You can use the oil over the sanded epoxy??? If so this is great. I've been under the assumption that the final later if epoxy resin should be left un-sanded. I've had to sand and redo a countertop a few times and it still has surface bubbles... If I can sand it and just apply the oil it would be awesome
+Christopher Thompson great question. the epoxy was $1500 for 60 liters. the walnut slab was $699. so about $73 a square foot. not bad for our area in Alaska for countertop prices. thanks for watching.
Hey, The Odies oil hasn’t held up the best. So I’m actually going to sand it down and use a different oil called Osmo Poly-x. It’s not a polyurethane despite its name. but you should check it out. I really like it more than Odies. Thanks for checking the video out. I appreciate it If you liked it, hit a thumbs up for me. Cheers!
@@thenakedcarpenter2502 Thanks for the fast reply. I am doing a bathroom vanity top river pour. I will take a good look as the Oslo product. Also considering Armor and Rubio products.
great question. I prefer a more matted sheen (usually satin), and I also don’t like synthetic finishes that if damaged need to be repaired. So that’s why I go with oil. Thanks for your words. Appreciated it!
Quick question, if you don’t mind.....did you intentionally not fill the epoxy up to the top of the slab? It appears that there was at least 1/2 “ of wood above the finished pour. I’m only asking so I can do this properly when I attempt it- seems like others pour until it’s overflowing onto the slab, and you did such an amazing job, maybe I should reconsider what I was thinking of doing. Thanks In advance....
Good question. So 60 liters was my estimate, and It was a bit short, but I knew that I could sand it down on that big sander, and I didn't want to spend any more money on epoxy, lol. So it was kinda of an accident, but kind of on purpose if that makes sense. So are you doing a big pour for a slab?
The Naked Carpenter I wouldn’t call it big, but it’s going to be my first one. It’s going to be for a coffee table for my house. I’m working my way around my house, and the den is my last stop, (most likely). The slab is about 60x30x2.5” but I want to run epoxy down both sides like you did., trying to make all my mistakes on “paper” first.
@@Samlol23_drrich Gotcha. Do you know what epoxy you're using? The reason I chose the epoxy I did is because it doesn't cure with much heat and that reduces the failure rate. tbh, there wasnt much heat at all and I really didnt need to worry.
The Naked Carpenter I went with the ecopoxy also. I’ve been watching a lot of blacktail studio pours, he uses that, then I saw yours and it sealed the deal. It seems to be the best one and most forgiving, and that is what I need.
I have that same feeling when I cut chicken, so blessed that I almost kneel down and thank the lord before taking that first mouth watering succulent bite of this that juicy bird.....Oh brother!????
+Bob Fischer hey, i actually haven’t been super impressed with it, so i am going to sand it down and do Osmo Poly x. what about you. any luck with Odies oil?
wait how do you calculate the amount of resin you need? Well this didn't tell me much at all except what gets you excited.. Sorry I was looking a how to video.. this was just a "look at what I can do" video..
+tinkmarshino Ha ha. Don’t get your maker panties in a bind. with any video your going to have to use your noggin to deduce certain aspects of the process. if you aren’t able to deduce things based on the clips and dialogue provided, you may want to get off youtube as a platform, as it won’t be of much help to you. also, from the emotional intelligence perspective, no one likes a keyboard warrior mate. lastly, when your ready to throw up a video of your process of making a 60 liter slab pour, be sure to give me a shout and i’ll make sure to watch it and offer my 2 cents that nobody wants in the first place. Cheers!
Great job, but it’s a gutsy move unless you’ve done this before. The 60L epoxy alone is over 1k. So this is a big money gamble imo. Plus, if you didn’t have that commercial machine to flatten both sides, it would be hours more work with a lot of potential for error. Great job though. Jealous. Subscribed
Thanks Sam. Yea, It was about $1500 in material. I was totally worried it would fail. Thats why i chose two pours. It does feel nice when it comes together though. Thanks for watching. Cheers!
Beautiful work my friend. Can see both your passions (woodworking & cinematography) in this one film. You have true talent.
Entertainment and education. Man loved the video.
Absolutely beautiful job!!! I can only imagine how much time went into such a creation! 2 👍👍 up on this one!
Awesome content my brother! Very satisfying to watch.
Thanks man. BTW, I download your LUT for HLG2 footage. Saved my life man. Thanks for your content!
@@thenakedcarpenter2502 that is awesome to know that it helped. You have great content.
Wow. Amazing project, amazing video. True craftsman.
+Justin Janssen Thanks
Thanks!
Great content 👍 i love working with wood and this was beauty to my eyes
Love seeing the bubbles disappear with the torch!
Well that took forever for a ❤️.
+MattBangsWood lol. i was just going thru them, and i was like, oh, matt bangs, heck yea
It's just awesome dude.
+Meanwhile in the Garage Thanks!
Wow its terrific. What a beautiful statement piece for the kitchen.
+James Humphries Thanks so much!
Thumbs up: slammed. Nice work, brother!
Thanks Robert!
This is beautiful! Awesome job 👏🏼
+BeckyG Thanks Becky!
Really nice work.
Chris Fields Thanks Chris. I appreciate the words. Cheers!
Subbed! Great content - love the name too!
+MattBangsWood Thanks Matt!
You did so good i love It you prob worked so hard your good at building :D
You can use the oil over the sanded epoxy??? If so this is great. I've been under the assumption that the final later if epoxy resin should be left un-sanded. I've had to sand and redo a countertop a few times and it still has surface bubbles... If I can sand it and just apply the oil it would be awesome
Beautiful bit of carpentry there bud, you must be so proud, looks amazing...
+Ryan R-L-T thanks Ryan!
+Ryan R-L-T thanks Ryan
Just beautiful. 😭 i just started working with epoxy.
Just stunning
+Stephen Gyte thanks!
Awesome job thanks for sharing
Very nicely done sir, excellent walkthrough, explanation, and the end result is stunning! What was the cost of this project?
+Christopher Thompson great question. the epoxy was $1500 for 60 liters. the walnut slab was $699. so about $73 a square foot. not bad for our area in Alaska for countertop prices. thanks for watching.
Nice job that looks awesome 👍
+outlawjjwales thanks for watching!
Beautiful. Thanks for sharing it.
Thanks for watching. Cheers!
Wow insanely great job. Where are your other video, did you stop? great work.
+JM Lav lol. Thanks! I didn’t stop. Just super busy. Thanks for watching
love it! subscriber now; hope you keep it going....
so beautiful!!
You have top class kitchen island, too bed rest of the kitchen does not keep up to that :(
Great work tough !
Nice work! What kind of tape is that? Thanks for sharing!
It’s called G-tape
Thanks for watching!
You deserve more views!
+Marvin Fiala Thanks for the complement!
Beautiful
Thank you!
beautiful!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
+Jay Mistry Thanks so much Jay!
Can you let us know how the Oddie's Oil is holding up please?
Hey, The Odies oil hasn’t held up the best. So I’m actually going to sand it down and use a different oil called Osmo Poly-x.
It’s not a polyurethane despite its name. but you should check it out. I really like it more than Odies. Thanks for checking the video out. I appreciate it If you liked it, hit a thumbs up for me. Cheers!
@@thenakedcarpenter2502 Thanks for the fast reply. I am doing a bathroom vanity top river pour. I will take a good look as the Oslo product. Also considering Armor and Rubio products.
Good Job!
+SAWBLADE PROJECTS thanks man.
Is there a reason you decided to finish the top with oil instead of resin? Just curious! Great workmanship, man.
great question. I prefer a more matted sheen (usually satin), and I also don’t like synthetic finishes that if damaged need to be repaired. So that’s why I go with oil.
Thanks for your words. Appreciated it!
Epoxy done right!
Quick question, if you don’t mind.....did you intentionally not fill the epoxy up to the top of the slab? It appears that there was at least 1/2 “ of wood above the finished pour. I’m only asking so I can do this properly when I attempt it- seems like others pour until it’s overflowing onto the slab, and you did such an amazing job, maybe I should reconsider what I was thinking of doing. Thanks In advance....
Good question. So 60 liters was my estimate, and It was a bit short, but I knew that I could sand it down on that big sander, and I didn't want to spend any more money on epoxy, lol. So it was kinda of an accident, but kind of on purpose if that makes sense. So are you doing a big pour for a slab?
The Naked Carpenter I wouldn’t call it big, but it’s going to be my first one. It’s going to be for a coffee table for my house. I’m working my way around my house, and the den is my last stop, (most likely). The slab is about 60x30x2.5” but I want to run epoxy down both sides like you did., trying to make all my mistakes on “paper” first.
@@Samlol23_drrich Gotcha. Do you know what epoxy you're using? The reason I chose the epoxy I did is because it doesn't cure with much heat and that reduces the failure rate. tbh, there wasnt much heat at all and I really didnt need to worry.
The Naked Carpenter I went with the ecopoxy also. I’ve been watching a lot of blacktail studio pours, he uses that, then I saw yours and it sealed the deal. It seems to be the best one and most forgiving, and that is what I need.
+samlol23 That’s a good way to put it-most forgiving. i found it super easy to work with. Good luck. Make a video about the process and hit me up!
I have that same feeling when I cut chicken, so blessed that I almost kneel down and thank the lord before taking that first mouth watering succulent bite of this that juicy bird.....Oh brother!????
+MR. BIG LOL
ooph that was awesome
Thanks Drew! Cheers!
+Drew DiPasquale Thanks Drew!
Perfect...that is all.
+Graham Orm lol. Thanks!
How did the Odie's Oil hold up?
+Bob Fischer hey, i actually haven’t been super impressed with it, so i am going to sand it down and do Osmo Poly x. what about you. any luck with Odies oil?
I want to create this look completely with Epoxy
+vqfive Nice!
wait how do you calculate the amount of resin you need? Well this didn't tell me much at all except what gets you excited.. Sorry I was looking a how to video.. this was just a "look at what I can do" video..
+tinkmarshino Ha ha. Don’t get your maker panties in a bind. with any video your going to have to use your noggin to deduce certain aspects of the process. if you aren’t able to deduce things based on the clips and dialogue provided, you may want to get off youtube as a platform, as it won’t be of much help to you. also, from the emotional intelligence perspective, no one likes a keyboard warrior mate. lastly, when your ready to throw up a video of your process of making a 60 liter slab pour, be sure to give me a shout and i’ll make sure to watch it and offer my 2 cents that nobody wants in the first place. Cheers!
DUDE! YES!
+jonathan Pittman Thanks!
Woow
Great job, but it’s a gutsy move unless you’ve done this before. The 60L epoxy alone is over 1k. So this is a big money gamble imo. Plus, if you didn’t have that commercial machine to flatten both sides, it would be hours more work with a lot of potential for error.
Great job though. Jealous.
Subscribed
Thanks Sam. Yea, It was about $1500 in material. I was totally worried it would fail. Thats why i chose two pours. It does feel nice when it comes together though. Thanks for watching. Cheers!
How much epoxy was consumed?
+Roland265 60 liters
👍😘👌
+sk see thanks!
Woodprix has a lot of plans to choose from.
Bel canale, complimenti. Iscritto, passa da me se ti va.... grazie!!!
thanks!
My husband used these plans from Stodoys and he is very pleased.