Thank you so much for this video, James. Amazing stuff!!! It would be so nice to run a 6-week adult bricklayer course. But I am very happy to have this video on London Trade College.
@@jamesbyronbragg can appreciate that James ,maybe mention that in the vid I know it’s a basic corner demonstration but knowing a good setup will certainly help beginners no dig intended 👍
Well done ✔️ James 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
Thank you so much for this video, James. Amazing stuff!!!
It would be so nice to run a 6-week adult bricklayer course.
But I am very happy to have this video on London Trade College.
Very interesting bricklayer techniques. I am looking forward to the next videos.
Many thanks
I know this is going to be a good video. It’s late at night so I clicked on the watch later button. Have a great day.
I remember James when I was at Hackney nice bloke
I really enjoyed the video! Very informative and well done 👌🏻👌🏻
What makes it a quoin? just looks like a corner
I really enjoyed it
Very informative
👍👍👍
I’d have materials set up on the face side firstly I went to college in 88👍
Agreed
Bricks are that side to enable filming
@@jamesbyronbragg can appreciate that James ,maybe mention that in the vid I know it’s a basic corner demonstration but knowing a good setup will certainly help beginners no dig intended 👍
Do you also use lime mortar for students? Does that break apart more easily so bricks can be reused?
Great video buddy
Never but never stack bricks on the face side .
Where’s the quoin
Yes sorry admin area no quoin in sight!
But the corner of buildings built out of masonry are often called Quoins, meaning Corner! Look in dictionary
That's just a normal corner
Correct it is. Just a brick corner
Promo*SM
That's not a quoin
Actually your wrong think about it
You could have another wall stepped In from it and it becomes a quoin
Agree with you no quoin
A quoin is the proper name for a corner in brickwork, from French, like a lot of old building terminology .