When I first saw kumiko it was om Neil Paskins channel Paskmakes. He made kumiko from plywood with power tools and a lot of elbow grease into screens and I have such respect for the project, absolutely beautiful. Now seeing this done by hand for the first time I’m in awe. Nothing to the work of Neil but I never thought of this being done with hand tools originally. Much respect James, love it.
I've an idea that if you use a much wider chisel, 1"-1½", to trim the angles in the jig you could use a slicing motion giving you a cleaner cut with less effort.
Thanks for sharing this; it was a helpful tutorial.. The end result was wonderful. I'm think these panels would look good in all sorts of projects. Best wishes. :)
I bet these would make an awesome set of trivets. I made some similar to this but it was just straight lines, was very surprised that 1/4” thick pieces that stood 3/4” high could withstand me stomping on them.
That does look like a lot of fun! Would it go well as part of a cabinet door (like a china cabinet or curio cabinet) or would the repeated opening and closing over time shake the components apart?
I’m interested in you table saw system. Did you make it or did you buy it? If you made it can you show us how you made it please. Thanks for cool project
That is so attractive! What are you going to do with the finished piece? A trivet? a decoration piece? Also, do you finish it at all with some tung oil or the like? Thanks!
This one will just go in my pile of test pieces. Nothing particular to do with it. I have thought about making a small cabinet with a panel in it but not yet.
If the cut is too long then the teeth clog up with sawdust cuz it can't go anywhere. So much longer than about 6-in cut and it won't work right. Starts to cause problems with the blade itself or will push the work out of the cut.
@@WoodByWrightHowTo Ah...They do make a rip blade for it so maybe that would work better, but it sounds like it would be obnoxious to keep changing the blade. Better buy two of them since they're so cheap and fit in your pocket
Great video! Thanks for this! Could I just ask regarding JMP and ripping: would it get stuck along the way or? Like, creating that thin stock/strips with JMP would seem ideal!
Unfortunately if you're trying to rip anything more than about 6 in it will clog up the teeth and cause the blade to go off one direction or the other two eject the dust. Or it will just jam up.
I don't think you mention it anywhere in the video, but is that oak? How did you like working with that wood? And would you recommend using a different wood instead? Any woods to stay away from? I have a lot of smaller scrap pieces including chunks of 2x4. Also, if I don't have a bridge city plane, I would have to mark the thickness with a marking gauge and try to plane down to that?
Most any wood would work. Just remember the softer the wood is the sharper the iron has to be. This was Filipino mahogany. A really nice wood but you have to be careful with the grain it can run away on you. And correct to do it without a thicknessing plane you just mark a line on the board and plane it down to that line. You can make a little jig just to test it to make sure it's the right thickness all that long.
That is a shooting board plane. It is designed to ride in the groove and run down in grain. Here's a video on it. Here's a video on it. th-cam.com/video/CUswU5TtToQ/w-d-xo.html
Thank you for your fast response. I have a new goal to find and use one of these. I’ve seen and used many different and effective planes on my shooting boards but this could change everything. Thank you for your response.
Unbelievable perfectness..... never thought it will be so accurate.
This video shows you the finer 'points' of woodworking. 👍👍
Imperfection is normal, thanks for the Real Message. Keep up good work 👍
Just think 80 more to go and you have a screen for the living room. Nice to see true woodworking 👍keep up the good work.
requires little space, few tools, little mess and lots of patients. My kind of woodworking and perfect for apartment living.
When I first saw kumiko it was om Neil Paskins channel Paskmakes. He made kumiko from plywood with power tools and a lot of elbow grease into screens and I have such respect for the project, absolutely beautiful. Now seeing this done by hand for the first time I’m in awe. Nothing to the work of Neil but I never thought of this being done with hand tools originally. Much respect James, love it.
It's really easy with a ryboa to miss the lines and create "off set kerfs." I do that ALL the time. hahaha. Cool video, James!! Thank you!
I'm disappointed that I need such expensive tools to make this. It looks like alot of fun.
Greets Danny from The Netherlands
Lol yup. Got to love what you can do with a hand saw, block plane, and a chisel.
Would love to see you work the kumiko into an other project!
I'm thinking about making a medicine cabinet. It might fit in there.
Amazing work, James! Really fantastic! 😃
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
Yayy great one 😁😁😁😁
What an amazing puzzle! ❣️
That looks awesome I'm going to have to try and make one
Great video
I just ordered from your link the bridge city plane and looking forward to use it as a mini planer for Kumiko strips.
Don't have too much fun.
I've an idea that if you use a much wider chisel, 1"-1½", to trim the angles in the jig you could use a slicing motion giving you a cleaner cut with less effort.
Very nice, James! Might make that jig you made earlier and have a go at it!
That is very cool! Now it's time to make some rice glue :)
Thanks for sharing this; it was a helpful tutorial.. The end result was wonderful. I'm think these panels would look good in all sorts of projects. Best wishes. :)
I bet these would make an awesome set of trivets. I made some similar to this but it was just straight lines, was very surprised that 1/4” thick pieces that stood 3/4” high could withstand me stomping on them.
Muchas gracias !!!
6:45 “HE’S A WITCH!! BURN HIM!!”
“So...logically...”
“If he weighs as much as a duck...A WITCH!!!”
Very nice
much obliged.
I mean, amazing result for a first attempt☺ Any tips or things you learned for us mere grasshoppers?😷
Parents and make more sticks then you think you will need.
Hi very good do I have to spend too much to make one
Hey, recognize that O.G. back saw.🤓
That does look like a lot of fun! Would it go well as part of a cabinet door (like a china cabinet or curio cabinet) or would the repeated opening and closing over time shake the components apart?
That's the most common use for it. Usually you just dab a tiny bit of glue in each joint and it's about a solid as can be. Congrats on first.
I’m interested in you table saw system. Did you make it or did you buy it? If you made it can you show us how you made it please. Thanks for cool project
Here you go. th-cam.com/video/oXRyL23CINk/w-d-xo.html
Thank you
That is so attractive! What are you going to do with the finished piece? A trivet? a decoration piece? Also, do you finish it at all with some tung oil or the like? Thanks!
This one will just go in my pile of test pieces. Nothing particular to do with it. I have thought about making a small cabinet with a panel in it but not yet.
Can you elaborate on why the joint maker pro isn’t good for ripping?
If the cut is too long then the teeth clog up with sawdust cuz it can't go anywhere. So much longer than about 6-in cut and it won't work right. Starts to cause problems with the blade itself or will push the work out of the cut.
@@WoodByWrightHowTo Ah...They do make a rip blade for it so maybe that would work better, but it sounds like it would be obnoxious to keep changing the blade. Better buy two of them since they're so cheap and fit in your pocket
So is it all just friction fit, no glue?
This is all just friction fit. However if I were to put it into a panel door or something permanent I would glue each joint.
@@WoodByWrightHowTo 👍
Great video! Thanks for this! Could I just ask regarding JMP and ripping: would it get stuck along the way or? Like, creating that thin stock/strips with JMP would seem ideal!
Unfortunately if you're trying to rip anything more than about 6 in it will clog up the teeth and cause the blade to go off one direction or the other two eject the dust. Or it will just jam up.
I don't think you mention it anywhere in the video, but is that oak? How did you like working with that wood? And would you recommend using a different wood instead? Any woods to stay away from? I have a lot of smaller scrap pieces including chunks of 2x4.
Also, if I don't have a bridge city plane, I would have to mark the thickness with a marking gauge and try to plane down to that?
Most any wood would work. Just remember the softer the wood is the sharper the iron has to be. This was Filipino mahogany. A really nice wood but you have to be careful with the grain it can run away on you. And correct to do it without a thicknessing plane you just mark a line on the board and plane it down to that line. You can make a little jig just to test it to make sure it's the right thickness all that long.
What is that skewed plane at :51 he is using on the shooting board? It looks like a Stanley #5 but skewed and angled tote. WHAT IS THAT!!??
That is a shooting board plane. It is designed to ride in the groove and run down in grain. Here's a video on it. Here's a video on it. th-cam.com/video/CUswU5TtToQ/w-d-xo.html
Thank you for your fast response. I have a new goal to find and use one of these. I’ve seen and used many different and effective planes on my shooting boards but this could change everything. Thank you for your response.
Чудова робота! 👍
Cool me cool
I don’t know about everyone else but I always use the same procedure when I skin cats
You got to get it more adventurous and try a couple different methods. It's a lot of fun lol
When you said you would leave links to other channels about kumiko, I thought "I bet one will be to Paskin channel".
32nd.
Maybe you tape masked itself and is hiding in plain sight
I don't like people who skin cats.