For those who wait come the good things ;) Have to say, the Joint Venture is such a good idea for a series. Works as a resource as well as a therapeutic watch. Good job.
Another beautifully executed joint. A bit of practice, and patience, and it will be perfect in no time. Great job, Dorian. (For anyone thinking I am "tearing him down", I have mad respect for what he is doing here. I just know the gaps are not what he is shooting for. Perfection is a journey, not a destination.)
Now i'm writing in enghish, look, read "amazing, it makes my ski crawl👌excellent, perfection and as it is like japanese carpenter, master👊! greetings from Argentina"
Might you consider a shot at the end of tools used for each video? For example you used what looked like a small bevel gauge to mark the dovetails inside the mortise. Of course there are a million ways to skin a cat but you learn a lot from watching the elegant efficacy of others. Are there certain tools you find are indispensable for layout in tight spaces?
The bevel gauge was actually rather big. Unfortunately I cant find miniature ones. Insespensibe in tight spaces is definitely a thin long marking knife!
lieber herr bracht, sehr super zuzusehen wie sie sich zu immer komplexeren verbindungen holzvorantreiben und diese auch schaffen. wenn sie so weitermachen werden sie bald sogar ihren japanischen tischlerkollegInnen zeigen können, wo der (holz)hammer hängt 8-)))
nice joint! I disagree with the short grain left at the back of the false tennon though, perhaps a longer one with more timber at the back to resist sheer at that point??
I love watching your videos and learning about the Japanese joints. What is the name of the chisel that you use starting at 6:43? That thing is awesome. Where do you learn all the joints that you feature?
If you want to learn some of these Japanese style joints I recommend The Complete Japanese Joinery by Yasuo Nakahara as possibly the best place to start (Second time I've recommended this book on this thread I know. Not spamming, it just is a great resource).
The level of complexity here is crazy surely no sane person would use this in real life but then I remember it's Japanese. With all these videos I try and think why would someone take the extra effort to make these? Does it provide extra strength or give the finished article a more pleasing aesthetic? Some times this is true and then you get ones like this one which seems to be trying too hard to do all of it at the same time and then I remember how Japanese culture views buildings. That they are non permanent and even moveable. I'm assuming then that one of the biggest reasons for many of these joints is they can (relatively) easily be undone and reused if required whilst maintaining all the other properties. Which would make perfect sense that you would add in the extra time and effort now to make things easier in the future. Either that or the Japanese are crazy just for fun which is also equally plausible :P Excellent work as always sir and I thank you for taking the time to show us.
Thank you! The main feature woth this joint is it is invisible on three sides and you can fit a beam in a tight space, since you don’t have a long tenon.
hiding endgrain so it's not exposed to the elements is really important for wood. most european styled timber frames use pegged joinery and the peg would allow water to enter for bacteria to start eating the wood away. they still last a long time if the roof sheds it far enough away, but siding that covers each nail with the next piece of siding is how it's done the euro way. most modern carpenters in america for exterior use don't care and just get pressure treated pine. it still rots away super fast because of how little care we have for the long term. the only people that would do this sort of work have the time and the passion. the money aspect to pay a carpenter to make these joints doesn't work for 99% of people in the world. i'm sure mr bracht only makes things for himself, friends, or the very very wealthy.
Another great video thanks. I’ve been looking for a joint to fit my slab down onto leg tenons for my Roubo bench and this might work. If I do the traditional wedged through joint I’ll not get it out of the building when I move! Can the joint be disassembled? Do you think this would be a good option? Or would recommend another joint? The slab is huge and in all honestly probably doesn’t need fixing but joinery is fun right! Thanks again
Thank you! Yes, it would be feasable to use this joint for your workbench. If you leave the shachi sen pins long you can easily disassemble the joint. I would leave a gap, like the one in my sao tsugi (ep 35) video, so you can persuade the leg off the floating tenon with a wedge or nail iron.
Dorian Bracht Thank you. Do you dimension your blanks by hand? I love this process but as the timbers get bigger squaring end grain becomes challenging! My bench legs are 6”x5” Sapele. Not easy! I appreciate your videos very much; you are passionate and fastidious - a great combination. I’ve just finished making my first kebiki and it works wonderfully but I found I had to use the thumbnail blade I made for the gauge to finish cutting the mortise as it as tiny. My point to this is certain joints clearly require odd chisels! I’d love to see you talk about favoured ones and also your thoughts on layout.
I've never seen a joint like that before. Anyone know what sort of application this little beauty would have? Seems like a furniture joint at first glance.
Are you referring to a certain book when making these joints or is it just personal knowledge? I'd like to do something similar where I can learn all the joints to practice my accuracy.
Since a lot of wood glues are stronger than the wood itself, would it be possible to make larger dimension lumber for this kind of work by gluing 2x4's together? Would love to build a little tea house on a shoestring budget since anything like 4" thick is pretty much impossible to find in my area.
i love your work. i used to watch an american tv show called the woodwrights shop. he makes everything traditionally, but usually the european/american way. it's a little boring once you sort of get it. i love how your videos make me feel like i'm just a beginner wondering what's going to happen next. i've made things like a violin or cabinets and am starting on a large timber frame and have done much in between. it's fun to see something i've dreamed up like a beveled sliding dovetail that has a dovetail on the end that keys and slides into a different housed joint - being made the proper way and to find out its actually something from a different tradition. perhaps i have some japanese in me. do you use a table saw? something difficult for me is getting stock so exactly similar (especially for a scarf joint). i think my planes aren't at the correct angle or something and i get tear out in hard woods. the planes are sharp, but maybe not hair shaving sharp. it takes a lot of skewing and changing direction to tame. sometimes i wish i had some machines to do fast precise things. for pine and poplar it's like butter though. and planing multiple together to get exact sizes is easy. some day i'll have the time to make my own planes. i don't have the time or money to woodwork anymore though. and i never sleep well hence the rambling comment made in the middle of the night.
Thanks for the comment! Yes Roy Underhill, I know the show. Ive seen it a number of times. Also I use machines to dimension my stock. It helps me save time.
Incredible! I'm new to your channel but I'm hooked! Do you have a suggestion for some good literature pertaining to the art of Japanese joinery and the setup phase? My wife got me the book by Kiyosi Seike but a lot of it's just pictures. It's still a good book but I'll need a more technical guide to this in order to get to the next step. Thanks!!!
@@juliocesarcaseresmena6588 no, pero si este chavalo habla ingles, no le vas a poner un mensaje en español, que tiene el que estar usando el traductor de google, no tiene que
Charpantier yo entiendo...pero no crees que en la misma manera, a como los hispanoparlantes, hacemos el esfuerzo de entender el Inglés, no podría haber reciprocidad de parte de ellos!!?? No es por jugar de culazo, pero nada cuesta leer los comentarios de nosotros los suscriptores, que somos los que "mantenemos" vivos éstos canales... El arte de este mae, la dedicación y la técnica es envidiable...de mi parte tome su like buen hombre!!! 👍🏻
@@juliocesarcaseresmena6588 si el video fuera en español, le diria que lo diga en español. pero las cosas como son. el sujeto es carpintero no traductor
Excellent work as always. I'm a subscriber and have watch all your videos at least once if not more. Quick question on this joinery. Are the two pins left long on purpose to disassemble later or can they be cut flush for a more permanent but aesthetic look? Again thanks
Thank you very much, I‘m glad you enjoy them! I think they are usually trimmed flush, but I need to disassemble these show joints every now and again for clients and such. So I leave them long.
Super Video, Dorian. Die Verbindung ist super und wie die aussieht auch belastbar. Sprich wenn man so ein regal bauen würde, mit der Querverbindung. Dreht das regal dann, dann müssten die Verbindungen doch dafür halten? Mal eine Frage, kennst du dich mit dem >Shinwa Winkel »Sashigane«, 510 mm, flexibel < aus? besser gesagt, mit der japanischen Skalierung? Weil die unterschiedliche "Rechenarten" haben (Durchmesser zu Umfang oder zum Quadrat)
Danke Günter! Sollte halten wenn man genug Materialstärke hat. Den Sashigane gibts auch in mm. Die Mathematik und verhältnisse bleiben eigendlich gleich, egal welches System du benutzt, oder?
Bitte schön. :-) Ich habe ja den Sashigane felxibel, eine Seite ist in mm und die andere Seite ist in japanischer Einheiten. Dachte nur du wüsstest wie die den benutzen für die Umrechnungen, werde dann mal schauen. Ob ich es mit dem Video hinbekomme, nur dann mit der mm Teilung. :-) Trotzdem danke für deine Bemühungen. :-)
I think these joints are far too complex when a right angle joint can be made with a mortise and tenon and a couple of pegs. They simply take too long to make.
Right as the joint came together I ran back to watch the inside angle chiseling action on the female side only to see that you added that footage at the very end it's like you knew someone might care to see that moment in action again. Very nice!
Sorry for the delayed upload, had a rush job to take care of. Anyway, enjoy!
I have watched all of your videos, for some reason this astounded me. Super inspirational. Thanks.
For those who wait come the good things ;) Have to say, the Joint Venture is such a good idea for a series. Works as a resource as well as a therapeutic watch. Good job.
We forgive you
Thank you!
Thank you!
Wow wow I just began to try to work wood. I’m 69 yrs old. I do not think I will reach that degree of awesomeness. What beautiful work b
Took me 12 years in all with apprenticeship. So chances are high you can!
I've not seen skills like this in over 40 years. A lovely piece of work and video. Thanks very much.
Thank you!
Beautiful joint. So much detail unseen in the finished product! Complex in design, simple in presentation. Well done!
Thank you!
Working with hardwood makes us appreciate working with pine so much more. Nice job! Very cool
Another beautifully executed joint. A bit of practice, and patience, and it will be perfect in no time. Great job, Dorian.
(For anyone thinking I am "tearing him down", I have mad respect for what he is doing here. I just know the gaps are not what he is shooting for. Perfection is a journey, not a destination.)
Thanks :)
These are some of the very best videos on TH-cam. Just all around great. I really love the chisel work!!! Just excellent
Wow, the bed that my grandpa made for me 40 years ago had joints just like this. He's a carpenter trained by Japanese.
Did he pass some knowledge on to you? Was he happy with his career choice? I know time were probably rough.
@@nonameneeded4605 Sadly no. Life was rough for him so he forbade anyone in the family from similar career paths.
This has to be one of your more complex ones. Such a beautiful work.
Thank you!
Insane amount of work
Well, I'm Impressed, I wish I had your talent.
Thanks for posting.
Thank you!
Now i'm writing in enghish, look, read "amazing, it makes my ski crawl👌excellent, perfection and as it is like japanese carpenter, master👊! greetings from Argentina"
Thank you! Greetings from Berlin :)
Really good to see you back again; a most enjoyable video as usual. Thank you for posting. Bob
Thank you!
Had to watch twice because the firt time I had my eyes closed nodding my head to that stillmatic beat! Dilla donuts meets Roy Underhill.
Nicee 😎
Great video. I'm learning good things, as an amateur is something really good for me. Thanks.
Great work as always but personally not a fan of the prolonged pitch black scene transitions. I kept thinking my phone screen turned off.
Thanks, I‘m just trying to transition with less abruptness... still experementing, since self taught.
Nice music, awesome work, glad I am here
Thanks!
Awesome joint! Thank you for sharing.
Very cool as all these ventures are!!early congrats on 100k bro much deserved
Thank you man! Not quite there yet ;)
Dorian Bracht always bro..a d u r pretty darn close bro! 100x better than anything I could do..
Simply amazing, congrats!!!!
Thank you!
Worth the wait for sure!
Thank you!
Very interesting! So I guess the advantages are no glue required and you could disassemble if you needed! Thank you.
Was es alles für Verbindungen gibt? Mal wieder der Hammer was du da zeigt. 👍 👍 👍 Wauuuuuuu L. G. Martin
Danke! Ein paar gibts noch. Heisst ja nicht umsonst 051 ;)
Sweet!!! Absolutely class.
Thank you!
Just beautiful and awesome
Thank you!
Hope you have a book recommendation or two on where you're finding all these joinery techniques.
The Complete Japanese Joinery is a good start.
Muy buen trabajo. Disculpa que madera es. Saludos cordiales
Always love to see ur videos
Glad to hear!
Hey Mr. Show off. Now I have to watch another of your videos.
Might you consider a shot at the end of tools used for each video? For example you used what looked like a small bevel gauge to mark the dovetails inside the mortise. Of course there are a million ways to skin a cat but you learn a lot from watching the elegant efficacy of others. Are there certain tools you find are indispensable for layout in tight spaces?
The bevel gauge was actually rather big. Unfortunately I cant find miniature ones.
Insespensibe in tight spaces is definitely a thin long marking knife!
playing at x2 speed makes the background music drum n bass
lieber herr bracht, sehr super zuzusehen wie sie sich zu immer komplexeren verbindungen holzvorantreiben und diese auch schaffen. wenn sie so weitermachen werden sie bald sogar ihren japanischen tischlerkollegInnen zeigen können, wo der (holz)hammer hängt 8-)))
Hahaha, danke :)
Your video is 13:10 long but how long did it actually take to make this beautiful joint.
A couple of hours. But the figuring out and filming takes the most time.
nice joint! I disagree with the short grain left at the back of the false tennon though, perhaps a longer one with more timber at the back to resist sheer at that point??
True, if it were bigger I probably would. But for demo purposes....
Thanks btw ;)
Perfectly. It is like a separate art form. And what kind of connection, in your opinion, is suitable for practical use?
Thank you!
This joint is used in buildings, when you do not have the space to thread a full tenon.
Super parabéns o seu trabalho é simplesmente fantástico se tivesse condições financeiras aceitaria um mestre com o seu esti
Obrigado Dorian amei o seu comentário e lhe peço divulgar para interesse de outros futuros clientes
That's amazing joinery.
Thank you!
Lovely!
Thanks Adrian :)
It would be interesting to see a strength test of that joint. I would imagine that it is pretty stout.
It should be... maybe I'll do failure testing in the future...
I love watching your videos and learning about the Japanese joints. What is the name of the chisel that you use starting at 6:43? That thing is awesome. Where do you learn all the joints that you feature?
Chez nous, on appelle ça une "Guimbarde", je ne sais pas comment ça se dit en Anglais.
www.bordet.fr/guimbarde-veritas,fr,4,741S9.cfm
Michael Ford it is called a router plane.
En effet, je ne me souvenais plus...merci :)
If you want to learn some of these Japanese style joints I recommend The Complete Japanese Joinery by Yasuo Nakahara as possibly the best place to start (Second time I've recommended this book on this thread I know. Not spamming, it just is a great resource).
Thanks! I belive your questions have been answered :)
The level of complexity here is crazy surely no sane person would use this in real life but then I remember it's Japanese. With all these videos I try and think why would someone take the extra effort to make these? Does it provide extra strength or give the finished article a more pleasing aesthetic? Some times this is true and then you get ones like this one which seems to be trying too hard to do all of it at the same time and then I remember how Japanese culture views buildings. That they are non permanent and even moveable. I'm assuming then that one of the biggest reasons for many of these joints is they can (relatively) easily be undone and reused if required whilst maintaining all the other properties. Which would make perfect sense that you would add in the extra time and effort now to make things easier in the future. Either that or the Japanese are crazy just for fun which is also equally plausible :P
Excellent work as always sir and I thank you for taking the time to show us.
Thank you! The main feature woth this joint is it is invisible on three sides and you can fit a beam in a tight space, since you don’t have a long tenon.
hiding endgrain so it's not exposed to the elements is really important for wood. most european styled timber frames use pegged joinery and the peg would allow water to enter for bacteria to start eating the wood away. they still last a long time if the roof sheds it far enough away, but siding that covers each nail with the next piece of siding is how it's done the euro way. most modern carpenters in america for exterior use don't care and just get pressure treated pine. it still rots away super fast because of how little care we have for the long term. the only people that would do this sort of work have the time and the passion. the money aspect to pay a carpenter to make these joints doesn't work for 99% of people in the world. i'm sure mr bracht only makes things for himself, friends, or the very very wealthy.
Great stuff, envious result!
Thanks!
Wow incredible
Thank you!
I wish Ikea would make furniture using these joints.
What do you do with all of these joints? Do you have like a collection of them?
I sure do!
Can we get a picture of it? Maybe in the TH-cam feed thingy
How many pounds (or whatever system you use) would that joint hold at a 90° angle?
Another great video thanks.
I’ve been looking for a joint to fit my slab down onto leg tenons for my Roubo bench and this might work. If I do the traditional wedged through joint I’ll not get it out of the building when I move! Can the joint be disassembled? Do you think this would be a good option? Or would recommend another joint? The slab is huge and in all honestly probably doesn’t need fixing but joinery is fun right!
Thanks again
Thank you!
Yes, it would be feasable to use this joint for your workbench. If you leave the shachi sen pins long you can easily disassemble the joint. I would leave a gap, like the one in my sao tsugi (ep 35) video, so you can persuade the leg off the floating tenon with a wedge or nail iron.
Dorian Bracht
Thank you.
Do you dimension your blanks by hand? I love this process but as the timbers get bigger squaring end grain becomes challenging! My bench legs are 6”x5” Sapele. Not easy!
I appreciate your videos very much; you are passionate and fastidious - a great combination. I’ve just finished making my first kebiki and it works wonderfully but I found I had to use the thumbnail blade I made for the gauge to finish cutting the mortise as it as tiny. My point to this is certain joints clearly require odd chisels! I’d love to see you talk about favoured ones and also your thoughts on layout.
Thank you. I dimension my stoch with machines. On bigger stock I square off with a hand saw.
I've never seen a joint like that before. Anyone know what sort of application this little beauty would have? Seems like a furniture joint at first glance.
It’s actually used in carpentry, when a full length tenon isn‘t feasable.
Are the pins sawed flush at the end? Or are the left the way are?
Sawed flush.
Very nice thanks.
Thank you!
So accurate. Nice. Greetings from .ru!
Спасибо!
Excellent travail, comme toujours. Il faudrait un explicatif des applications que ces assemblages permettent.
Merçi. Il est un petit peu difficile en français, pardon.
Are you referring to a certain book when making these joints or is it just personal knowledge? I'd like to do something similar where I can learn all the joints to practice my accuracy.
I recommend The Complete Japanese Joinery by Yasuo Nakahara as a very good place to start.
Bisch Basch Bosch thanks mate!
Yeah, what Bisch Bash Bosch said.
Since a lot of wood glues are stronger than the wood itself, would it be possible to make larger dimension lumber for this kind of work by gluing 2x4's together? Would love to build a little tea house on a shoestring budget since anything like 4" thick is pretty much impossible to find in my area.
Hmm, wood glue doesn’t do to well when exposed to the elements. Maybe try to get lumber directly fom a sawmill or on ebay/craigslist.
i love your work. i used to watch an american tv show called the woodwrights shop. he makes everything traditionally, but usually the european/american way. it's a little boring once you sort of get it. i love how your videos make me feel like i'm just a beginner wondering what's going to happen next. i've made things like a violin or cabinets and am starting on a large timber frame and have done much in between. it's fun to see something i've dreamed up like a beveled sliding dovetail that has a dovetail on the end that keys and slides into a different housed joint - being made the proper way and to find out its actually something from a different tradition. perhaps i have some japanese in me. do you use a table saw? something difficult for me is getting stock so exactly similar (especially for a scarf joint). i think my planes aren't at the correct angle or something and i get tear out in hard woods. the planes are sharp, but maybe not hair shaving sharp. it takes a lot of skewing and changing direction to tame. sometimes i wish i had some machines to do fast precise things. for pine and poplar it's like butter though. and planing multiple together to get exact sizes is easy. some day i'll have the time to make my own planes. i don't have the time or money to woodwork anymore though. and i never sleep well hence the rambling comment made in the middle of the night.
Thanks for the comment! Yes Roy Underhill, I know the show. Ive seen it a number of times.
Also I use machines to dimension my stock. It helps me save time.
Incredible! I'm new to your channel but I'm hooked! Do you have a suggestion for some good literature pertaining to the art of Japanese joinery and the setup phase? My wife got me the book by Kiyosi Seike but a lot of it's just pictures. It's still a good book but I'll need a more technical guide to this in order to get to the next step. Thanks!!!
Thanks! Sure you can have a look at ‚TheComplete Japanese Joinery‘ and ‚Joints in Classical Japanese Architecture‘
TROP FORT !!!!!! beau travaille !
Merçi!!
Impresionante!, me pone mi piel de gallina, 👌excelente, maestro.
Saludo desde en Argentina
se habla ingles no español :v
@@andreicharpentierquesada4530 la excelencia no tiene idioma!!!
@@juliocesarcaseresmena6588 no, pero si este chavalo habla ingles, no le vas a poner un mensaje en español, que tiene el que estar usando el traductor de google, no tiene que
Charpantier yo entiendo...pero no crees que en la misma manera, a como los hispanoparlantes, hacemos el esfuerzo de entender el Inglés, no podría haber reciprocidad de parte de ellos!!??
No es por jugar de culazo, pero nada cuesta leer los comentarios de nosotros los suscriptores, que somos los que "mantenemos" vivos éstos canales...
El arte de este mae, la dedicación y la técnica es envidiable...de mi parte tome su like buen hombre!!! 👍🏻
@@juliocesarcaseresmena6588 si el video fuera en español, le diria que lo diga en español. pero las cosas como son. el sujeto es carpintero no traductor
How long does it take to make those joints?
This one was a couple of hours. But it was the first time making it.
boa tarde. muito interessante, mas lhe faço uma ressalva, faltaram as medidas. Quando postar, mostre todas as medidas.
Ok
Hey this is really nice, what woods do you generally use
Thanks! It’s Hard Maple.
Excellent work as always. I'm a subscriber and have watch all your videos at least once if not more. Quick question on this joinery. Are the two pins left long on purpose to disassemble later or can they be cut flush for a more permanent but aesthetic look? Again thanks
Thank you very much, I‘m glad you enjoy them!
I think they are usually trimmed flush, but I need to disassemble these show joints every now and again for clients and such. So I leave them long.
lovely. what wood do you use?
twmd oak,maple,bubinga. Its in the description.
what wood did you use?
Was für ein grundhobel ist das?
Me: *binge watches 51 joinery videos on youtube* Wife: Why did a company named Dictum bill our credit card $600?
Impresionante, Felicidades!
I 'bout had a panic attack at 3:53 when he put the chisel over the line. Thought he was gonna mess it up.
Hehehe, sorry for the scare ;)
Amazing!
Thank you!
I want all of these tools but I'm not skilled enough to use the properly
Same here. The skill comes with the practice and patience in the lay-out phase. The more you do, the better you'll get.
6:25 my god this part made me nervous!
Same as Mister Chikadee did for is covered “deck”...?
Love his channel!
Sim
Music de gran tourismo 4 ?
Super Video, Dorian.
Die Verbindung ist super und wie die aussieht auch belastbar. Sprich wenn man so ein regal bauen würde, mit der Querverbindung. Dreht das regal dann, dann müssten die Verbindungen doch dafür halten?
Mal eine Frage, kennst du dich mit dem >Shinwa Winkel »Sashigane«, 510 mm, flexibel < aus? besser gesagt, mit der japanischen Skalierung? Weil die unterschiedliche "Rechenarten" haben (Durchmesser zu Umfang oder zum Quadrat)
Danke Günter! Sollte halten wenn man genug Materialstärke hat.
Den Sashigane gibts auch in mm. Die Mathematik und verhältnisse bleiben eigendlich gleich, egal welches System du benutzt, oder?
Bitte schön. :-)
Ich habe ja den Sashigane felxibel, eine Seite ist in mm und die andere Seite ist in japanischer Einheiten. Dachte nur du wüsstest wie die den benutzen für die Umrechnungen, werde dann mal schauen. Ob ich es mit dem Video hinbekomme, nur dann mit der mm Teilung. :-)
Trotzdem danke für deine Bemühungen. :-)
Yo le aria dos taladres le pongo 2 tornillos de 1/2...y listo
Y yo también. Como complicar un trabajo para algo tan sencillo.
toujours aussi génial bravo
Merçi!
AWESOME!
Thanks
Wood work ,my blood.
Schick schick schick. Superior
Danke!
I subscribed
Thank you!
Dorian Bracht You deserve it
make a tutorial on Joinery
ベタ裏もいいとこ。
裏押しが大変。
I think these joints are far too complex when a right angle joint can be made with a mortise and tenon and a couple of pegs. They simply take too long to make.
This one is for the time when you have too little space to fit an entire tenon length.
Just subscribed. Epic joinery wood pornography, I needs the lotion stat!
Right as the joint came together I ran back to watch the inside angle chiseling action on the female side only to see that you added that footage at the very end it's like you knew someone might care to see that moment in action again. Very nice!
Hahaha, great! Glad you enjoyed it ;)
Pondering how a japanese master would judge this? 😁
Same :)
Com certeza
Good...🖒🖒i like.iam subsribe.thanks
Thank you!
Jaja, sorry!
Ich kriege Minderwertigkeitskomplexe, zufrieden? :D
Noch nicht XD
What can I say ?!
Deine Joint videos zu sehen ist Medidation....
Danke, freut mich!
Imagine doing this on hardwood, not easy
It is hard wood. It’s actually called Hard Maple and is very challenging to work...
Dorian Bracht Maybe i will give it a try in the future, but looks like it requires a lot of time to finish just one
Древесная камасутра
あ
Messy, tool craft and accuracy needs improving.
Still learning here...
Gay