@@pipepuffah6548 I am a software developer (that larps as a contractor) and we say it "The difference between a bug and a feature is how good your salesperson is." Same meaning but I love that the sentiment exists in more useful industries.
Hearing you talk about how long it takes to make something makes me feel VERY seen. Got into wood working when I bought a house and every seemingly simple task has balooned into a multi-step, multi-day (if not week) process
Lester, do NOT feel bad. I started out around 21, 58 now, by saying that a $20 towel rack was WAY TOO MUCH money, and I could make something nicer for much less.... $200 later, we did have a nicer towel rack.... After spending the $200, I simply HAD to recover my money one way or another. 37 years later, still not there yet. Just have fun and make a couple nice things.
We must be brothers! I do my research before starting a job and then announce to my wife that the guy in the video said it takes 15 minutes, which means it'll take me at least two hours! 🤣
I never comment on these woodworking videos. Literally my first time. I have been woodworking on and off for 50 plus years. I agree with so much of your approach. Experiment, make mistakes, fix them as best you can and don't be embarrassed by how long it takes. Even with all the power tools, it can easily become a slow tedious process. I like the power tool/hand tool approach. Nice to use the hand saw, chisel or hand sanding when you can. In the North East humidity would make that joint open and close no matter what you do. I am pretty sure the vertical and horizontal pieces will soon be different heights. I have cut pieces up after years of movement and rejoined them only to have it all move again in the next season. Solid wood I so much more fun than plywood. I think beech is a great choice, tight grained and pretty stable. The furniture industry certainly agrees. What's the point of having all those wonderful tools if you don't jump in and play with them?
Hybrid approach!!! I like that name. I am big on using the best tool for the job too. I love hand tools. There is nothing like a super sharp hand plane and the glossy finish it leaves, but there is also something very satisfying about running my Milwaukee jig saw through a piece, with a sharp ground blade, and seeing a near perfect finish. 🕊🕊🕊
Agreed and humidity. I was thinking when looking at his dovetails that they looked like the professionally factory ones in several pieces I have in the middle of January. In July, zero space anywhere! Even in some of the projects I built in December and January, in July, my dovetails are perfect!
This was very impressive for someone who's never done dovetails work before. You get an A, just because after all the challenges, distractions and life itself, your tenacity made it happened at the end and it came out just beautiful. Well done!
Solid A for a first attempt, and A+ at making it work via corrections, adjustments, and fixes. This is a GREAT example of actually showing the gaps and problems, the fixes, and the final product. 🕊🕊🕊 Much appreciated, and loved the cameos ("Siri, call the Beard")
Hi! New subscriber here. Didn't take me too long, I jumped on when I saw the Ryobi jigsaw with the Festool label. I've been a woodworker as long as I can remember. I've done other things, but I've earned most of my living doing woodwork. I'm retired now, but that only means I have time to build a shop in my garage and make things I want to make instead of my customer. Like yourself, I love hybrid woodworking. Power tools are great and fast. Hand tools are great and slow. Both take a lot of skill, and the skills are different. You can get there with either one but using both together lets you use your judgement when either is appropriate. And it's often highly amusing to see the look on everyone's face when you're working in a shop with 50 benches and nobody can figure out how to even the tops on this monster cabinet we built, and I took a Stanley No 5 hand plane out of my toolbox and slicked them all up in about 15 minutes :-) Some of the younger guys had never seen one, lol. Given it's your first set, I'll grade you a B+ on the 🕊tails. It would have been better to not have to put in a piece, but knowing you did, and how to, merits you an A on that part. You're right it takes artistry to know how to hide your mistakes, because everybody makes them. One thing I was taught was there's more than one way to skin a cat, and sometimes we do things one way because that's how we were taught, or learned by experience. Doesn't mean our way is the right way, or that any other is the wrong one. It means that's the way, among a myriad others, we're most comfortable. I'm in Fort Worth, and I love the Plywood Company too. Perhaps we'll run into each other there one day. My family escaped the lottery so far, praise to all gods great and small. Uncommonly warm weather we're having this year; I suspect that's part of the reason. Stay safe out there. I've got 50 years in and 10 fingers. Dominic
Good job bringing in Encurtis, it's how I feel watching some of his work sometimes. As a weekend warrior with a day job, 3 kids and zero joinery experience, I think you did great, you went for it. Solid B+, 🕊️
Looks great. I used to watch my grandfather build furniture in is garage workshop when I was a boy. Watching your videos has inspired me to take up the hobby myself.
Having seen a few of your videos via the recommendations algorithm, I had no idea you were NOT a 1M+ account. It's surely on the horizon - great content, excellent presentation, humour, and the right level of self-awareness. Your point about 'showing them the way' is exactly why I've been gearing up to start the same thing. Immediate sub, at least for oppo research ;)
How....how is it possible you dont have 10x more subs...? Awesome channel. Does anyone else remember the marking knife video?? The only woodworking channel that made me cry...excellent video!
Overall, I'd give the dovetails a B with an A+ for error correction - the fact that they definitely needed filling, and that sanding error both knock you down a peg or two, but you didn't have to redo it, so it's not a C. (F would be giving up on it entirely in favour of a different join type. But you did well enough with filling the gaps that it looks great from a finished project perspective, and you turned the sanding mistake into a neat asymmetry accent, which is top tier fixing work.
1. Insert dove emogee(?) I don't know how. 2. A- who cares if it was your first. They are VERY good dovetail!!! 3. I love your approach (use every tool you can think of) welcome to my woodworking world! 4. That is the most incredible and brilliant reason for being a TH-camr I've ever heard. You're a great dad!
As someone who's seen far too many re-purposed pieces of furniture, the chamfer on one edge just gives it the character that lets you confuse people with the stories of how you found this in the back of a barn out on the west end of town that was about to be torn down, and you're just sure that they found that it wouldn't fit in the dormer bedroom the way it originally was so they probably knocked that corner off to give them a quarter of an inch more space so the door would open and close, while telling the next guy that when you made this table you were debating whether or not you should ease this one corner so that if someone fell coming through the door when there was Ice on the steps, they wouldn't have a sharp edge of the table to land on, then you put the chamfered edge on the far end of the table because you're just that kind of a guy. Then let the two people try to work out what's going on with the table. Because of course the best thing to see when two guests start to argue is the 🕊tails carrying off the ☮.
@@Geppetto04I have to disagree slightly - to me only the process matters since my 🕊skills are still non-existant and everything I make falls apart. I class myself as an expert at turning any wood into firewood but boy do I enjoy the process😁
Found you and just started watching you and your one of my top woodworks to watch now. I can feel you so much with you and the kiddos getting sick. My house just did the same thing. Glad your house is better. Your comedy is right up my alley. Keep doing you and making the haters hate lol great channel man. 🕊️
I love the way it turned out! (The layered beech actually gives me some ideas!) Mid way through the video, it finally struck me what I enjoy about your content, and what TRULY sets you apart from the others in the YT woodworker space - the subtle and skillful ministry. Bravo my friend and glad the family is healthy again! 🕊️
What I loved most about this is the honesty of showing your "mistakes" and how you fixed or featured them. Great job, and inspirational. Also, I now have a book to read (The War of Art), and a great quote about resistance. No, wait, not a quote about resistance. The quote was "...the brain works best when it is curious and engaged in solving interesting problems..." - and that I am going to use! Thanks!
Two chamfers would have been better, but the one states that symmetry should be slightly violated, as it is in nature. You made a left and a right. I do like fiddler crabs for the same reason.
I can't tell you how gratifying it was to see how f-ed up the joints were when you first cut them, and I can't tell you how inspiring it was to see you do such a masterful job of making those canyon sized gaps absolutely disappear. It means there is hope that one day I too might make something that exceeds the box I made in shop class in middle school.
Gonna be honest. One of my absolute favorite parts of your videos are the TH-cam woodworker crossovers that occur. It's been great watching you level up, and I remember back when you had like 20k subs! Your production quality has always been great.
DFW guy here, I too feel like for a first-time dovetail project you did extremely well, it is an earned skill cutting dovetail much like playing golf. Great editing and camera work, interesting choice on the wood. Put the word out as often as possible that when fellow woodworkers are using birch in any form, plywood, etc., we are sourcing that from Russia and some loophole they have manipulated to sell to us. Maple is a reliable, nice domestic choice if this works with your thoughts on Russia.
I love it! Solid B+. Pros: this video was a LOT of problem solving - which is what real woodworking is - scratching your head, fighting with tools. I also love the lopsided chamfer. It creates a story, a talking point. 🕊️
Your subscription story worked. I'm a subscriber! The great projects, the spiritual wisdom and the snark-filled content were definitely strong selling points as well.
I am sorry. I clicked off to watch cat hunting dove videos. A real wood worker will use beaver teeth they collected from their forearms after fighting a beaver for some prime black walnut. I recommend use what ever works best for you. If you like the speed of power tools, go for it. If you like the satisfaction of doing it by hand, do that. Nice first attempt. I would give an A for the final result.
I’ve just watch this video, the second I’ve watched of yours; I think I’ve found a replacement for rewatching Norm Abram’s republished videos. He was a real woodworker and excellent instructor on PBS from the ancient time before the interwebs (yes I am that old) whom I considered the very best at the craft. You keep doing you and I’ll keep watching and contributing 👍🏼 to influence the TH-cam alligatorism thingies to look on you favourably. Oh, yeah; I can’t be bothered looking for the 🕊️ emoji and your first dovetails are definitely an “A”. Fixing the mistakes gets you an “A++” cuz that’s how you learn and get better at the craft.
Great video and appreciate you showing the issues along the way. Most TH-cam content shows everything going perfectly and flawlessly. Trying new things out there seems to always be bumps along the way, but I’ve looked back and have been thankful for them as makes me better!
Sir, I come from the land of lime green power tools and really enjoy your videos. The main reasons are: You have a welcoming and inclusive nature, meaning there is no elitist approach ("if you don't do it that way, then") and your narrative is from a deeply positive perspective. All your projects scream: "I don't know if I'm going to do it right but if not I'm going to learn a lot along the way", which I thoroughly enjoy. Thank you for your content.
I love hand cut dovetails, they show another level of care and skill technique that comes by time and effort. They are difficult no matter what people say. Love the table and chamfer on one side only - it tells a story of your woodworking journey.
🕊️ everything in life is a rough draft. Until it’s a paying customer, I’ll just keep practicing… iterate then repeat. I genuinely didn’t recognize your voice for the first 5 min, got so excited when it was you. Thanks for sharing, and love that you shared your purpose and expressed living your life on a continuum.
Great video - Good+ woodworking. Of course, that comes from a woodworking newbie who has yet to try making a real fine furniture piece. I am waiting for my impending move to Tennessee to set up my woodworking man cave and try my hand at making tables and chairs for my new home. I enjoy your videos🕊🕊 always come away with a nugget or three to help me in my future woodworking projects.
Not that interested in woodworking to be honest, but as a father to three boys your story about why you started your channel is about the most inspiring thing I have heard in a long time. You rock! And I subbed, good luck sir!
I'm always impressed by your videos. Your planning, music and overall production quality is that of a top tier youtuber.I see you going far. As far as your 🕊tails go, you get an A, not perfect, but for a first time, way better than my attempts. Dovetails seem so easy until you get halfway and realize how perfect they need to be.
I'll definitely give you an A. My first attempt by hand was not so great. If you haven't heard of him, look up Rob Cosman. He's the master at dove tails. He gives a lot of great pointers, and his videos are raw and unedited. The one big thing I picked up from him was. When you're laying out to trace your pins, you should off set it by the the blade kerf on both side. This way you get a much tighter fit, and don't have any gaps to fill in.
A+ from someone who is really bad at dovetails, but appreciates the resourcefulness. Project came out great, though I WOULD finish both edges the same way (you're welcome). I would, in fact, round them over with a fairly largish radius bit. But it's not my project and that's a detail that is personal. Enjoy the fruits of your labor and stay well!
what’s up with all the new tools…i’m thinking you must have caught your flu and sinus bug while shopping online…hence todays sponsor surf shark. having had small kids, the beach is genius. it looks like a kid has already marked on it…A- on the dovetails - I probably would have ended up with a table 8” narrower (after I erased my first try). With all the track saws you own, you used the cordless festool…maybe the most honest review ever given.
I rarely if ever comment on TH-cam videos, but this video was a perfect blend of my woodworking hobby, entry level ways to handle dovetails with a mixture of tools, and supreme voice commentary. I’m not sure if it was the stories about passing around sickness with the kids, extended times inside from inclement weather, or the extended time it took to finish the project I could relate to the most. I love the way you pace your videos alongside the commentary. Reminds me of ol Frank Howarth. 10/10 for me - looking forward to your next video!
This is the first of your videos that I've seen. I love your sense of humor and humility. I'm also okay with your not getting the dove tails quite right but I'm sure they still look a ton better than what I could do. Dove.
🕊️ Kudos on the dovetails! They are my nemesis. I have made every single mistake and attempted fix that you did. You made me feel right at home! Great job!
As someone who aspires to create furniture I'd be proud for people to see, I found this video informative, entertaining, and inspiring. I hope you keep creating, and I think you should keep rolling with the hybrid woodworking style whether combining powertool and hand tool methods in one project or trying out projects that highlight each. I fully understand the desire to embrace the history of word working with hand tools, because it just feels honest ... but I also have 2 kids, chores and want to see things get done.
In my considered opinion, your dovetails are great. Best of all, the honesty and self-depreciation strike a ringing chord with me. I am a wood hacker of dubious skill, but I love the craft anyway. My first dovetails were cut raggedly and I didn't mark one of the sides of the intended drawer body and accidentally cut tails instead of pins on one end. your fixes for the gaposis was great.
This video really resonates with me- I'm an a-level (18 yrs old) design technology student doing a cabinet making final project, and I've had a lot of knock backs - my teacher has also been kind of a patronising arse in places, trying to tell me how to do it when at the end of the day its my project and she shouldn't interfere. But this video shows that I can make mistakes as I'm going, as long as I'm willing to solve them as I go- thanks for the motivation. That joint was definitely an A
I really enjoyed you bringing in Encurtis and The Wood Whisperer - love knowing there is such a supportive community. I'm new to hand tools and agree with having a hybrid approach (I sometimes like being a masochist and using a hand saw, but really it's the process that I enjoy) I would highly recommend Matt Estlea for things hand tool related - has the BEST online handtool school out there!!
Love your whit and your honesty about the mistakes you made; as well as showing how you dealt with them! Absolutely LOVE that you only chamfered one side of the table! MY OCD IS SCREAMING!!! LOL 🕊 🕊 Bigger and Better Dovetails than I've ever made! Great editing as well, my friend. *Parenting... You're doing it right! Shalom, from Tennessee.
Very much relating to your approach/experience here. I wanted to make almost the same table design as a riser over a microwave on a work surface. I'd planned on 45 mitre, where you've used dove tails. My shonky saw put paid to that idea, so i ended up with straight cuts and butt joints. The board was cupping and slightly split between the staves, but like you, after getting it all together, some filler, glue, and a wax and it's actually a not unattractive finished piece. I'll definitely be trying for dove tails next time after watching this. Well done!
This is so refreshing thank you!!! To see some mistakes, and how to deal with them and adjust, I think is massively important; I imagine a lot of beginners or would-be woodworkers see people drawing straight lines and think "well, I can't even do that, so this isn't for me..." but something I've found watching really experienced woodworkers is that, even with chops built up over the years, things don't always go to plan. What has continually amazed me though, is the creativity and flexibility they develop in order to make the accidents look intentional, or even turn out better than planned. It reminds me of musicians; If you know what to look and listen for, you might catch a glimpse of your hero royally effing up, but turning it into magic anyways. Nearly everything, when it comes to wood, is fixable. As with most things, perfection is the enemy of progress. You can either let fear/apprehension rob you of a potential good time, or not. On that note, I'm going to go brush off my tools and get to work. Thank you for the inspiration.
Early in my venture into woodworking I thought I could adjust dovetails, it never worked. Now I know which lines must never be crossed and which ones don't matter as the other piece will be later cut to fit. Nice job fixing things up. Here is a tip when buttering up joints with glue and sawdust, use a plastic spatula, metal ones can sometime turn the glue sawdust black. Not sure why I know that.
Remember Bob Ross: "We don't make mistakes! We only have some happy little incidents! Sincerly spoken, I would'nt have been satisfied with those dovetails, but in the end: who cares? The result looks great and (almost) nobody would ever give this table such a close inspection, to find out all the parts of wood and glue you've inserted to hide those "little incidents" I made a lot of dovetail joints by hand within the years, but it is somehow not predictable. Sometimes they turn out great, but sometimes you struggle to hide all the "little incidents", because in principle the joint works, but does not look "professional". Just use it and think about, where you can improve it the next time! Greetings from Germany (so don't mind my bad English) Norbert
I like the chamfer on the one side only. Keep the asymmetrical vibe, the sharp line against the wall will look great and not collect dandruff. But instead of a chamfer, maybe a round-over on that side and front edge for comfort and damage resistance. I bet it looks great and you don't risk hamster invasion, giving them no place to sleep. And you're also right about what draws "engagement" -- an important skill for any TH-camr.
I believe you get an A, because this is your first time as well as being able to recover from the mistakes you made. I love learning things from others and this was a great experience. Great Job...
I agree with Mark. For a first-timer, you did great! Also, because you figured out how to fix those goofs, that's really the important part. I'm assuming that you've heard the saying that a true craftsman knows how to fix their mistakes, so good for you. Also, your commentary gave me several reasons to chuckle, so that made what could have been another boring build video, fun. I am now a subscriber.
The video was great. The Pressfield book is great. I am in no position to grade dovetails; I use pocket screws. Good for you to take the challenge on. If I made those dovetails on my first try, I would be happy. Great job for your kids. There is a lot to admire in this video.
I would love to get into woodworking but was derailed by an unexpected (and TOTAL) house renovation. Doing almost everything myself has given me a real appreciation of doing everything 'hybrid'. I rate your dovetails A for Amazing and Awesome and I love the chunky-ness of them. I bet I could even do those and the small ones give me the heebie-jeebies. 🕊🕊
Nice job! My first large dovetails were for my Roubais-style workbench, and at least they are functional. I had to fill gaps, too, also using wafers of wood---thicker ones than you needed. So yours were objectively better; therefore, to protect my self esteem, you get an A+.
lol..... (scribble/scribble...forehead rub...bewildered look) Greg (garden grove, CA usa) this has been very enjoyable to watch! I"m 60 and feel like I'm a "rookie" at everything I do in life. Seeing your tools & shop, and knowing you're not a rookie, and yet mistakes happen and time-lines get extended, and costs increase... all this fits nicely in the age-old saying "misery loves company". How many posts on TH-cam that we admire, have had edits, and cuts, and retakes - and an assumption is developed "this person is a master at their craft - they never get anything wrong."? It's refreshing to see a true master have "set backs". (I'm going to show this to my wife, right now - It'll make me feel better)
🕊️ production value, incredible. Hilarious, and informative. Also made me feel better about all of my constant mistakes, and your references to ‘ the War of Art’ was incredibly helpful and inspiring. Thanks brother man. Keep it up. I hope your kids get their PS5. It’s excellent. Maybe I’d be a better woodworker if I wasn’t a 45 year old man who stilled played video games.
Great video. I am an occasional woodworker whose projects focus only on functionality, not on artistry. I use lots of screws. I watch woodworking videos out of admiration, not even to learn how to do it, since I don't think I'll ever do a dove tail joint. So I really appreciated this video from someone just a little bit ahead of me. I see it as a prophecy of what my first project might look like. I also fully support your motive for making this video! Glad you're training your children well! I am a better video editor than I am a woodworker, and you have great production value. 🕊
Great video. I would have gave you C for the dovetails. The Wood Whisperer has a good point though. I have not tried a dovetail yet. I started building a guitar from scratch a long time ago and cut the neck too thin and had to redo it. The resistance struck me too. I am just getting ready to try the neck again. Thanks for the video.
First time watching, loved it. I hope all of your videos are like this. You are refreshingly... normal, human. It is very inspiring for me, who is also battling literal everything you talked about. Thank you! 🕊
Awesome for a first attempt-I didn’t get to finish my first hardwood dovetail project yet 😢. I think a hybrid approach is the the most approachable/fun. Mix and match techniques with what you like/have available! I really liked using masking tape too (and another TH-camr’s dovetail guide). Thanks for sharing your first dovetail project-flitting off to watch a cat video 🕊️.
A common carpenter's trick for softening end grain for more effective chiseling/paring is to spritz the grain with clean water. Equally important is to keep your chisel razor sharp. If possible, have one tool for chiseling and a separate chisel or slick used only for paring. The force of hammer blows from chiseling takes the fine edge off your blade quickly and almost immediately lessens its ability to make fine paring cuts.
Dear Drew This is an excellent project and the result is impressive. I assume you are an enthusiast in woodworking as I am. With other words we are not professionals and learned it in a apprenticeship. So our learn curve to aquire the necessary skills and techniques is/was steep. From my point of view, the most important point is the enjoyment to work with wood and learn new things. It is creativity on many levels. Yes, I am a Festool fan too. Having the right tools does not substitute lack of skills but helping to bridge deficiencies to get good results in a good time. At least this applys to me. To put the circumstances into considerations the result is excellent and I like you honest comments to this excellent video. Thank you for this and I like it. I hope you understand my remarks as concouragement and constructive and not as the opposite. English is not my mothertongue. Keep in touch - Kind Regards from Bern (Switzerland)
My only comments are these: 1. Ain't nothin' wrong with hybrid woodworking. I personally prefer (for myself) hand-tool primary/power tool dimensioning, but whatever you do, it's all good. 2. Crappy dovetails... I mean, if you were a professional hand-tool furniture maker. But for a first run at it? They're better than mine were. Good job! 3. I might subscribe. I find your sacrilegious commentary deeply amusing. 4. I take 3. back. I definitely will subscribe. Aren't you proud of yourself?
I’m not sure who said it (maybe Christopher Schwarz?), but the wood doesn’t care whether it was done with power tools or hand tools. My first dovetails weren’t even close to as good as yours, I’d give you an “A”, you did really good! I use both hand tools as well as power tools, and nobody has criticized me - but I wouldn’t care anyway - they just wouldn’t be allowed to hang out in my shop any more. I mean, we are a community of woodworkers and we should be supporting each other and cheering on ANY success each of us has. Learning is a process, and I enjoy the process! Your dovetails rock!
That final piece looks stunning. I recogize myself so much in your comments here, even though I have only made simpler pieces so far, such as shelves etc. I might even try this design. 😊
I’ve built custom cherry kitchen cabinets and more. Seeing other people who pay attention to detail and having love for their work is rare. Many people just don’t care enough or I’m too much of a perfectionist. If I was paying for wood projects I don’t think I’d have 2nd thoughts about having you do one for me or recommending you to someone so take that as your grade. I’ve worked for people who were architects in their homes and they were picky and hard to work for. I believe it was my personality and attention to detail that allowed me the opportunity to work for people with such high standards that also paid very well.
Love seeing Matt Outlaw aka 731 Woodworks in your Patreon list and seeing all of the other TH-cam WW community supporting/messing with/talking shit on each other.
Solid A for your first tails man. they look better then my first try (I think I hid that first try in the back of the attic). Rob Cosman has probably one of the simplest approaches to dovetails I've ever seen. It's simple and fast (comparatively). once you get his system down, you can obviously adapt to your liking, but he's got the second fastest dovetail in the world atm. watch his speed video, it's crazy. if you think power tools are faster, you'll be in for a Suprise. And it doesn't require a dozen tools and hours of work. he does a set of 3 tails and pins in just a few minutes. It's a blast to watch and a great learning experience. Honestly though, If I was doing DT's the size you are here, I'd be pulling out the router too :D
Those 🕊tails look pretty durn good, but only because of the super clever way you masked your errors. Here's a dovetail tip: make them super tight, but then hollow out the middles so they slide in easily. People only see the outsides. Sorry, having typed that I realize it's more a tip for sliding dovetails, but that's probably up ahead in your woodworking journey anyway. :)
Thank you for highlighting two important woodworking truths about doing this hobby with kids and on TH-cam. 1) Time to do woodworking while juggling kids and 2) Amount of time to edit the videos. I also truly believe that it's not necessarily how good you are at the techniques as it is to learn how to fix the (many) mistakes one makes. B+ on the 🕊🕊
Around 7:14, before you got your chisels going, I thought it would have been interesting to KEEP the curves. Yes, you would later have had to make outer curves to match the inner curves, but that can be done with a template too. Note that the sharp corners in the traditional version create stress concentrators, avoided in the rounded version, and so are stronger.
That was super fun to watch. It’s actually quite an inspiration to see you trying dovetail on the first try with an entry table, plus gigantic pins and tails! Every time I try something new when woodworking, I make tons of mistakes and learn from them. This is encouraging, because you leaned into the errors and owned them. The power tools you use are above my financial capacity to acquire, so I have to do more restoration of old, used stuff for my builds. Let me say, it builds character, and it’s a poor (skill level) craftsman that always blames his tools. I just built a three legged chair with 9 through tenons (wedged). I made it from Catalpa which I milled on my bandsaw mill (all manual handling - woodland mills bandsaw) I made the wedges from an Osage orange (Bois D’Arc) log a guy gave me and I milled that too. I’d have to give my joinery a C+, I’d put your dovetails at A-. It’s such a satisfying thing to take an idea and turn it into reality. 🕊️. Great video.
Qualified and or faint praise are as Shakespeare said damning. I like that you used an underappreciated wood species and enhanced, highlighted the qualities that many of us miss this alone justifies exhibiting the table at your home, never sell as the table will represent the woodworking skill you possess at this moment to others rather than the artistic insights you possess. As mentioned this is a first effort and what in my opinion is noteworthy is that you overcame what Peterson references as resistance and completed the task, Congratulations this is not common in solitary endeavors. Ray Stormont
Some good communication rules up front, fair enough and I agree. Just tripped over your channel and I thoroughly enjoyed it - so thank you. Loved your humour and your skills . I am now a subscriber . So - happy days, looking forward to your next video . Cheers and thanks ! 😀😳🥸
I'm gonna give you an A. Mostly because you've given me hope that my crappy dovetails can be made to look good with enough sawdust and glue. The table looks great!
Witt, I think the WW was right, for being your first dovetails, you deserve an A. The work you did to fill the small gaps A+. Love the table and hope you and your family are doing much better.
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You can do both and still show off hand-tool skill. Chonk out large sections with power tools, use hand tools for finery.
Decades ago I was told, "Knowing how to make a joint is skill. Knowing how to hide your mistakes is artistry." Thx for another info-taining video.
that's the truth. thank you
It was " if in doubt, make a feature of it" for mistakes when I was an apprentice
@@pipepuffah6548 Norm (who is not power tool shy) said, "Celebrate the joint." He was not talking about the devil's lettuce.
A little putty and paint make the builder what he ain't.
@@pipepuffah6548 I am a software developer (that larps as a contractor) and we say it "The difference between a bug and a feature is how good your salesperson is." Same meaning but I love that the sentiment exists in more useful industries.
Hearing you talk about how long it takes to make something makes me feel VERY seen. Got into wood working when I bought a house and every seemingly simple task has balooned into a multi-step, multi-day (if not week) process
that's the way it goes!
Lester, do NOT feel bad.
I started out around 21, 58 now, by saying that a $20 towel rack was WAY TOO MUCH money, and I could make something nicer for much less....
$200 later, we did have a nicer towel rack....
After spending the $200, I simply HAD to recover my money one way or another.
37 years later, still not there yet.
Just have fun and make a couple nice things.
My usual t-shirt I wear while woodworking says, “We do these things not because they are easy, but because we thought they would be easy.” 😊
Can y'all talk to my wife and tell her that big projects probably won't be done in a couple of hours on a Saturday?
We must be brothers! I do my research before starting a job and then announce to my wife that the guy in the video said it takes 15 minutes, which means it'll take me at least two hours! 🤣
Putting the Festool label on the Ryobi jig saw, comedic genius! 😂😂😂
I got the shade of green mixed up
@@wittworks only slightly. 🤣🤣
This is supposed to distract from the fact that there is a Mafell under the RYOBI cover!
🕊️
💯
Compressed hamster bedding is trademarked. Expect a call from my people.
By my people I actually just mean me. Let’s catch up 🕊️
Totally fair. I’ll fly up in May to work off my debt in framing.
I never comment on these woodworking videos. Literally my first time. I have been woodworking on and off for 50 plus years. I agree with so much of your approach. Experiment, make mistakes, fix them as best you can and don't be embarrassed by how long it takes. Even with all the power tools, it can easily become a slow tedious process. I like the power tool/hand tool approach. Nice to use the hand saw, chisel or hand sanding when you can. In the North East humidity would make that joint open and close no matter what you do. I am pretty sure the vertical and horizontal pieces will soon be different heights. I have cut pieces up after years of movement and rejoined them only to have it all move again in the next season. Solid wood I so much more fun than plywood. I think beech is a great choice, tight grained and pretty stable. The furniture industry certainly agrees. What's the point of having all those wonderful tools if you don't jump in and play with them?
Thank you!
Hybrid approach!!! I like that name. I am big on using the best tool for the job too. I love hand tools. There is nothing like a super sharp hand plane and the glossy finish it leaves, but there is also something very satisfying about running my Milwaukee jig saw through a piece, with a sharp ground blade, and seeing a near perfect finish.
🕊🕊🕊
Agreed and humidity. I was thinking when looking at his dovetails that they looked like the professionally factory ones in several pieces I have in the middle of January. In July, zero space anywhere! Even in some of the projects I built in December and January, in July, my dovetails are perfect!
This was very impressive for someone who's never done dovetails work before. You get an A, just because after all the challenges, distractions and life itself, your tenacity made it happened at the end and it came out just beautiful. Well done!
Solid A for a first attempt, and A+ at making it work via corrections, adjustments, and fixes. This is a GREAT example of actually showing the gaps and problems, the fixes, and the final product. 🕊🕊🕊
Much appreciated, and loved the cameos ("Siri, call the Beard")
thank you!
Hi! New subscriber here. Didn't take me too long, I jumped on when I saw the Ryobi jigsaw with the Festool label.
I've been a woodworker as long as I can remember. I've done other things, but I've earned most of my living doing woodwork. I'm retired now, but that only means I have time to build a shop in my garage and make things I want to make instead of my customer. Like yourself, I love hybrid woodworking. Power tools are great and fast. Hand tools are great and slow. Both take a lot of skill, and the skills are different. You can get there with either one but using both together lets you use your judgement when either is appropriate. And it's often highly amusing to see the look on everyone's face when you're working in a shop with 50 benches and nobody can figure out how to even the tops on this monster cabinet we built, and I took a Stanley No 5 hand plane out of my toolbox and slicked them all up in about 15 minutes :-) Some of the younger guys had never seen one, lol.
Given it's your first set, I'll grade you a B+ on the 🕊tails. It would have been better to not have to put in a piece, but knowing you did, and how to, merits you an A on that part. You're right it takes artistry to know how to hide your mistakes, because everybody makes them. One thing I was taught was there's more than one way to skin a cat, and sometimes we do things one way because that's how we were taught, or learned by experience. Doesn't mean our way is the right way, or that any other is the wrong one. It means that's the way, among a myriad others, we're most comfortable.
I'm in Fort Worth, and I love the Plywood Company too. Perhaps we'll run into each other there one day. My family escaped the lottery so far, praise to all gods great and small. Uncommonly warm weather we're having this year; I suspect that's part of the reason.
Stay safe out there. I've got 50 years in and 10 fingers.
Dominic
Good job bringing in Encurtis, it's how I feel watching some of his work sometimes. As a weekend warrior with a day job, 3 kids and zero joinery experience, I think you did great, you went for it. Solid B+, 🕊️
Thanks for sharing!
Having watched A LOT of videos on dove tails but never having done any furniture woodworking. I am impressed! First time? A+!
Wow, thank you!
The ENCurtis section was one of the funniest things I've seen in a long time! 🕊🕊🕊
I'd say thank you, but we both know you only watch Lee and SNL, who are both not funny.
@@wittworks Clearly I watch you too. Try not to read too much into that.
thanks for making me almost spit out my morning coffee!@@worstworkshop
Looks great. I used to watch my grandfather build furniture in is garage workshop when I was a boy. Watching your videos has inspired me to take up the hobby myself.
Having seen a few of your videos via the recommendations algorithm, I had no idea you were NOT a 1M+ account. It's surely on the horizon - great content, excellent presentation, humour, and the right level of self-awareness. Your point about 'showing them the way' is exactly why I've been gearing up to start the same thing. Immediate sub, at least for oppo research ;)
Wow, thank you!
How....how is it possible you dont have 10x more subs...? Awesome channel. Does anyone else remember the marking knife video?? The only woodworking channel that made me cry...excellent video!
Overall, I'd give the dovetails a B with an A+ for error correction - the fact that they definitely needed filling, and that sanding error both knock you down a peg or two, but you didn't have to redo it, so it's not a C. (F would be giving up on it entirely in favour of a different join type. But you did well enough with filling the gaps that it looks great from a finished project perspective, and you turned the sanding mistake into a neat asymmetry accent, which is top tier fixing work.
1. Insert dove emogee(?) I don't know how.
2. A- who cares if it was your first. They are VERY good dovetail!!!
3. I love your approach (use every tool you can think of) welcome to my woodworking world!
4. That is the most incredible and brilliant reason for being a TH-camr I've ever heard. You're a great dad!
As someone who's seen far too many re-purposed pieces of furniture, the chamfer on one edge just gives it the character that lets you confuse people with the stories of how you found this in the back of a barn out on the west end of town that was about to be torn down, and you're just sure that they found that it wouldn't fit in the dormer bedroom the way it originally was so they probably knocked that corner off to give them a quarter of an inch more space so the door would open and close, while telling the next guy that when you made this table you were debating whether or not you should ease this one corner so that if someone fell coming through the door when there was Ice on the steps, they wouldn't have a sharp edge of the table to land on, then you put the chamfered edge on the far end of the table because you're just that kind of a guy. Then let the two people try to work out what's going on with the table. Because of course the best thing to see when two guests start to argue is the 🕊tails carrying off the ☮.
thats funny
@@wittworksthat's an understatement. Even getting in the 🕊around the end. Probably planned from the start. I'd take an hour to write such a comment.
🕊️only two things matter, enjoying the process of creating and the end result, which is a beautiful piece of furniture.
@@Geppetto04I have to disagree slightly - to me only the process matters since my 🕊skills are still non-existant and everything I make falls apart. I class myself as an expert at turning any wood into firewood but boy do I enjoy the process😁
Found you and just started watching you and your one of my top woodworks to watch now. I can feel you so much with you and the kiddos getting sick. My house just did the same thing. Glad your house is better.
Your comedy is right up my alley. Keep doing you and making the haters hate lol great channel man. 🕊️
I love the way it turned out! (The layered beech actually gives me some ideas!)
Mid way through the video, it finally struck me what I enjoy about your content, and what TRULY sets you apart from the others in the YT woodworker space - the subtle and skillful ministry. Bravo my friend and glad the family is healthy again! 🕊️
Thank you! appreciate that
What I loved most about this is the honesty of showing your "mistakes" and how you fixed or featured them. Great job, and inspirational. Also, I now have a book to read (The War of Art), and a great quote about resistance. No, wait, not a quote about resistance. The quote was "...the brain works best when it is curious and engaged in solving interesting problems..." - and that I am going to use! Thanks!
Thank you
Only one chamfer? You psychopath! Thanks for the tip on the nano stuff. I’m totally going to apply it to my own table project. 🕊️
Two chamfers would have been better, but the one states that symmetry should be slightly violated, as it is in nature. You made a left and a right. I do like fiddler crabs for the same reason.
I can't tell you how gratifying it was to see how f-ed up the joints were when you first cut them, and I can't tell you how inspiring it was to see you do such a masterful job of making those canyon sized gaps absolutely disappear. It means there is hope that one day I too might make something that exceeds the box I made in shop class in middle school.
Gonna be honest. One of my absolute favorite parts of your videos are the TH-cam woodworker crossovers that occur. It's been great watching you level up, and I remember back when you had like 20k subs! Your production quality has always been great.
Thanks! I try not to over do them but they're fun. TH-cam can be lonely and I like to try to make it a community thing.
The color is absolutely beautiful. +++.
First DT = 99.99991%.
BRAVO.
Drew, I'm so sorry to hear about your family's ongoing sickness. I'm in North FW and we've had the same thing going through our family! A+ on the 🕊!
thank you. I guess it's everywhere?!?!
In DFW too. My family also hit the same lottery... 😑
DFW guy here, I too feel like for a first-time dovetail project you did extremely well, it is an earned skill cutting dovetail much like playing golf. Great editing and camera work, interesting choice on the wood. Put the word out as often as possible that when fellow woodworkers are using birch in any form, plywood, etc., we are sourcing that from Russia and some loophole they have manipulated to sell to us. Maple is a reliable, nice domestic choice if this works with your thoughts on Russia.
Thank you. It was beech not birch
Glad you're whole family is better. You are the most honest and funniest " woodworker" on TH-cam.
you're kind. thank you. are you saying there are boring and dishonest woodworkers on youtube? 🤪
I love it! Solid B+.
Pros: this video was a LOT of problem solving - which is what real woodworking is - scratching your head, fighting with tools.
I also love the lopsided chamfer. It creates a story, a talking point.
🕊️
haha thank you
That dig at Blacktail had me laughing pretty good. TH-cam woodworking is such a meme.
He loves the Beatles so much
Your subscription story worked. I'm a subscriber! The great projects, the spiritual wisdom and the snark-filled content were definitely strong selling points as well.
I am sorry. I clicked off to watch cat hunting dove videos. A real wood worker will use beaver teeth they collected from their forearms after fighting a beaver for some prime black walnut. I recommend use what ever works best for you. If you like the speed of power tools, go for it. If you like the satisfaction of doing it by hand, do that. Nice first attempt. I would give an A for the final result.
I'm sorry, but a *real* woodworker would use their own teeth. Or pull their teeth out and replace them with beaver teeth.
I’ve just watch this video, the second I’ve watched of yours; I think I’ve found a replacement for rewatching Norm Abram’s republished videos. He was a real woodworker and excellent instructor on PBS from the ancient time before the interwebs (yes I am that old) whom I considered the very best at the craft.
You keep doing you and I’ll keep watching and contributing 👍🏼 to influence the TH-cam alligatorism thingies to look on you favourably.
Oh, yeah; I can’t be bothered looking for the 🕊️ emoji and your first dovetails are definitely an “A”. Fixing the mistakes gets you an “A++” cuz that’s how you learn and get better at the craft.
Actually Norm was a carpenter who became a good woodworker. Remember him first on the original This Old House?
A
Great video and appreciate you showing the issues along the way. Most TH-cam content shows everything going perfectly and flawlessly. Trying new things out there seems to always be bumps along the way, but I’ve looked back and have been thankful for them as makes me better!
Sir, I come from the land of lime green power tools and really enjoy your videos.
The main reasons are:
You have a welcoming and inclusive nature, meaning there is no elitist approach ("if you don't do it that way, then") and your narrative is from a deeply positive perspective.
All your projects scream:
"I don't know if I'm going to do it right but if not I'm going to learn a lot along the way", which I thoroughly enjoy.
Thank you for your content.
Danke 🇩🇪 💚
* Unless your name is John Malecki
I love hand cut dovetails, they show another level of care and skill technique that comes by time and effort. They are difficult no matter what people say. Love the table and chamfer on one side only - it tells a story of your woodworking journey.
0:43 compressed hamster bedding! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Farticle board
isn't that what it is?!
@@wittworks it most certainly is! Still laughing. 🤣🤣🤣
Must remember that one.
Because of that one comment, I watch all the way to the end.🕊
🕊️ everything in life is a rough draft. Until it’s a paying customer, I’ll just keep practicing… iterate then repeat. I genuinely didn’t recognize your voice for the first 5 min, got so excited when it was you. Thanks for sharing, and love that you shared your purpose and expressed living your life on a continuum.
Beautiful 🎉
You should start a TH-cam channel
Hearing from God directly is a serious comment!!
This is my second time viewing your table video. Great outcome for a first effort. The big win is the effort and for sticking with it. 🕊
Great video - Good+ woodworking. Of course, that comes from a woodworking newbie who has yet to try making a real fine furniture piece. I am waiting for my impending move to Tennessee to set up my woodworking man cave and try my hand at making tables and chairs for my new home. I enjoy your videos🕊🕊 always come away with a nugget or three to help me in my future woodworking projects.
thank you
Not that interested in woodworking to be honest, but as a father to three boys your story about why you started your channel is about the most inspiring thing I have heard in a long time. You rock! And I subbed, good luck sir!
I'm always impressed by your videos. Your planning, music and overall production quality is that of a top tier youtuber.I see you going far. As far as your 🕊tails go, you get an A, not perfect, but for a first time, way better than my attempts. Dovetails seem so easy until you get halfway and realize how perfect they need to be.
Thanks! Appreciate you recognizing the work behind the video. The video was harder than the doves.
I'll definitely give you an A. My first attempt by hand was not so great. If you haven't heard of him, look up Rob Cosman. He's the master at dove tails. He gives a lot of great pointers, and his videos are raw and unedited. The one big thing I picked up from him was. When you're laying out to trace your pins, you should off set it by the the blade kerf on both side. This way you get a much tighter fit, and don't have any gaps to fill in.
I hope your family understands that the table is not for putting things on . . . or touching. It's just for admiration and adoration ;-)
hahaha
A+ from someone who is really bad at dovetails, but appreciates the resourcefulness. Project came out great, though I WOULD finish both edges the same way (you're welcome). I would, in fact, round them over with a fairly largish radius bit. But it's not my project and that's a detail that is personal. Enjoy the fruits of your labor and stay well!
what’s up with all the new tools…i’m thinking you must have caught your flu and sinus bug while shopping online…hence todays sponsor surf shark. having had small kids, the beach is genius. it looks like a kid has already marked on it…A- on the dovetails - I probably would have ended up with a table 8” narrower (after I erased my first try). With all the track saws you own, you used the cordless festool…maybe the most honest review ever given.
If you look closely I actually used 3 different festool track saw models just for the trolls 🤪
I rarely if ever comment on TH-cam videos, but this video was a perfect blend of my woodworking hobby, entry level ways to handle dovetails with a mixture of tools, and supreme voice commentary. I’m not sure if it was the stories about passing around sickness with the kids, extended times inside from inclement weather, or the extended time it took to finish the project I could relate to the most. I love the way you pace your videos alongside the commentary. Reminds me of ol Frank Howarth. 10/10 for me - looking forward to your next video!
🕊️🥰
thanks! Frank is my hero.
This is the first of your videos that I've seen. I love your sense of humor and humility. I'm also okay with your not getting the dove tails quite right but I'm sure they still look a ton better than what I could do. Dove.
I appreciate that!
🕊️ Kudos on the dovetails! They are my nemesis. I have made every single mistake and attempted fix that you did. You made me feel right at home! Great job!
As someone who aspires to create furniture I'd be proud for people to see, I found this video informative, entertaining, and inspiring. I hope you keep creating, and I think you should keep rolling with the hybrid woodworking style whether combining powertool and hand tool methods in one project or trying out projects that highlight each. I fully understand the desire to embrace the history of word working with hand tools, because it just feels honest ... but I also have 2 kids, chores and want to see things get done.
In my considered opinion, your dovetails are great. Best of all, the honesty and self-depreciation strike a ringing chord with me. I am a wood hacker of dubious skill, but I love the craft anyway. My first dovetails were cut raggedly and I didn't mark one of the sides of the intended drawer body and accidentally cut tails instead of pins on one end. your fixes for the gaposis was great.
This video really resonates with me- I'm an a-level (18 yrs old) design technology student doing a cabinet making final project, and I've had a lot of knock backs - my teacher has also been kind of a patronising arse in places, trying to tell me how to do it when at the end of the day its my project and she shouldn't interfere.
But this video shows that I can make mistakes as I'm going, as long as I'm willing to solve them as I go- thanks for the motivation. That joint was definitely an A
I really enjoyed you bringing in Encurtis and The Wood Whisperer - love knowing there is such a supportive community. I'm new to hand tools and agree with having a hybrid approach (I sometimes like being a masochist and using a hand saw, but really it's the process that I enjoy) I would highly recommend Matt Estlea for things hand tool related - has the BEST online handtool school out there!!
Thank you. I watched a lot of Matt when learning this. He's great.
Beautiful work, and fantastic video. You should have 10 times that many subs. I'm gonna call TH-cam in the morning and straighten that out!
Hahaha. Thank you
Love your whit and your honesty about the mistakes you made; as well as showing how you dealt with them! Absolutely LOVE that you only chamfered one side of the table! MY OCD IS SCREAMING!!! LOL 🕊 🕊 Bigger and Better Dovetails than I've ever made! Great editing as well, my friend. *Parenting... You're doing it right! Shalom, from Tennessee.
Very much relating to your approach/experience here. I wanted to make almost the same table design as a riser over a microwave on a work surface. I'd planned on 45 mitre, where you've used dove tails. My shonky saw put paid to that idea, so i ended up with straight cuts and butt joints. The board was cupping and slightly split between the staves, but like you, after getting it all together, some filler, glue, and a wax and it's actually a not unattractive finished piece. I'll definitely be trying for dove tails next time after watching this. Well done!
This is so refreshing thank you!!! To see some mistakes, and how to deal with them and adjust, I think is massively important; I imagine a lot of beginners or would-be woodworkers see people drawing straight lines and think "well, I can't even do that, so this isn't for me..." but something I've found watching really experienced woodworkers is that, even with chops built up over the years, things don't always go to plan. What has continually amazed me though, is the creativity and flexibility they develop in order to make the accidents look intentional, or even turn out better than planned. It reminds me of musicians; If you know what to look and listen for, you might catch a glimpse of your hero royally effing up, but turning it into magic anyways.
Nearly everything, when it comes to wood, is fixable. As with most things, perfection is the enemy of progress. You can either let fear/apprehension rob you of a potential good time, or not. On that note, I'm going to go brush off my tools and get to work. Thank you for the inspiration.
I don't know anything about anything. I just really enjoy these types of videos. A++ in my book 🕊 so relatable, makes me want to do more woodworking.
Thank you. That’s the goal
Early in my venture into woodworking I thought I could adjust dovetails, it never worked. Now I know which lines must never be crossed and which ones don't matter as the other piece will be later cut to fit. Nice job fixing things up. Here is a tip when buttering up joints with glue and sawdust, use a plastic spatula, metal ones can sometime turn the glue sawdust black. Not sure why I know that.
Remember Bob Ross: "We don't make mistakes! We only have some happy little incidents!
Sincerly spoken, I would'nt have been satisfied with those dovetails, but in the end: who cares? The result looks great and (almost) nobody would ever give this table such a close inspection, to find out all the parts of wood and glue you've inserted to hide those "little incidents"
I made a lot of dovetail joints by hand within the years, but it is somehow not predictable. Sometimes they turn out great, but sometimes you struggle to hide all the "little incidents", because in principle the joint works, but does not look "professional".
Just use it and think about, where you can improve it the next time!
Greetings from Germany (so don't mind my bad English)
Norbert
What an awesome video Drew!
thank you
I like the chamfer on the one side only. Keep the asymmetrical vibe, the sharp line against the wall will look great and not collect dandruff. But instead of a chamfer, maybe a round-over on that side and front edge for comfort and damage resistance. I bet it looks great and you don't risk hamster invasion, giving them no place to sleep. And you're also right about what draws "engagement" -- an important skill for any TH-camr.
I believe you get an A, because this is your first time as well as being able to recover from the mistakes you made. I love learning things from others and this was a great experience. Great Job...
I agree with Mark. For a first-timer, you did great! Also, because you figured out how to fix those goofs, that's really the important part. I'm assuming that you've heard the saying that a true craftsman knows how to fix their mistakes, so good for you. Also, your commentary gave me several reasons to chuckle, so that made what could have been another boring build video, fun. I am now a subscriber.
The video was great. The Pressfield book is great. I am in no position to grade dovetails; I use pocket screws. Good for you to take the challenge on. If I made those dovetails on my first try, I would be happy. Great job for your kids. There is a lot to admire in this video.
I would love to get into woodworking but was derailed by an unexpected (and TOTAL) house renovation. Doing almost everything myself has given me a real appreciation of doing everything 'hybrid'. I rate your dovetails A for Amazing and Awesome and I love the chunky-ness of them. I bet I could even do those and the small ones give me the heebie-jeebies. 🕊🕊
Nice job! My first large dovetails were for my Roubais-style workbench, and at least they are functional. I had to fill gaps, too, also using wafers of wood---thicker ones than you needed. So yours were objectively better; therefore, to protect my self esteem, you get an A+.
lol..... (scribble/scribble...forehead rub...bewildered look) Greg (garden grove, CA usa) this has been very enjoyable to watch! I"m 60 and feel like I'm a "rookie" at everything I do in life. Seeing your tools & shop, and knowing you're not a rookie, and yet mistakes happen and time-lines get extended, and costs increase... all this fits nicely in the age-old saying "misery loves company". How many posts on TH-cam that we admire, have had edits, and cuts, and retakes - and an assumption is developed "this person is a master at their craft - they never get anything wrong."? It's refreshing to see a true master have "set backs". (I'm going to show this to my wife, right now - It'll make me feel better)
🕊️ production value, incredible. Hilarious, and informative. Also made me feel better about all of my constant mistakes, and your references to ‘ the War of Art’ was incredibly helpful and inspiring. Thanks brother man. Keep it up. I hope your kids get their PS5. It’s excellent. Maybe I’d be a better woodworker if I wasn’t a 45 year old man who stilled played video games.
Great video. I am an occasional woodworker whose projects focus only on functionality, not on artistry. I use lots of screws. I watch woodworking videos out of admiration, not even to learn how to do it, since I don't think I'll ever do a dove tail joint. So I really appreciated this video from someone just a little bit ahead of me. I see it as a prophecy of what my first project might look like. I also fully support your motive for making this video! Glad you're training your children well! I am a better video editor than I am a woodworker, and you have great production value. 🕊
Great video. I would have gave you C for the dovetails. The Wood Whisperer has a good point though. I have not tried a dovetail yet. I started building a guitar from scratch a long time ago and cut the neck too thin and had to redo it. The resistance struck me too. I am just getting ready to try the neck again. Thanks for the video.
Your video was really motivating to get back to some wood projects I've been putting off. Thank you! 🕊
First time watching, loved it. I hope all of your videos are like this. You are refreshingly... normal, human. It is very inspiring for me, who is also battling literal everything you talked about. Thank you! 🕊
Awesome for a first attempt-I didn’t get to finish my first hardwood dovetail project yet 😢. I think a hybrid approach is the the most approachable/fun. Mix and match techniques with what you like/have available! I really liked using masking tape too (and another TH-camr’s dovetail guide). Thanks for sharing your first dovetail project-flitting off to watch a cat video 🕊️.
A common carpenter's trick for softening end grain for more effective chiseling/paring is to spritz the grain with clean water. Equally important is to keep your chisel razor sharp. If possible, have one tool for chiseling and a separate chisel or slick used only for paring. The force of hammer blows from chiseling takes the fine edge off your blade quickly and almost immediately lessens its ability to make fine paring cuts.
Dear Drew
This is an excellent project and the result is impressive.
I assume you are an enthusiast in woodworking as I am.
With other words we are not professionals and learned it in a apprenticeship.
So our learn curve to aquire the necessary skills and techniques is/was steep.
From my point of view, the most important point is the enjoyment to work with wood and learn new things.
It is creativity on many levels.
Yes, I am a Festool fan too. Having the right tools does not substitute lack of skills but helping to bridge deficiencies to get good results in a good time.
At least this applys to me.
To put the circumstances into considerations the result is excellent and I like you honest comments to this excellent video.
Thank you for this and I like it. I hope you understand my remarks as concouragement and constructive and not as the opposite. English is not my mothertongue.
Keep in touch - Kind Regards from Bern (Switzerland)
Nice work on the dovetails and entertaining video. The Beach really gives the table a great look and works really nicely with the joinery.
Thank you very much!
Epic build and choices considering your experience. The resultant in your house is very tasteful and contemporary. Great job!
My only comments are these:
1. Ain't nothin' wrong with hybrid woodworking. I personally prefer (for myself) hand-tool primary/power tool dimensioning, but whatever you do, it's all good.
2. Crappy dovetails... I mean, if you were a professional hand-tool furniture maker. But for a first run at it? They're better than mine were. Good job!
3. I might subscribe. I find your sacrilegious commentary deeply amusing.
4. I take 3. back. I definitely will subscribe. Aren't you proud of yourself?
It was a pleasure watching you man, great sense of humor and great work. Unreal tools of course.
Thanks. I think.
Outstanding job! The fact that it was your first try is mind blowing!
Thank you very much!
I’m not sure who said it (maybe Christopher Schwarz?), but the wood doesn’t care whether it was done with power tools or hand tools. My first dovetails weren’t even close to as good as yours, I’d give you an “A”, you did really good! I use both hand tools as well as power tools, and nobody has criticized me - but I wouldn’t care anyway - they just wouldn’t be allowed to hang out in my shop any more. I mean, we are a community of woodworkers and we should be supporting each other and cheering on ANY success each of us has. Learning is a process, and I enjoy the process! Your dovetails rock!
thanks! CS is amazing
That final piece looks stunning.
I recogize myself so much in your comments here, even though I have only made simpler pieces so far, such as shelves etc.
I might even try this design. 😊
I’ve built custom cherry kitchen cabinets and more. Seeing other people who pay attention to detail and having love for their work is rare. Many people just don’t care enough or I’m too much of a perfectionist. If I was paying for wood projects I don’t think I’d have 2nd thoughts about having you do one for me or recommending you to someone so take that as your grade. I’ve worked for people who were architects in their homes and they were picky and hard to work for. I believe it was my personality and attention to detail that allowed me the opportunity to work for people with such high standards that also paid very well.
Dovetail grade: C. Mistake fixing/hiding grade: A+
sounds like all woodworking
Love seeing Matt Outlaw aka 731 Woodworks in your Patreon list and seeing all of the other TH-cam WW community supporting/messing with/talking shit on each other.
I’m giving you a B+ because there wasn’t any TH-cam Walnut. I was promised TH-cam Walnut.
Fair.
Solid A for your first tails man. they look better then my first try (I think I hid that first try in the back of the attic).
Rob Cosman has probably one of the simplest approaches to dovetails I've ever seen. It's simple and fast (comparatively). once you get his system down, you can obviously adapt to your liking, but he's got the second fastest dovetail in the world atm. watch his speed video, it's crazy. if you think power tools are faster, you'll be in for a Suprise. And it doesn't require a dozen tools and hours of work. he does a set of 3 tails and pins in just a few minutes. It's a blast to watch and a great learning experience.
Honestly though, If I was doing DT's the size you are here, I'd be pulling out the router too :D
Those 🕊tails look pretty durn good, but only because of the super clever way you masked your errors. Here's a dovetail tip: make them super tight, but then hollow out the middles so they slide in easily. People only see the outsides. Sorry, having typed that I realize it's more a tip for sliding dovetails, but that's probably up ahead in your woodworking journey anyway. :)
Thank you for highlighting two important woodworking truths about doing this hobby with kids and on TH-cam. 1) Time to do woodworking while juggling kids and 2) Amount of time to edit the videos. I also truly believe that it's not necessarily how good you are at the techniques as it is to learn how to fix the (many) mistakes one makes. B+ on the 🕊🕊
Around 7:14, before you got your chisels going, I thought it would have been interesting to KEEP the curves. Yes, you would later have had to make outer curves to match the inner curves, but that can be done with a template too. Note that the sharp corners in the traditional version create stress concentrators, avoided in the rounded version, and so are stronger.
I actually thought about that! Would look cool
That was super fun to watch. It’s actually quite an inspiration to see you trying dovetail on the first try with an entry table, plus gigantic pins and tails! Every time I try something new when woodworking, I make tons of mistakes and learn from them. This is encouraging, because you leaned into the errors and owned them. The power tools you use are above my financial capacity to acquire, so I have to do more restoration of old, used stuff for my builds. Let me say, it builds character, and it’s a poor (skill level) craftsman that always blames his tools. I just built a three legged chair with 9 through tenons (wedged). I made it from Catalpa which I milled on my bandsaw mill (all manual handling - woodland mills bandsaw) I made the wedges from an Osage orange (Bois D’Arc) log a guy gave me and I milled that too. I’d have to give my joinery a C+, I’d put your dovetails at A-. It’s such a satisfying thing to take an idea and turn it into reality. 🕊️. Great video.
Thanks!
I thought it was pretty cool how the story of this piece was also a story about your family. Woodworking, or any craft, should be human.
My kids are grown now. Thanks for the vivid reminder of the joys of parenting.
Hahaha.
Appreciate the small details on time and cost and you’re honesty with everything. 9/10. Way to go. 🕊️
Qualified and or faint praise are as Shakespeare said damning. I like that you used an underappreciated wood species and enhanced, highlighted the qualities that many of us miss this alone justifies exhibiting the table at your home, never sell as the table will represent the woodworking skill you possess at this moment to others rather than the artistic insights you possess. As mentioned this is a first effort and what in my opinion is noteworthy is that you overcame what Peterson references as resistance and completed the task, Congratulations this is not common in solitary endeavors. Ray Stormont
Some good communication rules up front, fair enough and I agree. Just tripped over your channel and I thoroughly enjoyed it - so thank you. Loved your humour and your skills . I am now a subscriber . So - happy days, looking forward to your next video . Cheers and thanks !
😀😳🥸
Awesome, thank you!
I'm gonna give you an A. Mostly because you've given me hope that my crappy dovetails can be made to look good with enough sawdust and glue. The table looks great!
Witt, I think the WW was right, for being your first dovetails, you deserve an A. The work you did to fill the small gaps A+. Love the table and hope you and your family are doing much better.
I thought it all turned out fantastic, looks beautiful!
Thank you