Beautiful wood, tools and work! Hat’s off to you for using (or re-using) reclaimed wood! If more professional woodworkers would do the same I am sure that would add up to an incredible number of board feet of prime wood! More time put into it yes, but maybe customers are getting more educated these days and can really appreciate all aspects of quality wood and quality artisanship? It is the way of the future to salvage usable wood all across the different levels of craftmanship and artisanship in woodworking. Love to see such a great example of it!
Awesome build Awesome video. I'm glad you put this beginning to end video it shows how much work goes into a piece of furniture. It's a long process and look at the beautiful table at the end incredible work.
After watching bits an pieces on your Blog it's great to see it all come together in a single video - really nice. I'm interested in your choice of epoxy for for some of the table top glue up. What was the reason there?
Beautiful build, something that will get passed down for generations I'm sure. I've always used PVA for gluing up table tops, any reason you used epoxy for this one?
Simon Woodward basically just wanted to have the addition gap filling properties of the epoxy as every board wasn't jointed and then planed i was relying on clamping out any twist which can cause issues sometimes with tight seems
Awesome I'd like to do that on a smaller scale for a coffe table. As a home owner we don't have the tools you had but I'm sure I can make due with a bench planer and other tools. Great job. What flooring was it red oak?
Very late to the response, but the wood is a native timber from Western Australia called Jarrah. A very strong hardwood, which is why it gets used for construction and flooring. Also, termites hate it and won't touch the stuff.
Men, how do you deal with the overspray? I guess it will be dry powder once it miss the table, but.... does your tools and all you got behind doesn't get little sticky or something? by the way... project just came out great!
Very enjoyable and the end result is fantastic. I wonder if you could make the video a little better for untrained wood workers (read still learning since retirement) by adding a written dialogue as you prepare each step. Eg Cutting the end rails, cutting the stretcher, sanding the top etc. Just a thought to add to the quality of the video. I am not sure if that would be hard to do? Congratulations on another top build.
Check out my second channel (th-cam.com/users/jordancrawford2) for my vlogs of this project, there you will additional info like what you suggested. Usually I try and include a little bit of extra info in my videos but this time around it was proving to be a bit too difficult to incorporate. thanks for the comment :)
Thanks for the reply. I looked at the Blog (which I have never done before as I didn't know what it meant). Which I still don't know what it stands for but it was certainly interesting. Thanks again.
In what way are you referring? I did to the breadboard ends just edited it out, but if your referring to the tabletop glue-ups mostly because I was concerned about removing too much material for the dowels creating week spots in the lamination as the boards were so thin
Beautiful wood, tools and work! Hat’s off to you for using (or re-using) reclaimed wood! If more professional woodworkers would do the same I am sure that would add up to an incredible number of board feet of prime wood! More time put into it yes, but maybe customers are getting more educated these days and can really appreciate all aspects of quality wood and quality artisanship? It is the way of the future to salvage usable wood all across the different levels of craftmanship and artisanship in woodworking. Love to see such a great example of it!
I subscribe to a lot of woodworkers but JordsWoodShop is the only one I get excited and watch immediately when I see a new video is up.
made my day
What an amazing piece of work. You should be proud. I'm sure your client is very pleased. Great job!
Beautiful table. Wonderful work.
Excellent build. Hats off to you my friend.
Amazing work Jordan, it's excellent. I got to see that big sander at work. Thank you.
Awesome build Awesome video. I'm glad you put this beginning to end video it shows how much work goes into a piece of furniture. It's a long process and look at the beautiful table at the end incredible work.
As always, beautiful table. Really liked the music and video. Nice to watch you build..
Simply Beautiful!!!
Very nice build.
Beautiful work as always Jordan. Keep up the great work and videos.
I Cant believe thats reclaimed lumber..looks AWESOME Jordan!!🍻
Unreal workshop too
I'm so jealous of your shop! Table looked awesome!
haha cheers mate!
Great work beautiful table
Beautiful work.
A couple of machines here I didn't know existed.
Result is outstanding, of course.
Beautiful!
Fabulous table liked how you lined up the old nail holes
Bernie Stefan-Rasmus cheers mate
Thumbs up from South Africa 👍🏼
You're killing it! Keep up the good work!
I really enjoyed this video... very jimmy diresta-ish camera work. I like it, keep up the outstanding work and thanks!
jeff foster thanks Jeff!
Jordan, I would preferred if you explained your process and leave the music out. I very interested in learning about using our Australian timber.
Did you have to joint the edges?
Thanks for the video!
Looks outstanding I watch the video and forgot the time....I love Woodwork ❤️❤️❤️
You can find nice instructions on woodprix website if you like to build it
Nice job indeed!!!
Great table , just wondering what filler you used for the nail holes ?
Great video!
And great editing!
Love the work and vid! 👍🏾👍🏾
Beautiful
dope video , love the music choices.
After watching bits an pieces on your Blog it's great to see it all come together in a single video - really nice. I'm interested in your choice of epoxy for for some of the table top glue up. What was the reason there?
gee thats a nice build
Nice work Jordan. What hardener/additive do you use to turn the epoxy black?
Beautiful build, something that will get passed down for generations I'm sure. I've always used PVA for gluing up table tops, any reason you used epoxy for this one?
Simon Woodward basically just wanted to have the addition gap filling properties of the epoxy as every board wasn't jointed and then planed i was relying on clamping out any twist which can cause issues sometimes with tight seems
Awesome I'd like to do that on a smaller scale for a coffe table. As a home owner we don't have the tools you had but I'm sure I can make due with a bench planer and other tools. Great job. What flooring was it red oak?
Very late to the response, but the wood is a native timber from Western Australia called Jarrah. A very strong hardwood, which is why it gets used for construction and flooring. Also, termites hate it and won't touch the stuff.
Nice one!
What did you fill the nail holes with? great table btw
Doesn't give you the greatest satisfactions when beauty emerges from reclaimed wood...(and it.s a paid job ]
Muito bom o seu trabalho! Parabéns!
really nice job Jord!
ya would know it was reclaimed timber...
Brilliant
Men, how do you deal with the overspray? I guess it will be dry powder once it miss the table, but.... does your tools and all you got behind doesn't get little sticky or something?
by the way... project just came out great!
Put up poly sheets on the tools nearby
Dust collector on the router isn't working mate... haha
Very enjoyable and the end result is fantastic. I wonder if you could make the video a little better for untrained wood workers (read still learning since retirement) by adding a written dialogue as you prepare each step. Eg Cutting the end rails, cutting the stretcher, sanding the top etc. Just a thought to add to the quality of the video. I am not sure if that would be hard to do? Congratulations on another top build.
Check out my second channel (th-cam.com/users/jordancrawford2) for my vlogs of this project, there you will additional info like what you suggested. Usually I try and include a little bit of extra info in my videos but this time around it was proving to be a bit too difficult to incorporate.
thanks for the comment :)
Thanks for the reply. I looked at the Blog (which I have never done before as I didn't know what it meant). Which I still don't know what it stands for but it was certainly interesting. Thanks again.
Tres bien
Jordan,have u ever thought of buying one of those metal detector wands to help locate/remove any broken off nails in the re-claimed floorboards u get?
I did have one a long time ago but sometime between shop moves I misplaced it and haven't been able to relocate it, super useful tools for sure!
A magnet would probably work as well, cost less to acquire and nothing to operate.
Wish people over here would get away from cheap laminate floor boards.
Kool vd
Oh mate, all the safety sallys and ur wearing gloves at the saw .... ;-)
Why the epoxy glueup of the boards?
How come you don't dowel the boards
In what way are you referring? I did to the breadboard ends just edited it out, but if your referring to the tabletop glue-ups mostly because I was concerned about removing too much material for the dowels creating week spots in the lamination as the boards were so thin
If you want to know how to make it yourself, just look for woodprix.
Man. Video made me motion sick! Sorry I couldn't finish watching, always enjoy your content.
Ian Herd can't win then all! Hopefully my next one will be less motion sickly! Thanks mate
If the motion in video is too fast you could set the speed to 0.75 or 0.5 in the video settings. Don't know if it helps but you could give it a try.
Kool Vid as keyboard i is no good ok
Stodoys comes with very useful plans with all the details you need.
Step 1: Get a million dollars worth of equipment.
This isn't a "how-to" so why complain about free content?
@@JordsWoodShop Not sure how a joke is a complaint?
could haved watch. but the music has to go
Thers always volume duh