This is a great wood project book th-cam.com/users/postUgkxkPIWb22DigCqxmlXerCyUF4HCl6eSU2L . Most of the projects use the pallet simply as a source of reclaimed wood not as a recognizable pallet so even if you didn't have a pallet you could make these projects with any reclaimed (or even new) wood. The instructions are excellent. The style is charming and would work with lots of different decor. There are quite a number of projects that involve tiling of teh wood pieces which is a really cool idea and can produce beautiful pieces when working with aged wood.
I can only assume an unfathomable amount of time went into this design. The cutting and glue up times must've been extensive too. I've never seen CNC used in this way at that level of detail. I am absolutely blown away by this. The detail is breathtaking. Outstanding work sir.
A good chunk of the praise should also go to the CNC engineers, for creating a machine precise enough to have the accuracy necessary to do this. Plus the software developers. Truly amazing.
As a rookie CNC'r who admires these things in a completely different way than I once did. The hard work was in the hours of design and programming. The contrasts post finish were stunning. I honestly didn't expect that. Bravo!!!
Having made a fair bit of stuff on a cnc machine myself, (nothing like this quality) I can totally appreciate what it has taken to make this fine piece of art. You would be a tradesman, computer programmer and artist all in one. I wish I had seen this a few years back when I had access to cnc machinery. I love it!
@@johnread7404 why? Did you look a the piece i suggested? im a buyer of wood pieces and folk art. I see to much of it already. I travel the country looking for unique works. I see thousands of things made with CNC machines. I respect a totem pole carved with a grinder over one cut on a CNC machines.
I agree, It is nice but it's not really a true work of art. it's a machine made picture. Any machine programed to do this can do this. but there are only a FEW people with the skill to do this by hand, which would make it a True work of art.@@a.barker7792
ive never thought much about using a CNC machine to do that. It looks great. I bought a picture thats done with every color wood cut by hand. Cant imagine the time it took the person to do a 24x36 picture, one tiny piece at a time.
Wow! I just watched this with the owner of the cabin and I can’t wait to see the piece on their at their home. Amazing artistry with the tools of a modern artist.
This helped me feel a little better I have epilepsy and recovering from some seizures and what amaizing work you done you created a very beautiful at piece and I can't stop looking at it on pause because it's such a beauty and I love it very much great job you done God bless
@@Broinwood your welcome and thank you for messaging me you made my day 🙂 and what an amazing piece of art I love it and seeing how it's made it's just so mind-blowing. Take care God bless and can't wait to see other things you will make in the future you put a smile on my face and makes me feel soothing with your art work and I love the woodwork 100%
Brought to you by Titebond……… Stunning. People who work in CNC know how ‘next level’ this really is. So many things that can go wrong at any step. This is the master.
This is absolutely the single most amazing woodworking project ive ever seen!!! ive been a hobby carpenter for years and have never seen and inlay even close to that!! wow
@@jackfntwist of course a “robot” made it, it’s CNC, that doesn’t mean it’s as simple as saying start. The programming to make this can take hours or days depending on how complicated it is, based on the amount of intricate cuts in this it’s likely took a long time and it’s even more important that both the main section of wood and the inlays fit perfectly again also no easy feat
This was absolutely fantastic!! My only thought was wondering what it would look like with some raised parts, water ripples, pillars, tree bark etc. BLOWN AWAY!!!
Its fine, but i must assume that you have not seen much woodworking. This is only one example that is much more impressive th-cam.com/video/qPlEr2mtKcA/w-d-xo.html
In one episode can you show the press you used for clamping the plugs into place? Are you just using a bunch of clamps? Either way can you show the process of how your applying pressure and securing the plugs while the glue dries. Thanks and always amazing work.
Parker..really if your asking that your not even close to doing that detailed work. 1. A some what harden rubber matt. Lay on new glued plugs, then slap a sand bag on top of the rubber. Sand will push harder on any wood plug poping up into the rubber Matt. Let it dry. Wood glue wouldn't stick to the rubber. If you dony have, a CNC , just use a palm sander, save the dust, if you have to patch. May want to stick to makeing bird houses.
I haven't tried inlays yet but wanna try them soon. But this level of detail is insane and something I'll never even attempt I guess. This must have taken weeks to get this finished. Carving the male and female part, soak it with glue, insert the inlays, let it dry, then carve away the excess, then repeat. Best inlay video I've ever seen.
I went to your website. I have to say even your standard cutting boards are very nice. This one you made is incredible. What detail and the level of precision is amazing. Very beautiful cutting board.
Руки золотые это ладно! У кого не бывает! Но вот терпения, это да! Это не одного дня работа! А еще сколько времени необходимо для составления рисунка, программы!
This is a really impressive level of detail for such a large piece! I’ve been able to achieve this kind of detail on a coaster, but have failed a few times now on cutting boards half this size - too many gaps! It must take a lot of pressure to force the pieces in over the whole area - maybe it helps that your boards are generally thicker, because mine start to buckle under the pressure
Very very cool and loads of work but a lil bummed to find that a machine took care of the hard stuff. I've seen very intricate wood inlay mosaics that were all done by hand, now those were a true accomplishment of skill and mastery.
I'm impressed with the design, artistry and the devotion to detail... I'm not impressed with the skill of the woodworker... The CNC did the work of making it possible... not the carpenter... Yes, I know that there is skill in machining... but it's the CNC's skill, not the carpenters... I also am not impressed with the waste... a lot of good wood was lost by the use of CNC...
I agree. I regret watching this video as opposed to real woodworking craftsmanship. Being good at computers is one thing, being good at woodworking is another. I would not want to own that piece. It is simply too much, and the image is not that good anyways. But a little respect of the skills with the idea of mirroring ant cutting into fewer sections before glueing. Honestly I would say it was put together in 30 pieces.
@@bojensen8051 I'm with you there... I've seen fine inlay work that impressed the hell out of me with both the craftsmanship and art... This isn't it...
Cool story nerd. Let’s see the shit you make and the quality videos to go with it. If you can’t comprehend how much skill went into this, you have no place commenting.
@@blakelocati The only skill was programming the machine... but not in the craftsmanship... it's the Lego version of woodworking... Don't get me wrong it's a good piece of work... and there is artistry in it, but it's not in any way an example of this person's skill at woodworking... He could put out 50 of them and no one would know the difference...
Pretty sure the machine did it. It's amazing what we think is actual skill nowadays. To the ones not needing a machine to do what their own hands can I salute you.
IM always amazed watching your videos. You stretch the Envelop every time, always new design concepts, more technical carves, more art & colour from various wood materials. No-one will ever surpass your skill.. you are THE MASTER ...
your talent is unbelievable!! You don’t need to call it a cutting board. I bet your clients would not bring a knife within 10 feet of your creation. I also am a woodworker mostly bowls and cutting boards I’ve thought about CNC work. But I haven’t taken the plunge yet 😊
It's a stunning and beautiful piece. I'd love to see something like this, but with the tree and plant elements stained with a deep muted green, and the water elements a deep, rich, muted blue stain. Subtle, but with those colors I think it would look even more beautiful.
That my Friend is a Work of LOVE...Beautifully done...You have some serious skills and if I should ever get a place where I want it showed off, You'll be getting the contract...Keep up that exquisite Art
que buen trabajo hizo la maquina si señor... eso tiene algún merito? todo es mecanizado. ya pocas personas son artesanas. What a good job the machine did, yes sir... does that have any merit? everything is mechanized. Few people are artisans anymore.
@@jackfntwist How do you know it's a photo - it doesn't look like a photo to me. At any rate, I commented because I enjoyed the video and I wanted to improve the guy's algorithm. So, what's the problem?
Well once you've done the designing in whatever software you use, the machine does it all, literally, cuts a positive and negative of the parts of the one design, all you had to do was place the wood, add glue, stick them together and finish it once the machine levelled it. The hardest part for you must be the designing on software and I bet even that has elements that you simply choose and manipulate. Kudos on the designing, it is a brilliant piece of programming and design. It was fantastic but it was the machine that made it, you just helped. My father was a cabinet maker, carpenter and joiner who trained from age 12 - he made some amazing things, he would have been able to do this by hand.
How to find inlay parameters.
broinwood.com/products/how-i-am-finding-inlay-parameters
Now THAT looks very interesting! Do you discuss the recommended minimum size of details in the tutorial as well?
Thank you! No, sir, i am not discussing the inlay size in the course. But i do not recommend making an inlay less than 1mm.
@@Broinwood ...and that right there is golden advice. Most excellent, that course goes on the shopping list :) Thank you!
What's with the terrible music. it doesn't fit!
@@jimbob-jn6jz yes
This is a great wood project book th-cam.com/users/postUgkxkPIWb22DigCqxmlXerCyUF4HCl6eSU2L . Most of the projects use the pallet simply as a source of reclaimed wood not as a recognizable pallet so even if you didn't have a pallet you could make these projects with any reclaimed (or even new) wood. The instructions are excellent. The style is charming and would work with lots of different decor. There are quite a number of projects that involve tiling of teh wood pieces which is a really cool idea and can produce beautiful pieces when working with aged wood.
I can only assume an unfathomable amount of time went into this design. The cutting and glue up times must've been extensive too. I've never seen CNC used in this way at that level of detail. I am absolutely blown away by this. The detail is breathtaking. Outstanding work sir.
Thank you so much! It was a very long and complicated project.
@@Broinwood
Кто-то сказал, - деревянных денег не бывает. Помоему ты доказал обратное ю. Точно как на манетном дворе. Очень крапотливая работа ю.
@@AlekseyPurtov спасибо!
A stunning piece of work, would love to know the process of how you translate that to the CNC machine
You are a magician, who can such beauty from nothing, incredible.
A good chunk of the praise should also go to the CNC engineers, for creating a machine precise enough to have the accuracy necessary to do this. Plus the software developers. Truly amazing.
Inlaying will never be the same not only in woodworking but metal as well. Very good example of what can be accomplished.
As a rookie CNC'r who admires these things in a completely different way than I once did. The hard work was in the hours of design and programming.
The contrasts post finish were stunning. I honestly didn't expect that. Bravo!!!
Having made a fair bit of stuff on a cnc machine myself, (nothing like this quality) I can totally appreciate what it has taken to make this fine piece of art. You would be a tradesman, computer programmer and artist all in one. I wish I had seen this a few years back when I had access to cnc machinery. I love it!
Thank you!
Too me. It's nothing but cut and paste. It's not art to me at all. I saw a guy win Artprize in GR with a pencil, nothing more. That's art.
@@a.barker7792 You do it then. Draw up the design, work out all the toolpaths.
@@johnread7404 why? Did you look a the piece i suggested? im a buyer of wood pieces and folk art. I see to much of it already.
I travel the country looking for unique works. I see thousands of things made with CNC machines. I respect a totem pole carved with a grinder over one cut on a CNC machines.
I agree, It is nice but it's not really a true work of art. it's a machine made picture. Any machine programed to do this can do this. but there are only a FEW people with the skill to do this by hand, which would make it a True work of art.@@a.barker7792
ive never thought much about using a CNC machine to do that. It looks great. I bought a picture thats done with every color wood cut by hand. Cant imagine the time it took the person to do a 24x36 picture, one tiny piece at a time.
Wow! I just watched this with the owner of the cabin and I can’t wait to see the piece on their at their home. Amazing artistry with the tools of a modern artist.
Thank you so much! 😊
The amount of time and effort you must have put into not only the design but cutting both the positives and negatives. Amazing work.
Yeah, isnt CNC great. Personally I would be more impressed if it was manually done.
@@GarryOzols Personally I'd be more impressed if you cut into a tree and this was the natural grain design.
This helped me feel a little better I have epilepsy and recovering from some seizures and what amaizing work you done you created a very beautiful at piece and I can't stop looking at it on pause because it's such a beauty and I love it very much great job you done God bless
Thank you so much! 🙌
@@Broinwood your welcome and thank you for messaging me you made my day 🙂 and what an amazing piece of art I love it and seeing how it's made it's just so mind-blowing. Take care God bless and can't wait to see other things you will make in the future you put a smile on my face and makes me feel soothing with your art work and I love the woodwork 100%
I'm out of words. This may be the most skillful use of the CNC I have ever seen in my life. You are great!!!
This simple ballet of man and machine has brought a tear to my eyes, literally. Amazing work.
Thanks! 😊
I'm surprised he couldn't buy a robot to add the glue. Really.
The most outstanding inlay work I have ever seen! Absolutely fantastic!
Thank you!
Really , you’re admiring a computer . Craftsman used to do that by hand .
@@grahamfarleck6377 Sorry, no hand done inlay work that I have ever seen matches the complexity and fit of this complicated piece.
@@grahamfarleck6377 and...what have you ever done?
You are the one and the only in Art
Very Impressive and beautiful. I admire the tediousness of the detail and the patience it takes to do that kind of art !
Я поражен вашей деревообработкой! Спасибо, что уделили время на создание видео.👍👍👍
Brought to you by Titebond………
Stunning. People who work in CNC know how ‘next level’ this really is. So many things that can go wrong at any step. This is the master.
thank you!
This is absolutely the single most amazing woodworking project ive ever seen!!! ive been a hobby carpenter for years and have never seen and inlay even close to that!! wow
Thank you so much!
You act like you didn't just see a robot make the entire thing. Lol.
@@jackfntwist of course a “robot” made it, it’s CNC, that doesn’t mean it’s as simple as saying start. The programming to make this can take hours or days depending on how complicated it is, based on the amount of intricate cuts in this it’s likely took a long time and it’s even more important that both the main section of wood and the inlays fit perfectly again also no easy feat
@@shanemeyer9224 By programming you mean scanning a picture that someone else took, and running a program that someone else "programmed"? Lol
This was absolutely fantastic!! My only thought was wondering what it would look like with some raised parts, water ripples, pillars, tree bark etc. BLOWN AWAY!!!
Thank you!
inlay
The real achievement here is your flawless technique; the end result is incidental. Bravo.
That is the MOST amazing piece of woodworking I have ever seen! Fantastic!
Thank you!
Its fine, but i must assume that you have not seen much woodworking. This is only one example that is much more impressive th-cam.com/video/qPlEr2mtKcA/w-d-xo.html
A beautiful, tactile creation ... It must feel wonderfull to lightly run your fingertips over the surface
Such a beautiful piece of work. Love the detail within this.. That was incredible to watch, you done a fantastic job!.
I can't believe how great that turned out. Built by a true craftsmen - job well done!
Was there a craftsman in the video? Were they standing behind the big cnc machine that was making the thing?
Охринеть!!! Просто самый настоящий шедевр!!! Такое повторить просто не возможно!! 💪💪👍👍
Это чпу, это можно повторять бесконечно
Super sehr schön gemacht
Vielen Dank für Ihnen
Such a beautiful piece of work. Love the detail within this.
No tahnkq for sharing your experience with us.
it was a pure delight to watch ur ideas into realty bravo.
Absolutely beautiful. Thanks for sharing 👍
In one episode can you show the press you used for clamping the plugs into place? Are you just using a bunch of clamps? Either way can you show the process of how your applying pressure and securing the plugs while the glue dries. Thanks and always amazing work.
They definitely use a shop press, probably with steel plates attached. Check out MTMWOOD shop press
Thank you! There is nothing special, just a metal frame and bottle jack. I will show it someday.
Parker..really if your asking that your not even close to doing that detailed work.
1. A some what harden rubber matt. Lay on new glued plugs, then slap a sand bag on top of the rubber. Sand will push harder on any wood plug poping up into the rubber Matt. Let it dry.
Wood glue wouldn't stick to the rubber. If you dony have, a CNC , just use a palm sander, save the dust, if you have to patch. May want to stick to makeing bird houses.
I haven't tried inlays yet but wanna try them soon. But this level of detail is insane and something I'll never even attempt I guess. This must have taken weeks to get this finished. Carving the male and female part, soak it with glue, insert the inlays, let it dry, then carve away the excess, then repeat. Best inlay video I've ever seen.
Am I the only one that prefers the look of wood unstained.
Do you like dry snatch as well?
Makes the two of us
There used to be craftsman that did that by hand, good job by the computer programer and designer , CAD is one hell of a bit of kit.
There still are craftsmen / artists who do this by hand.
So much detail. This board is amazing!
I went to your website. I have to say even your standard cutting boards are very nice. This one you made is incredible. What detail and the level of precision is amazing. Very beautiful cutting board.
Thank you so much!
Cutting board? Not even a wet glass of water would ever go on that if it was mine! Too precious
Damn that was insane! Absolutely impressive and hands down the most complicated inlay I’ve ever seen someone make! 🤯👏👏
Thank you!
정말 대단하군요 ^^ 놀랬습니다. 영상 잘 봤습니다.
정말 고맙습니다!
As a woodworker you are a great cnc user
The CNC certainly makes this a lot easier i imagine!
Looks great!
Руки золотые это ладно! У кого не бывает! Но вот терпения, это да! Это не одного дня работа! А еще сколько времени необходимо для составления рисунка, программы!
Спасибо!
WELL DONE Art-Layout-Fabrication you are to be commended for your work. BRAVO
This is a really impressive level of detail for such a large piece!
I’ve been able to achieve this kind of detail on a coaster, but have failed a few times now on cutting boards half this size - too many gaps!
It must take a lot of pressure to force the pieces in over the whole area - maybe it helps that your boards are generally thicker, because mine start to buckle under the pressure
amazing what a computer and a cnc machines can do now a days. been more impressive if done by hand
@@hazedemotions69 Beautiful work! I'm conflicted though is it beatiful woodworking, or beautiful programming?
@@Joe-nv6ge badass programming skills
@@hazedemotions69 well, if you had tires you could be a bicycle, but you don't.
Simply amazing ! You are soo far at the opposite end of the spectrum that I reside.
This absolutely gorgeous piece of work, the understanding of time involved from drawing to finish, you definitely have inspired me
Thank you!
beau travail du bois ! bravo....l'artiste !!
Peut etre.... le robot.
Very very cool and loads of work but a lil bummed to find that a machine took care of the hard stuff. I've seen very intricate wood inlay mosaics that were all done by hand, now those were a true accomplishment of skill and mastery.
An artist to take something comon like wood and turn it into a masterpiece. A Masterpiece.
Another cool machine i cant afford ☹️
I never get bored of watching CNC machines do their thing
Now..... Do it by hand and I'll be impressed. Nice Work Nonetheless.
Ты большой молодец! Так приятно наблюдать за работой людей, которые любят свое дело! Здоровья и творческих успехов тебе брат!
The subject should be The most complex Inlay I have ever made with my CNC
Yes
The most complex inlay my robot has ever made and I added glue to.
Dude. That is un-freaking-real. Tip of the hat to you bro. Gorgeous and clearly a labor of love. I am sure she loved it!
CNC gives you talent that you're not born with
He's very talented at putting glue on. :)
Look forward to seeing your attempts 😂
@@nateellis628 I'll just buy one from China.
i believe the drawings are his own design.
and those machines are not as straightforward to use as they appear.
@@garblehose Looks like a scan of a photo, or something that comes with the software.
Incredible technology…incredible accomplishment…
The old Masters did remarkable inlays by hand with out a computerized machine, so ya think ya good, ha.
They still do hand inlay. And it's much more beautiful by like a million times.
What a stupid comment
Классная разделочная доска получилась.
Very clever and good work, pity the end product was bland and un-interesting
If I hadn't seen it I wouldn't have thought it possible.
Well done
Thank you!
Beautiful 👍👍👍. Thank you for sharing. Be safe 🇨🇦
Thank you!
I'm impressed with the design, artistry and the devotion to detail... I'm not impressed with the skill of the woodworker... The CNC did the work of making it possible... not the carpenter... Yes, I know that there is skill in machining... but it's the CNC's skill, not the carpenters... I also am not impressed with the waste... a lot of good wood was lost by the use of CNC...
I agree. I regret watching this video as opposed to real woodworking craftsmanship. Being good at computers is one thing, being good at woodworking is another. I would not want to own that piece. It is simply too much, and the image is not that good anyways. But a little respect of the skills with the idea of mirroring ant cutting into fewer sections before glueing. Honestly I would say it was put together in 30 pieces.
@@bojensen8051
I'm with you there... I've seen fine inlay work that impressed the hell out of me with both the craftsmanship and art... This isn't it...
You absolutely right; this technique does not require any skills. Press a couple of buttons, and that's it.
Cool story nerd. Let’s see the shit you make and the quality videos to go with it. If you can’t comprehend how much skill went into this, you have no place commenting.
@@blakelocati
The only skill was programming the machine... but not in the craftsmanship... it's the Lego version of woodworking... Don't get me wrong it's a good piece of work... and there is artistry in it, but it's not in any way an example of this person's skill at woodworking... He could put out 50 of them and no one would know the difference...
Crazy amount of detail. The amount of risk of making an absolute arse of it at any point is giving me hives!... hehe. Well done Mr BroInWood guy.
Thank you! I do my best;)
Yeah. Glad robots don't get hives.
It's kind of cheating, or just a different way of doing it. I bet a human hand would be more charming to watch and own.
Interesting use of CNC technology.
Wood Art at it's Best, Top Quality Job done.
Thanks!!!
So mesmerizing. Could watch all day. Thanks for showing an amazing piece.
Soy artesano desde hace 28 años..
Simplemente estoy lleno de alegría... ¡Estoy conmovido!buena suerte..
OH MY WORD!!! That was intense to say the least. Still the MASTER.....
Thank you!
Bravissimo!
Un lavoro eccezionale. Complimenti! 👏👏👏👍
Pretty sure the machine did it. It's amazing what we think is actual skill nowadays. To the ones not needing a machine to do what their own hands can I salute you.
yes
He couldn't find a machine to add glue or lift onto other machines.
IM always amazed watching your videos. You stretch the Envelop every time, always new design concepts, more technical carves, more art & colour from various wood materials. No-one will ever surpass your skill.. you are THE MASTER ...
i appreciate your kind words! I do my best!
Some people are crazy. You are in a higher level! Congratulations!
Thanks!
your talent is unbelievable!! You don’t need to call it a cutting board. I bet your clients would not bring a knife within 10 feet of your creation. I also am a woodworker mostly bowls and cutting boards I’ve thought about CNC work. But I haven’t taken the plunge yet 😊
No words can describe tis estetic experience. But it feels like goning hungry and get served woelds best chokolate cake.
It's a stunning and beautiful piece.
I'd love to see something like this, but with the tree and plant elements stained with a deep muted green, and the water elements a deep, rich, muted blue stain. Subtle, but with those colors I think it would look even more beautiful.
BEAUTIFUL ARTWORK .... this is an actual artwork.... thank you
Except it's not. It's a robot cutting an inlay of scanned artwork.
woooooow that`s amazing super well done
Thank you!
Das Design eignet sich bestimmt auch für Arbeiten mit Perspektive. Beeindruckend.
That my Friend is a Work of LOVE...Beautifully done...You have some serious skills and if I should ever get a place where I want it showed off, You'll be getting the contract...Keep up that exquisite Art
Astonishing amount of detail, Respect to you for skill & determination
Beautiful, smart, work.
Fantastic, absolutely fantastic !!!!
Thank you!
Holy cow, that is incredible!
Inspirational. I just finished my first v-carve inlay using your videos as a guide. Not as nice as yours, but my wife is happy.
Great!
que buen trabajo hizo la maquina si señor... eso tiene algún merito? todo es mecanizado. ya pocas personas son artesanas.
What a good job the machine did, yes sir... does that have any merit? everything is mechanized. Few people are artisans anymore.
To be honest, i did nothing; that machine is just amazing!
Ive begin using my Shapeoko 5 pro. Still learning but its not easy. This level is beyond anything I can hope to do. Absolutely amazing
Браво, мастер. Шикарная работа.
Спасибо!
That is nice, now I want a CNC machine and some talent. 😄
What do you need talent for? Hit the "on" switch? Add glue?
@@jackfntwist I mean, the idea for the image and the creation of the image. The image didn't create itself.
@@AwkwardTruths He scanned a photo! Probably not even his photo / image! lol
@@jackfntwist How do you know it's a photo - it doesn't look like a photo to me. At any rate, I commented because I enjoyed the video and I wanted to improve the guy's algorithm. So, what's the problem?
Truly fascinating work. Omg beautiful inlay’s
Well once you've done the designing in whatever software you use, the machine does it all, literally, cuts a positive and negative of the parts of the one design, all you had to do was place the wood, add glue, stick them together and finish it once the machine levelled it. The hardest part for you must be the designing on software and I bet even that has elements that you simply choose and manipulate. Kudos on the designing, it is a brilliant piece of programming and design. It was fantastic but it was the machine that made it, you just helped. My father was a cabinet maker, carpenter and joiner who trained from age 12 - he made some amazing things, he would have been able to do this by hand.
Wow. Beautiful.
Brilliant and beautiful
You constantly leave me in awe. Great work is an understatement.
Thank you!
Very nice. Keep up the great work. Enjoy your videos.
Thanks!
Computer does nice work. You just put the puzzle together. But very nice.
You know what would be interesting… a dot-matrix CNC where you put in different colour dowels each time.
This is literally the most bad ass thing I have ever seen, you have a great talent my friend
Thank you!
Wow!
Never seen anything like that before 👍
First time I’ve seen that process 👍
That is just plain sick! Wow!