Great effort. As someone who plays with multicolor epoxy pours I think it turned out very nice. It’s a great deal of work - that’s why I share methods for doing multicolor epoxy pours on my channel. But, I haven’t tackled anything this big. Awesome!
Wow that really looks amazing. Great solution to the mess up. A big part of this trade is figuring out how to fix mess ups without making it obvious. I really enjoy content like this.
Hi, nice to see your new creative project, the map really turned out great at its size and my applause to you and your team. My thought: Top side overhead projector lamps might give additional ambience...i think.
Surprisingly pretty. Didn't realize how nice the formica powder (or whatever the pigment is) would make the land masses. Keep in mind that if the room the map is in gets a lot of sunlight, the epoxy will yellow eventually without a protective layer. They make marine 2-part clear coats specifically to top coat epoxy.
Perhaps reissue this with a different name like - WHY DID NO ONE WATCH THIS. I can't remember who, perhaps Smarter everyday, did a comparison of same video different titles and it makes a HUGE difference. It is not about being super accurate it is about it being something that trigers action (watching the video). All the best and its great someone putting out there how things really happen
You could have carved in the black area, in huge ornate text, the title of the work, 'Look at Canada!' It's stunning, really. The time that went into mixing the details later looks like textured terrain. How about a small robotic arm for production? Print sizes up to 11x17, 2 machines fit on a table. The pours will be CAD-calculated to the ml.. Machine will dispense pours. Human does the pour and does initial material distribution (need video and AI/ML to learn how to do that.) Then robot does the stirring/terrain texture mixing. The *problem* with this is scale. It costs 'x' to mix 'y' amount of pour. At small scale there's a lot of waste. One fix for that would be to run 6 machines to produce the same print. 1 human operator might be able to keep up with that.
Great effort. As someone who plays with multicolor epoxy pours I think it turned out very nice. It’s a great deal of work - that’s why I share methods for doing multicolor epoxy pours on my channel. But, I haven’t tackled anything this big. Awesome!
It was alot! Just wish I had a slow cure catalyst in there.
We like to see more videos like these. Fun to watch.
Wow! Great job. Looks fantastic!
Wow that really looks amazing. Great solution to the mess up. A big part of this trade is figuring out how to fix mess ups without making it obvious. I really enjoy content like this.
Hi, nice to see your new creative project, the map really turned out great at its size and my applause to you and your team.
My thought: Top side overhead projector lamps might give additional ambience...i think.
Surprisingly pretty. Didn't realize how nice the formica powder (or whatever the pigment is) would make the land masses.
Keep in mind that if the room the map is in gets a lot of sunlight, the epoxy will yellow eventually without a protective layer. They make marine 2-part clear coats specifically to top coat epoxy.
Thank you! Will do!
Perhaps reissue this with a different name like - WHY DID NO ONE WATCH THIS. I can't remember who, perhaps Smarter everyday, did a comparison of same video different titles and it makes a HUGE difference. It is not about being super accurate it is about it being something that trigers action (watching the video). All the best and its great someone putting out there how things really happen
Very impressive project! Well done 🎉
It was different for sure, thank you!
All the equipment you have and you don't own a Gem sander? Great video!
Good stuff Ryan! Glad to see you are bringing the channel back to life…
No hard wood was harmed in the making of this video.
Great job and great video! Huge project!
Top Notch! Is this for the wall in the shop or going in the doublewide?
Going in the shop, no wall big enough in the trailer haha
This looks incredible, absolutely superb work! One day I hope to make something half as good as this and I'll be happy!
Thanks, glad you enjoyed it :)
I wonder though, in hindsight, would you do another black base pour or would you just opt for more blue pigment or like a black paint on the inside?
You actually explain this technique perfectly in one of your older videos. Brain farts happen.
Turned out awesome!
I am Cuban and I didn't find my Island. Great video anyways
Nicely done. Stay out of the "comfort zone" It forces you to get better.......
Came out looking pretty cool, map of the universe next ?? you can do it.
I have a life size map of Texas --- It took me all summer to get it folded in half 😎 LoL
Nice work! Keep it up.
Oh yeah.... First
Thank you, I hope you laughed some in the video as well, many people make woodworking so serious. Yes nice first comment!
You could have carved in the black area, in huge ornate text, the title of the work, 'Look at Canada!' It's stunning, really. The time that went into mixing the details later looks like textured terrain.
How about a small robotic arm for production? Print sizes up to 11x17, 2 machines fit on a table. The pours will be CAD-calculated to the ml.. Machine will dispense pours. Human does the pour and does initial material distribution (need video and AI/ML to learn how to do that.) Then robot does the stirring/terrain texture mixing. The *problem* with this is scale. It costs 'x' to mix 'y' amount of pour. At small scale there's a lot of waste. One fix for that would be to run 6 machines to produce the same print. 1 human operator might be able to keep up with that.
Brilliant t
What's your store/shop name. Want to see what you have for sale