitchhikers nightmare a morticians dream, burning rubber on Route 9015.
Been waiting for this one! What an awesome take on an age old design. Very cool to watch the process and today I learned that I need to order “furniture” hot glue! Do you need a special gun for that? Thanks for bringing more Jimmy to us, Rockler!
Beautiful chair. Stained or mineral oil/bees wax would be stunning. Kind of a shame to cover all that beauty in paint. Great work and tutorial. Can say how muck I appreciate your channel and others like it.
Hey, many thanks for the video! Rookie question... Why after gluing the pieces you choose to plan them with a manual planner instead of an electric planner or a belt sander?
Amazing chair! Great job! I have two questions: 1. How long do you leave the woon on steam before bending them? 2. What is the model of your DeWalt belt sander? I have never found a DeWalt belt sender to buy. Thank you!
Beautiful work. I love the design. I think I'd prefer it leaning back a bit and use it as a comfy fireplace relaxation. (Those slotted screws are the worst. I can't see how people prefer them to screws that function.)j
Do you have a video that shows how to make the box out of wood? I am building a model train layout. I could use steam bending to make the sub roadbed. I am already cutting the thin strips. The steam bending would help with getting the radii more organic.
Poly sheet /or bag works well. I used mattress bag & it worked great my first time steam bending. A guy that does wood boat building has videos on it. I’ll post it in the comments if I can find it. Way less of a hassle than building a box especially if your only doing a one off.
what's the reason for steam bending first and then gluing them to each other, seems that it would be just as easy to do a bent lam from the start, it gets you to the same place without the extra step
If you mean skipping the steam bending step, those pieces of wood are too thick and the bend is too extreme to do a simple bent wood lamination. The pieces would fracture. If the stock was 1/8” thick or less, you may have been able to do the chair legs, but the seat slats would not survive the bend. Even steamed, he fractured one of the pieces of wood.
The Maker, showing you how he does it. That's Jimmy at his best. Showing people, demystifying the process. Awesome
It is VERY humbling when a guy who has every single possible tool available (and some that aren't!) to human kind at his disposal uses a drill, a hand plane, a band saw and a table saw to make this beautiful chair. This is why he's the Godfather!. Thanks for the inspiration man!
Taylor is rubbing off on you in your design sensibilities! Very Mid-century danish....Excellent
Taylor's design style is super clean. And you'll never meet a nicer person. Catching up with her (and Jimmy) was a highlight of Maker Camp!
As the first TH-cam maker I ever watched, Jimmy Diresta is actually a huge reason why I build or make anything at all.
This is Jimmy working his magic. No ego, no attitude, just the man sharing the love of the craft. This is a happy place indeed. Thank you man.
Thank you ☺️👊🏼👊🏼
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Very enjoyable and inspiring. Brass screws are absolutely unforgiving. Best to use a steel screw first to cut the thread and then back it out and slip the brass one in - much less chance of munting the brass screw head. Thanks for the video. Cheers, David
Great tip
Awesome Video Jimmy. Always enjoyable to watch the teacher in you let the info spill out onto the floor like that. Just awesome.
Wife got me a steam unit for my birthday last year. Time to put it to better use. Great video. Thanks
So relaxing to watch while waiting for a meeting, your flow is amazing I wish I had the space to indulge my creativity like this. You remind me of my dad who on weekends would disappear into his workshop with his cache of scrap wood and a myriad of glass food jars full of assorted new and salvaged hardware. Eventually a few weekends later a beautiful piece of furniture would emerge. If it was a chair sit on it once a table run his rough hands over it with one eye he gave 99% of the pieces away as it was the process that was the reward.
Stumbled on your channel. Wow. Your narration is superb. You choice vocabulary is vast, clear and thoughtful. Camera and editing, perfect. The best has to be, this can be anyone’s workshop, although very nice, nothing super flashy. You show the middle of the build. To me, the most important part of any build. The place where many mistakes can be made and ideas are formed or changed.
That’s what I always love traditional woodworking so much to learn and so much talent goes in to each project you build. Thanks for all your fine woodworking lessons
Nice video. Really appreciate the explanations of the why behind the decisions. Always appreciate a Jimmy Diresta project!
Got to love anytime Jimmy and Rockler get together for a project!
I love how Jimmy has no rules for the process. He does what makes sense to him, and it works.
Watching this video makes me feel steam bending is actually quite satisfying because you're able to get the shape you're looking for and the end product being exactly what you want.
Great video Jimmy 👍🏽 👌👏
Great video. Love the voice over. Helps me be more confident in tackling my projects when I know you struggle sometimes in yours. Thanks brother.
I noticed you have a Do All machine in your shop! Years ago the steel company i worked for shut down the pattern shop which was used to make molds for pouring steel. A crazy guy i worked with in the fab shop bought all the machines. Everyone thought he was nuts because they were all 3 phase. He was crazy as a fox because he got them for cheap and sold it all for $25,000! Today they would be worth three or four times that much. They were all in excellant condition and built like tanks !
Great video, lots of useful info and tips and like how you don't mess around and just complete all your projects without any fuss!
Elusive unbeatable awesome !!!!! The technique from wood to flexible from a simple wood to the in into a chair Jimmy's family Greece 🇬🇷 ❤❤❤❤
Great build. The chair is great. One microscopic detail that rang my OCD bell. My father always made me line up the screw head slots. Really they all had to be in a straight line. I think I will make for of these for my patio. After all they only take 20 minutes apiece to build!
One of my favorite styles of chair. Very nice build Jimmy. Thanks.
I am inspired, thank you. I'm getting that steamer, no more soaking oak in my bath tub for 3 days.
Thanks, Jim. I'll have to use this with my students I have at least one or two a year that want to challenge themselves with steam bending.
There’s always something to learn from Jimmy. Never a disappointing project or video. Very cool chair with a fun and inspiring process.
Como siempre el mejor.
Y claro que sí disfrutamos éste proyecto
You are a master blaster mate. Its a pleasure to watch you work . Extremely neat and practical . Keep it up.Best of luck on all your future ventures .
excellent work, very well executed and very well organized between all stages.greetings from Brazil
Awesome I’m try to make this chair. Thank you
👏
I love how Jimmy in a way SENDS IT. He makes you realize that the most important thing is to just do it.
Makes me want to make a toboggan! Thanks for sharing how you do it Jimmy
So inspired by your approach. Thanks much for sharing!
I just found you and I feel like I just hit the jackpot I love how you explain your thought process and your honesty
I’m a retired veteran taking up this wonderful world of woodworking you are inspirational 🇨🇦
What a cool car in the background ! What make and model, 1950’s rocket ship styling. The woodwork going on is pretty good too. I teach Design Technology at Diploma and Middle Years programme. I would love to do this as a project etc. I was a fine antique conservator / cabinet maker in London before teaching in Jordan and now S Korea. I am pleased to see you using push sticks. I cannot show students videos with hands going close to saw blades as it sends mixed messages on safety.
Love the ‘57 caddy hearse! Beautiful.
As a shorter person I think the length is perfect. Love the design.
beautiful work, traditional screws and screwdriver
Nice one Jimmy, I tend to focus too much on the forms and not the actual project. Great tips
“Diresta Classic” is the best! ❤️🔝
The cheer turned out really nice!I can see how though seat is a little bit short. But it does look really good and very comfortable.
that really is beautiful. i was going to ask about your legs, Im sure putting an additional bend in the wood so it bends down toward the ground would help out with the legs.
Beautiful chair. Looks like the perfect seat length to me but I have a hard time finding shorter length seats that let my feet touch the ground.
That was a very interesting video. I've never seen hot glue used in a form like that before but it certainly worked in this case. Food for though. Thanks for sharing
Wonderful great job ....thanks
What a great chair design Jimmy, looks good and comfortable ... thankyou ..
I saw the chair in real life, an absolute stunner!
I am Roberto from Italy. I like very much your chair and i like your hand working. I have only a little thing to say, the hand screws looks very much better if all the cuts in their heads are all in the same direction.
Amazing, very beautiful job. Thank you for sharing this work with us
I like your style, not into totally planning out a project. When I did that as a builder I paralyzed myself. I would have a remodel and literally know how many screws I'd need,. much less the framing, sheet goods, etc. Everything from start to finish - and at times I'd do EVERY STEP OF THE PROJECT excepting HVAC and carpet. (which I dislike with vigor, give me a wood floor!)
Then I was subbing and almost lost my job because that slowed me down SO MUCH! Hell, at times I'd find myself literally tensing up OVER EVERY FORKING NAIL! Can you say "constipated? Anal retentive? OCD? Lol).
So one scary day I somehow just dropped all that crap and just winged it all. With my OCD history I found I could easily and accurately estimate material of all stripes. By not going into a baby panic because I fell off the plan or schedule (this job uses another tradesman and they get sick, or materials are backordered...) I would have to solve the inevitable problem popping up. I actually developed a local reputation for fixing the impossible, and found a huge miscarried point load that WOULD have caused catastrophic failure when Colorado mountain winter snows hit. Eleven tons of misplaced load. Million $$$ house. I pulled the problem area apart and the engineer stared at it for almost 2 days. I'd figured what I'd do to fix it within literally 45 seconds of opening it up. Told engineer that there may be some reason it couldn't be done this way, but I'd do these 10 steps and he looked at me sort of empty faced. Then said, "I'll write it up."
It got to the point I was flown back there from the wife's family ranch in N California to Colorado to fix the impossible remod. I ended up running the whole thing.
So I love your style of using your experience, knowing what you want, and adjusting to get there.
Thank you for sharing this 👊🏼👊🏼🙏🏼
Great job Jimmy! 😍👍🏼
Get bent...nice pal, thanks got the sharing teaching and inspiring! I'm saving this to a list of projects on TH-cam :)
Thank you Mr. Jimmy D !!!
What!?!?!?! 1950 WHAT!?!?!!? That Cadillac Hearse is absolutely awesome. What's the condition? Man I freakin love that. I'm a woodworker but man my dream is to have one of those. Just like Radio Werewolf.......... "I'm in love with my baby but she knows what comes first cuz I'm in love my 1960's CADILLAC HEARSE!!!!!!" "She's a hitchhikers nightmare a morticians dream, burning rubber on Route 9015.
I did enjoy this fantastic video Thanks Jimmy, Well done Sir
Been waiting for this one! What an awesome take on an age old design. Very cool to watch the process and today I learned that I need to order “furniture” hot glue! Do you need a special gun for that? Thanks for bringing more Jimmy to us, Rockler!
I'm watching from Kenya 🇰🇪 thank you
Great tips throughout.
Nice work as always, Jimmy!
Watching Jimmy work is such a joy. Hearing him narrate his process and his thoughts really flesh a project out in a super satisfying way.
Dude! I love this chair!
Thank you Jimmy
That’s beautiful mate! Love that style
Very cool build really cool seeing how your about to pass a clamped piece through the bandsaw someday I’ll get me a 36 if I’m lucky I’ll get a 48 😆🙏
A bull nose end to extend the seat would not only work great, it would look great and intensional 👍
Great build & video.
Beautiful chair. Stained or mineral oil/bees wax would be stunning. Kind of a shame to cover all that beauty in paint. Great work and tutorial. Can say how muck I appreciate your channel and others like it.
Felicidades, muy buen trabajo, gracias por compartir!!!
Hella work my guy. Looks really good.Car is gangster !!!
Ive always enjoyed your content. Well done. And. Thank you.
Great video cool looking Chair. 👍👍👍
Excellent workmanship, very nice chair
There's just something about wood I just enjoy ,nice chair
Masterpiece. Great job.
Beautiful. Need to make a bigger and wider one for a more comfortable sitting
Pretty cool, man. Im gonna make one of these. Thank you!
Nice job Jimmy!
every little detail matters like making all the screw slits look the same
Thanks Jimmy! 👍
Congrats Jimmy
Fantastic wonderful chair Jimmy's family Greece 🇬🇷
Hey, many thanks for the video!
Rookie question... Why after gluing the pieces you choose to plan them with a manual planner instead of an electric planner or a belt sander?
That's satisfying to watch...
This is extremely interesting!
Would you use a steel screw the same size as the brass ones to cut a thread?
Beautiful and comfortable. Attach rubber footings.
Sweet car you had there, good video, tq
Great job
Amazing chair! Great job!
I have two questions:
1. How long do you leave the woon on steam before bending them?
2. What is the model of your DeWalt belt sander? I have never found a DeWalt belt sender to buy.
Thank you!
Hi Alex M, Please reach out to our product support team at 1-800-260-9663 or support@rockler.com. They'll be able to assist you. Thank you
Do you have a link or make for the hot glue ?
We're unsure of the exact glue gun Jimmy is using, but you can find several options at www.rockler.com/shop?w=hot+glue+gun
Love it. Nice job
This was awesome.
Beautiful work. I love the design. I think I'd prefer it leaning back a bit and use it as a comfy fireplace relaxation.
(Those slotted screws are the worst. I can't see how people prefer them to screws that function.)j
Gorgeous chair. 🙂👍
Awesome. Such talent dude
Great work
Excellent 👍👍👍well done !!
Pretty sweet for PRACTICE there Jimmy!
Do you have a video that shows how to make the box out of wood? I am building a model train layout. I could use steam bending to make the sub roadbed. I am already cutting the thin strips. The steam bending would help with getting the radii more organic.
I don't know about wood, but I've seen people use PVC pipe for the container for steam bending.
Poly sheet /or bag works well. I used mattress bag & it worked great my first time steam bending. A guy that does wood boat building has videos on it. I’ll post it in the comments if I can find it. Way less of a hassle than building a box especially if your only doing a one off.
👍👍👍👍👍 nice.....I definitely need a steamer
Thank you very nice work
Awsome work , thanks for the video
Thanks for watching!
what's the reason for steam bending first and then gluing them to each other, seems that it would be just as easy to do a bent lam from the start, it gets you to the same place without the extra step
If you mean skipping the steam bending step, those pieces of wood are too thick and the bend is too extreme to do a simple bent wood lamination. The pieces would fracture. If the stock was 1/8” thick or less, you may have been able to do the chair legs, but the seat slats would not survive the bend. Even steamed, he fractured one of the pieces of wood.