Your work is some of the most outrageously impressive woodworking/marquetry I've ever seen, thank you for sharing the video (I know they are a lot of work to put together). Spotted the Steve Latta inlay tools in the background. I just made a set based off Latta's design and will be trying my hand at inlay for the first time. I'll try to channel your skill lol.
Thanks for the compliment Andrew ! I used the inlay tools also to decorate the marquetry liqueur cabinet which you can see in another video of me, the tools work fine. Have fun !
I am not sure if I am impressed or scared by the precision and amount of work behind it. I am a trained joiner so we made maquetry with thinner layers even that is a high amount of work but cutting every piece and stick it together is something beyond everything I have seen yet. You have my highest respect!
I love your work and seeing you do it with your beaten up hands. It's exactly like seeing my dad doing it. Thanks for sharing your very impressive work.
I can't imagine it is so hard just by watching the craftsman do it using modern equipments and thinking how those craftsman in the 1700s without these tools to make these similar, magnificent pieces of artifact... absolutely blown my mind!!!
Marvelous. A masterwork. Thank you so much. I like to think I could also be meticulous and precise, and that I could also be patient and not rush things. But the artistic eye and taste, no I could not come near to what you do. But I will try some of the same technique, in a small way, and be satisfied I hope.
I have done some veneer marquetry and alsa some wodd inlay marquetry liek your doing here, but nothing like this. This is just insanly good. I have done the classic gothic compass and a three colour frame with alternating grain, and a small song bird on a branch, but seriously this is something I would see in a medieval palace furniture. Good job
Thank you Rodrigo, I make the white lines the same way as the rest of the picture. I add a piece of holly to the almost completed flower (with an excess) , then the completed flower is sawn into the background. You then leave a very thin edge of the holly.
Superb work! Great craftsmanship and great artistic design. I read your responses to questions on technique and understand that your material is 3mm and you use the double bevel technique. I am puzzled how you executed all the cutting on such a long board using a scroll saw with only a 21” throat.
Thank you James ! I made the panel in two parts, one for the top three drawers and one for the bottom three. I joined the panels together to cut the last overlapping flowers and leaves. Because these parts are in the middle of the panel, I had enough space on the scroll saw.
@@ronnie_rozenga Interesting. I guessed it was about 3mm and I have not seen anyone using double bevel on that sort of thickness. I am just a newcomer to scroll saw but have some big ideas 😁 and this seems a perfect way to go. At least I can experiment with this kind of material.
@@PatheticPeasant I resaw all the veneer I use. If possible I use my thicknesser to plane it at 3mm thickness. If I have small or vulnerable pieces I use a jig and a router to mill it to thickness
Thank you Matthew. The marquetry for this cabinet took about 150 hours to complete, including making the drawing. I must say that I was not always satisfied at once, some pieces have been redone.
Me encanta tu trabajo! . Eres con diferencia el mejor de todos los videos de marquetería que he visto.. Que ángulo utilizas para el corte? 3 grados? . Y el grosor de las chapas que son de 5mm?. Viendo tus vídeos me ha entrado el gusanillo de intentarlo, aunque me parece muy difícil hacer las líneas finas.....Mi mas sincera enhorabuena por tu trabajo.
Thanks for the compliments ! The material I work with is 3mm thick. The angle at witch I saw is about 7 degrees but depends on the thickness of the saw blade and the thickness of the veneer. It is a matter of trying. Have fun !
Hello Ronnie I was wondering if you received instruction for the Marquetry techniques you use. Your work looks very much like the work of Silas Kopf (US). I have been doing “packet” style Marquetry for years but now am learning the Dbl Bevel method. The detail is amazing but it definitely not very easy🤨 Great work sir. I watch your videos over and over. John
Hello John. Yes it is the same technique as Silas Kopf, the differense is that i use much thicker veneer. The wood i am using is 3mm thick. There is no place where i can buy it so i make my own veneer. I also glue every part together so that i always can see what the result will look like. When i am not satisfied, i can always replace some parts. The dbl Bevel method makes that you can make very fine details with no gaps. Have fun! There will be another video this winter.
Hi again. Hey I just bought a large tape dispenser and I have to say it’s made my marquetry easier. You only need one hand to get a bit of tape off the roll and the tear is clean. As you well know it’s a lot of tape being torn of the roll.
I notice your not rotating that large panel much. Are you using a spiral blade? I have not tried them but how else can you cut a radically intricate and reversing cut on a big panel like the one I see here?
I made the panel in two parts, otherwise it would be too big for my scrollsaw. I don't use spiral blades, I think they will leave a too wide sawcut, I want it as thin as possible. Most of the marquetry is made in smaller parts, such as the leaves and flowers. Then they are sawn into the background. I haven't had much trouble with that sofar.
Very inspiring and educative video's Ronnie, I am truly grateful for your posts! Very interesting to see your inlay techniques, you're a real hero to develop this all yourselves, make great furniture, and not even have a dedicated website to show the world what great art and craftsmanship you represent. And beautiful workshop, a dream to have one! One practical question Ronnie: where in the Netherlands do you source your holly? I have tried Amsterdamse Fijnhouthandel, they don't have it. Arnhem also seems out of stock? many thanks and Kind Regards - Giel - Amsterdam - The Netherlands
Bedankt voor de complimenten Giel. Ik heb inderdaad geen website. Ik maak de meubels in mijn eigen werkplaats in mijn vrije tijd, naast mijn baan als allround restauratie en interieurtimmerman. Ik heb een jaar of 3 geleden een aantal delen hulst gekocht bij Inlands Hout van Leersum in Burgum, Friesland. Ze hadden toen een aardige stapel liggen. Binnenkort ga ik zelf ook nog weer eens kijken want ik ben er zelf ook doorheen. De kleur kan wel varieren, soms is het ook wel wat grijzer. Als alternatief gebruik ik ook wel het witste esdoorn wat ik kan vinden maar Hulst heeft de voorkeur. Groeten en succes!
@@ronnie_rozenga Dank je wel Ronnie voor de tips. Ik dacht er zelf aan te proberen esdoorn te bleken, gebruikmakend van een vacuum kamer, maar het is natuurlijk veel mooier om volledig natuurlijke kleuren te gebruiken. Ik probeer Friesland en anders een licht stuk esdoorn van Fijnhout Adam. Sta overigens nog aan het begin van mijn inleg-leercurve: heb wat dingen met parelmoer gedaan - onderdelen passend makend door precies op een dunne lijn te zagen. Daarom interessant te zien hoe jij de double bevel methode gebruikt, dat is weer een heel andere benadering. Ik doe het meubelmaken naast een kantoorbaan, zou eigenlijk ook graag de stap maken naar eigen werkplaats, geld verdienen met interieurbouw en daarnaast meubels naar eigen smaak en ontwerp. Durf je hier te verklappen in welk landsdeel je werkt? Als je wilt, mail me anders op giel.halberstadt@waternet.nl. Groeten - Giel
How do you determine which woods to use for which parts? The complementary colors are fantastic, but I can't wrap my head around how you would start picking woods. Do you dye some parts to get the colors you need for some pieces?
You need a lot of wood species for this work. I never use dye to color the wood, it is all natural. For each part I look for the right color and grain. When I want to go from dark to light then I take colors that are close to each other but the one is slightly lighter than the other. This is how you let the color flow. For the inside of a flower are maybe 5 or 6 woodtypes required.
You can pay attention to a few things. First of all, the size , if you want to make large workpieces you need a long arm. If you want to make double bevel marquetry, the table or saw arm must be able to tilt.If you have a lot of internal sawing, it is useful that you can easily attach the sawblade. It is also useful to be able to change the speed. The rest depends on your personal preference. Have fun !
Hello Petr, I buy them at www.123disposables.com . It is a company in Holland. I don't know if you live far away, maybe they will send it to you. succes!
you can trust me. money in the bank. i've never ever ever been wrong. you don't have to trust me, tho. i'm just that kind of being. nonetheless, i'm in awe of your marquetry talent, as well as the video/audio/esthetic production.
Beautiful work. Sorry for the n00b question, but what kind of glue is that and how fast does it dry? I used a laser cutter to cut 6mm veneer and am searching for a glue and a glueing technique. All my pieces are small so it is like a 380cm long jigsaw puzzle. Any advice appreciated.
I use Titebond Original to glue the marquetry pieces together. I like it because it is thin and the glue adheres quickly. It offers me the possibility to make several cuts one after the other. I use masking tape to join the pieces together.
Hallo Ronnie , adembenemend mooi wat je hier maakt . Ik ben zelf ook wel eens met mijn Hegner aan de gang , maar heb nogal problemen met het zicht . Nu zie ik dat jij een mooie , grote loeplamp gebruikt . Mijn vraag is nu nu : welk merk en type is deze loeplamp en voldoet hij voor jou ? Heb je die in Nederland gekocht ? Ik zou zeggen ga zo verder met filmpjes plaatsen , ik heb ze allemaal al eens bekeken zelfs het verven van de deuren .
Bedankt voor je reactie! Ik kan op de lamp geen merk vinden, wel het bedrijf waar ik hem gekocht had maar dit bedrijf bestaat niet meer. Als je zoekt op "loeplamp" vind je ze wel, ik zag bijvoorbeeld bij "loeplampdirect.nl" wel ongeveer hetzelfde model wat ik ook gebruik. Ik gebruik hem voornamelijk voor het licht, ook wel voor het allerfijnste werk als het heel klein wordt. Succes!
It depends on the thickness of the veneer. Thin veneer requires a high angle, thick veneer a low angle. The veneer I am using is 3mm thick, the saw angle is 6 degrees.
@@ronnie_rozengaThank you! That's *automation*, & while it may require skill in design & computer knowledge, that's *not the same thing.* I'm not going to spend thousands on a laser cutter if we don't know the basics. Thank you for showing us this.
@@magicman9486 I'm not saying I don't use power tools for certain jobs, but when we talk about woodworking skills I don't mean being able to program a laser cutter....
It's not entirely clear to me what you want to ask. If you want to know the brand of the scroll saw; it's a Hegner Polycut 3. I don't understand your second question.
@@ronnie_rozenga oh it’s a scroll saw not a jig saw how cool ! The country gravy is at time stamp 10:32 ? I am a tile setter who does mosaic tessellation’s and I also do paper collages so I thought this is something I would love to do and would be good at.
@@Lukesh30253 What you see in the video is that I am applying shadow effects to the parts with hot sand.This is a technique that is called sand shading. The wood is scorched a little. Have fun with woodworking!
@Ronnie Rozenga Amazing work, congratulations. Very fine technique. I want to learn marquetry like this but I don't know where to start. I'm in Brazil and it looks like there's no one teaching here with high quality.
@@paulodetarsoleitejunior1896 Thank you ! I had the same problem here in the Netherlands. I learned some things from the internet and I have developed my own technique. Practice makes perfect !
beste Ronnie ik heb je video,s al vele malen bekeken. maar ik begrijp 1 ding niet. als je het bovenste deel pas moet zagen in het onderste deel. moet je dan met de klok mee zagen of tegen de klok in of heeft dat er niets mee te maken. anders zou de spie die je zaagt kunnen draaien en krijg je juist een grotere naad. kortom hoe werkt deze techniek, omdat u in graden zaagt om de zaagsnede te elimineren denk ik
@@nielsvlietland5406 Hoi Niels, het klopt dat ik onder een hoek zaag om een naadloze passing te krijgen. Of je met de klok mee, of tegen de klok in zaagt hangt af van welke kant je wilt invoegen. Wil je iets van onder af invoegen, dan zaag je tegen de klok in, het onderste deel wordt dan iets groter. Wil je van boven af invoegen, dan zaag je met de klok mee. In dit geval wordt het bovenste stuk iets groter en past naadloos in de uitgezaagde sparing. Succes !
@@ronnie_rozenga I knew it was serious, specialized work, but I didn't know it was THIS much work! So many opportunities for things to go terribly wrong! Your finished panel was a masterpiece. Kudos to you, sir!
Hoe handenarbeid via vakmanschap naar echte kunst evolueert. U bent volgens mij een ongelofelijk geduldig man ... :-) Als ik vragen mag Ronnie, hoelang doe je dit al ?
Bedankt voor het compliment! Van kinds af aan is houtbewerken mijn hobby en uiteindelijk mijn vak geworden. Met marqueterie ben ik ongeveer vijf jaar geleden begonnen.
Please don't put the FINISHED PRODUCT behind a bunch of advertisements for other videos. I watched the whole video just to barely be able to see the thing done.
Thank you for your comment. I have seen it myself and I agree with you. This video is less suitable for an end screen and I will therefore remove it. By the way, I have another video that shows the complete construction of the cabinet.
Your work is some of the most outrageously impressive woodworking/marquetry I've ever seen, thank you for sharing the video (I know they are a lot of work to put together). Spotted the Steve Latta inlay tools in the background. I just made a set based off Latta's design and will be trying my hand at inlay for the first time. I'll try to channel your skill lol.
Thanks for the compliment Andrew ! I used the inlay tools also to decorate the marquetry liqueur cabinet which you can see in another video of me, the tools work fine. Have fun !
instablaster.
It’s beautiful! Check out Clemens Söllner Marquetry! instagram.com/clemens_soellner_marquetry?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=
He makes also incredible marquetry!
I am not sure if I am impressed or scared by the precision and amount of work behind it. I am a trained joiner so we made maquetry with thinner layers even that is a high amount of work but cutting every piece and stick it together is something beyond everything I have seen yet. You have my highest respect!
Thank you very much ! It does take a lot of time to make this kind of marquetry, but it gives great satisfaction to complete a work.
This artistry is legit giving me chills. Breathtaking!
Thank you Meridien, that's nice to hear !
@@ronnie_rozenga The compliment is well-deserved. You've found the talent to make the medium give up its secrets! Lovely work.
@@meridien52681 Thanks again !
I feel like I'm still decades away from being this good at marquetry. It's a joy to watch your videos.
Thank you! Very nice to hear!
Absolutely beautiful.... to watch a master at work!!! ❤😊🙏
Fantastic.... thank you!!!😊❤🙏
@@theresehopkins1581 Thank you very much ! That is nice to hear 😊
What a work of patience! Very beautiful!!!!
Thank you !
BEAUTIFUL!!
(Eta: Oh my gosh, that's the most organized wood shop I've ever seen.)
Thank you very much !
this is beautiful! i love this style of woodworking. it looks incredibly time-consuming, and it must take a lot of skill.
@@wandersoffdoodling Thank you very much ! It really is very time consuming to make, but it is worth the effort at the end 😊
I have only started making inlays, while learning to build guitars in my semi-retirement. Your work is extraordinary.
Thank you very much!
Absolutely beautiful, a true master of your craft!
Thank you very much !
I havent started yet but I just quit. Incredible work!
Thank you Matt !
Oh my, that is a lot of work! Beautiful detailed designs, ❤
Thank you very much Cynthia !
I love your work and seeing you do it with your beaten up hands. It's exactly like seeing my dad doing it. Thanks for sharing your very impressive work.
Thank you Emmanuel ! Yes, the work sometimes takes its toll, I am glad you like the video !
One day I am going to meet Ronnie and show him my work. He is an inspiration.
Thank you Jim, it is nice to hear my work inspires you !
Incredible talent! Great video showing the procedure you use.
Thank you very much !
I can't imagine it is so hard just by watching the craftsman do it using modern equipments and thinking how those craftsman in the 1700s without these tools to make these similar, magnificent pieces of artifact... absolutely blown my mind!!!
Thank you Katerina, I also certainly have respect for the craftsman of the time.
Its unbelievable ! Great craftsmanship !
Thank you Dmitriy !
Marvelous. A masterwork. Thank you so much. I like to think I could also be meticulous and precise, and that I could also be patient and not rush things. But the artistic eye and taste, no I could not come near to what you do. But I will try some of the same technique, in a small way, and be satisfied I hope.
Thank you! It takes time and practice to discover how to take advantage of the color and grain of the wood, just try and have fun !
My mind is blown. Just no words to express the beauty.
Thank you very much !
Great technique and beautiful results. Thanks for posting.
You're welcome! Thanks for the comment!
You are the King of marquetry!
I would love to build a small keepsake box for my best friend but the design is so hard...
Thank you ! Yes, marquetry is not always easy.....
You need more subs. Your work is incredible.
Thank you Adam !
So Glad u love ur work, and ur RidgeBack
Thank you !
Sir, this what you are doing is absolutely stuning. Thank you for this wideo.
Thank you!
I have done some veneer marquetry and alsa some wodd inlay marquetry liek your doing here, but nothing like this. This is just insanly good. I have done the classic gothic compass and a three colour frame with alternating grain, and a small song bird on a branch, but seriously this is something I would see in a medieval palace furniture. Good job
Thank you very much Banán !
Que artista incrível. Detalhista. Um trabalho lindíssimo! Divino! 😮😮😮👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Thank you very much !
Beautiful work!
Thank you Andrea !
Wow absolutely beautiful!!
Thank you !
Dude! I wish we could be best friends and we could make things, all the day!
Thanks, keep up the good work!
WOW absolutely beautiful. Thank you for sharing
You're welcome, and thank you too!
That is very impressive, beautiful work!
Thank you, nice to hear!
I miss my Rhodesian Ridgeback! Great work too :)
Thank you Andrew ! I understand what you mean, Ridgebacks are great dogs !
How do you make those very thin white lines that outline one side of the flowers? The effect is incredible!
Thank you Rodrigo, I make the white lines the same way as the rest of the picture. I add a piece of holly to the almost completed flower (with an excess) , then the completed flower is sawn into the background. You then leave a very thin edge of the holly.
Just stunning... scorching to make shadows...brilliant.
Thank you !
Superb work! Great craftsmanship and great artistic design. I read your responses to questions on technique and understand that your material is 3mm and you use the double bevel technique. I am puzzled how you executed all the cutting on such a long board using a scroll saw with only a 21” throat.
Thank you James ! I made the panel in two parts, one for the top three drawers and one for the bottom three. I joined the panels together to cut the last overlapping flowers and leaves. Because these parts are in the middle of the panel, I had enough space on the scroll saw.
@@ronnie_rozenga Interesting. I guessed it was about 3mm and I have not seen anyone using double bevel on that sort of thickness. I am just a newcomer to scroll saw but have some big ideas 😁 and this seems a perfect way to go. At least I can experiment with this kind of material.
@@gedsoft3793 This thickness works very well for me, especially since I can then glue all the parts together.
@@ronnie_rozengado you resaw your own veneer or do you have it milled for you?
@@PatheticPeasant I resaw all the veneer I use. If possible I use my thicknesser to plane it at 3mm thickness. If I have small or vulnerable pieces I use a jig and a router to mill it to thickness
Fantastic work,you must have plenty of patients and many rolls of masking tape.Can I ask how long a piece like this would take you to make? thank you
Thank you Matthew. The marquetry for this cabinet took about 150 hours to complete, including making the drawing. I must say that I was not always satisfied at once, some pieces have been redone.
Wow! Beautiful!
Thank you Cindy !
Me encanta tu trabajo! . Eres con diferencia el mejor de todos los videos de marquetería que he visto.. Que ángulo utilizas para el corte? 3 grados? . Y el grosor de las chapas que son de 5mm?. Viendo tus vídeos me ha entrado el gusanillo de intentarlo, aunque me parece muy difícil hacer las líneas finas.....Mi mas sincera enhorabuena por tu trabajo.
Thanks for the compliments ! The material I work with is 3mm thick. The angle at witch I saw is about 7 degrees but depends on the thickness of the saw blade and the thickness of the veneer. It is a matter of trying. Have fun !
@@ronnie_rozenga 😄 Muchas gracias por responder.
@@carmenmartinezrubio3423 You're welcome.
Потрясающе красиво и профессионально! Мое восхищение - Мастеру!
Thank you for the compliment !
Excellent, magnificent, splendid !!!
Thank you Euripedes!
exquisite work. absolutely beautiful
Thank you !
Hello Ronnie
I was wondering if you received instruction for the Marquetry techniques you use. Your work looks very much like the work of Silas Kopf (US).
I have been doing “packet” style Marquetry for years but now am learning the Dbl Bevel method. The detail is amazing but it definitely not very easy🤨
Great work sir. I watch your videos over and over.
John
Hello John. Yes it is the same technique as Silas Kopf, the differense is that i use much thicker veneer. The wood i am using is 3mm thick. There is no place where i can buy it so i make my own veneer. I also glue every part together so that i always can see what the result will look like. When i am not satisfied, i can always replace some parts. The dbl Bevel method makes that you can make very fine details with no gaps. Have fun! There will be another video this winter.
Bravo!! Inspiring 👋👋👋
Thank you Michael !
Hi again. Hey I just bought a large tape dispenser and I have to say it’s made my marquetry easier. You only need one hand to get a bit of tape off the roll and the tear is clean. As you well know it’s a lot of tape being torn of the roll.
Yes, that would be useful indeed...Thanks
I liked the cute dog as well. Thank you!
Thank you ! Silke was a great dog
wow that is a masterpiece.
Thank you !
I notice your not rotating that large panel much. Are you using a spiral blade? I have not tried them but how else can you cut a radically intricate and reversing cut on a big panel like the one I see here?
I made the panel in two parts, otherwise it would be too big for my scrollsaw. I don't use spiral blades, I think they will leave a too wide sawcut, I want it as thin as possible. Most of the marquetry is made in smaller parts, such as the leaves and flowers. Then they are sawn into the background. I haven't had much trouble with that sofar.
Hi Ronnie, your work is amazing 👏 👏
I'd like to know what the material is (6:39) & the glue you're using, thanks in advance 🙏😇
Thank you! I add a piece of wenge here, the glue is Titebond original. I like this glue because it bonds quickly.
@@ronnie_rozenga Thanks a lot Ronnie! 🙏🙏 Merry Christmas 🎅 🎄 💫
@@ge973 Your welcome, merry Christmas !
Gorgeous piece.
Thank you Linda !
Very beautiful !
Thank you!
nice blood blister. i just gave myself a huge one the other day after whacking my thumb with a mallet during a table glue up
Yes...this happens sometimes when you work with hand tools😁
Phenomenal!
Thank you Scott !
Arte primorosa, parabéns! Ganhou um admirador e um inscrito do Brasil. Lindo o seu trabalho. :-)
Thank you very much Sirlan !
Very inspiring and educative video's Ronnie, I am truly grateful for your posts! Very interesting to see your inlay techniques, you're a real hero to develop this all yourselves, make great furniture, and not even have a dedicated website to show the world what great art and craftsmanship you represent. And beautiful workshop, a dream to have one! One practical question Ronnie: where in the Netherlands do you source your holly? I have tried Amsterdamse Fijnhouthandel, they don't have it. Arnhem also seems out of stock? many thanks and Kind Regards - Giel - Amsterdam - The Netherlands
Bedankt voor de complimenten Giel. Ik heb inderdaad geen website. Ik maak de meubels in mijn eigen werkplaats in mijn vrije tijd, naast mijn baan als allround restauratie en interieurtimmerman. Ik heb een jaar of 3 geleden een aantal delen hulst gekocht bij Inlands Hout van Leersum in Burgum, Friesland. Ze hadden toen een aardige stapel liggen. Binnenkort ga ik zelf ook nog weer eens kijken want ik ben er zelf ook doorheen. De kleur kan wel varieren, soms is het ook wel wat grijzer. Als alternatief gebruik ik ook wel het witste esdoorn wat ik kan vinden maar Hulst heeft de voorkeur. Groeten en succes!
@@ronnie_rozenga Dank je wel Ronnie voor de tips. Ik dacht er zelf aan te proberen esdoorn te bleken, gebruikmakend van een vacuum kamer, maar het is natuurlijk veel mooier om volledig natuurlijke kleuren te gebruiken. Ik probeer Friesland en anders een licht stuk esdoorn van Fijnhout Adam. Sta overigens nog aan het begin van mijn inleg-leercurve: heb wat dingen met parelmoer gedaan - onderdelen passend makend door precies op een dunne lijn te zagen. Daarom interessant te zien hoe jij de double bevel methode gebruikt, dat is weer een heel andere benadering. Ik doe het meubelmaken naast een kantoorbaan, zou eigenlijk ook graag de stap maken naar eigen werkplaats, geld verdienen met interieurbouw en daarnaast meubels naar eigen smaak en ontwerp. Durf je hier te verklappen in welk landsdeel je werkt? Als je wilt, mail me anders op giel.halberstadt@waternet.nl. Groeten - Giel
We love ur artwork, outstanding Salute u ~
Thank you very much !
How do you determine which woods to use for which parts? The complementary colors are fantastic, but I can't wrap my head around how you would start picking woods.
Do you dye some parts to get the colors you need for some pieces?
You need a lot of wood species for this work. I never use dye to color the wood, it is all natural. For each part I look for the right color and grain. When I want to go from dark to light then I take colors that are close to each other but the one is slightly lighter than the other. This is how you let the color flow. For the inside of a flower are maybe 5 or 6 woodtypes required.
Very very nice.Thanks
You're welcome ! And thank you too !
Wonderful! Thank you.
Thanks, you're welcome !
what kind of scroll saw should i buy?
You can pay attention to a few things. First of all, the size , if you want to make large workpieces you need a long arm. If you want to make double bevel marquetry, the table or saw arm must be able to tilt.If you have a lot of internal sawing, it is useful that you can easily attach the sawblade. It is also useful to be able to change the speed. The rest depends on your personal preference. Have fun !
Hi Ronnie, I would like to ask you where would be possible to buy your syringe with special nose? Thanks
Hello Petr, I buy them at www.123disposables.com . It is a company in Holland. I don't know if you live far away, maybe they will send it to you. succes!
this might go viral, as an asmr video.
Well, I don't know there, but I do hope it's a positve and relaxing experience for people...
you can trust me. money in the bank. i've never ever ever been wrong. you don't have to trust me, tho. i'm just that kind of being.
nonetheless, i'm in awe of your marquetry talent, as well as the video/audio/esthetic production.
@@infinidimensionalinfinitie5021 Thank you, we will see.
Beautiful work. Sorry for the n00b question, but what kind of glue is that and how fast does it dry? I used a laser cutter to cut 6mm veneer and am searching for a glue and a glueing technique. All my pieces are small so it is like a 380cm long jigsaw puzzle. Any advice appreciated.
I use Titebond Original to glue the marquetry pieces together. I like it because it is thin and the glue adheres quickly. It offers me the possibility to make several cuts one after the other. I use masking tape to join the pieces together.
Thank you!
You're welcome! Good luck with your project.
Wow amazing
Thank you Jack ! 👍
Where you take veneer 3mm? I saw only 0.6mm and a few woods 1.5mm
I make my own veneer, I saw and plane it out of solid wood.
@@ronnie_rozenga thanks.
I just learned what marquetry is from Woodtalk podcast, and this is the first thing I found on youtube. I am not worthy. Wow.
Thank you ! Just try and have fun !
this is exquisite
Thank you Bear !
where I live, this is taught in 1-2 mm thick wooden boards.
Yes, I think most woodworkers use thinner veneer than me.
Bellissimoooooooo!!!!!!!!
Thank you !
Hallo Ronnie , adembenemend mooi wat je hier maakt . Ik ben zelf ook wel eens met mijn Hegner aan de gang , maar heb nogal problemen met het zicht . Nu zie ik dat jij een mooie , grote loeplamp gebruikt . Mijn vraag is nu nu : welk merk en type is deze loeplamp en voldoet hij voor jou ? Heb je die in Nederland gekocht ? Ik zou zeggen ga zo verder met filmpjes plaatsen , ik heb ze allemaal al eens bekeken zelfs het verven van de deuren .
Bedankt voor je reactie! Ik kan op de lamp geen merk vinden, wel het bedrijf waar ik hem gekocht had maar dit bedrijf bestaat niet meer. Als je zoekt op "loeplamp" vind je ze wel, ik zag bijvoorbeeld bij "loeplampdirect.nl" wel ongeveer hetzelfde model wat ik ook gebruik. Ik gebruik hem voornamelijk voor het licht, ook wel voor het allerfijnste werk als het heel klein wordt. Succes!
12:30 that looks great! oh ... it was the back heheh
😁
Великолепная работа
Thank you !
эротика для глаз))
Thank you !
What is the angle of table?
It depends on the thickness of the veneer. Thin veneer requires a high angle, thick veneer a low angle. The veneer I am using is 3mm thick, the saw angle is 6 degrees.
Le travail est super mais il manque quelques explications sur le procédé du calque et sur les différentes nuances de couleurs
Thank you for the response, I will take this into future projects.
what kind of scroll saw blade did you use?
I use Pebeco 3 blades.
Wow
Thank you !
Шикарно!
Thank you!
Excellent!!
Thank you Barry, nice spice rack!
Thank you 🙏
Imagine what you can do with a laser cutter! 🙂
Yes, but that's not woodworking....
@@ronnie_rozengaThank you! That's *automation*, & while it may require skill in design & computer knowledge, that's *not the same thing.* I'm not going to spend thousands on a laser cutter if we don't know the basics. Thank you for showing us this.
@@dottyjyoung You're welcome !
@@ronnie_rozenga I disagree. If your grand father had access to a router or a laser he would use it.
@@magicman9486 I'm not saying I don't use power tools for certain jobs, but when we talk about woodworking skills I don't mean being able to program a laser cutter....
What is the jigsaw thing called you’re using and what’s with the country gravy ?
It's not entirely clear to me what you want to ask. If you want to know the brand of the scroll saw; it's a Hegner Polycut 3. I don't understand your second question.
@@ronnie_rozenga oh it’s a scroll saw not a jig saw how cool ! The country gravy is at time stamp 10:32 ?
I am a tile setter who does mosaic tessellation’s and I also do paper collages so I thought this is something I would love to do and would be good at.
@@Lukesh30253 What you see in the video is that I am applying shadow effects to the parts with hot sand.This is a technique that is called sand shading. The wood is scorched a little. Have fun with woodworking!
I can only find 0.6mm veneer- will that work?
Marquetry can be made from thin veneer. I don't use it, I think I would use a knife technique in that case instead of a scrollsaw.
@@ronnie_rozenga thanks👍
Amassing!
Thank you!
Very nice. thanks
Thank you !
I admire! 👍
Thanks again Chri Stina !
Привет из Крыма высший пилотаж
Thank you !
13:08 feed me please :D anyway it's fantastic job...
Thank you Miha, however, she is always hungry.......
@@ronnie_rozenga hahah)
amazing
Thank you !
la classe
Thank you !
How long does it take to complete this marquetry?
It took about 150 hour.
@Ronnie Rozenga Amazing work, congratulations. Very fine technique.
I want to learn marquetry like this but I don't know where to start. I'm in Brazil and it looks like there's no one teaching here with high quality.
@@paulodetarsoleitejunior1896 Thank you ! I had the same problem here in the Netherlands. I learned some things from the internet and I have developed my own technique. Practice makes perfect !
@@ronnie_rozenga How long did it take you to reach your current skill level?
@@paulodetarsoleitejunior1896 I have been a woodworker for over 45 years, since childhood. I've started making marquetry 8 years ago.
beste Ronnie ik heb je video,s al vele malen bekeken. maar ik begrijp 1 ding niet. als je het bovenste deel pas moet zagen in het onderste deel. moet je dan met de klok mee zagen of tegen de klok in of heeft dat er niets mee te maken. anders zou de spie die je zaagt kunnen draaien en krijg je juist een grotere naad. kortom hoe werkt deze techniek, omdat u in graden zaagt om de zaagsnede te elimineren denk ik
@@nielsvlietland5406 Hoi Niels, het klopt dat ik onder een hoek zaag om een naadloze passing te krijgen. Of je met de klok mee, of tegen de klok in zaagt hangt af van welke kant je wilt invoegen. Wil je iets van onder af invoegen, dan zaag je tegen de klok in, het onderste deel wordt dan iets groter. Wil je van boven af invoegen, dan zaag je met de klok mee. In dit geval wordt het bovenste stuk iets groter en past naadloos in de uitgezaagde sparing. Succes !
@@ronnie_rozenga bedankt voor de reactie.
ga het proberen!!
@@nielsvlietland5406 👍
I will 100% never do this in my life. Holy hell.
Hahaha, you sound pretty convinced about that Robert !
@@ronnie_rozenga I knew it was serious, specialized work, but I didn't know it was THIS much work! So many opportunities for things to go terribly wrong!
Your finished panel was a masterpiece. Kudos to you, sir!
@@RobertWrightOneManCovers Thank you Robert !
absolutely beautiful!
Thank you !🙏
nice
Thank You !
Hoe handenarbeid via vakmanschap naar echte kunst evolueert.
U bent volgens mij een ongelofelijk geduldig man ... :-)
Als ik vragen mag Ronnie, hoelang doe je dit al ?
Bedankt voor het compliment! Van kinds af aan is houtbewerken mijn hobby en uiteindelijk mijn vak geworden. Met marqueterie ben ik ongeveer vijf jaar geleden begonnen.
You do know SILAS KOPF,don’t you?
Yes I do, he is one of the best.
Advanced, Art.
Thank you !
Please don't put the FINISHED PRODUCT behind a bunch of advertisements for other videos. I watched the whole video just to barely be able to see the thing done.
Thank you for your comment. I have seen it myself and I agree with you. This video is less suitable for an end screen and I will therefore remove it. By the way, I have another video that shows the complete construction of the cabinet.
Il video si vede malissimo, come mai?
I don't quite understand what your question is exactly....
I doubt you will ever get paid enough for the time thats gone into making this panel.
That's right, it takes a lot of time.