Awesome! I live in an old tudor home and I decided to extend the existing paneling. It def a labor of love. I had to match the existing quarter sawn wood which was a pain to find but it's all worth it! You should do the whole room and create a nice library!
As a kid my dad let me destroy walls and it is great fun for kids. Fantastic work on the panels and a great reminder for the scope of a project like this.
Wow, it's great u have the knowledge to do this kinda wk...this would cost a fortune if u were to hire someone, that's if u can find someone, that will do good wk and won't rip u off...
Wow, what a great video. Thank you for sharing. Why didn’t you just put the paddle on to the drywall? why did you take the drywall down? I am thinking about doing the same thing in my office,
When cutting raised panels, do the end grain cuts first, because you're likely to get some tearing of fibres. This will be removed when you subsequently do the cuts along the grain. The same applies when you're machining on a router table or spindle moulder (shaper).
Great job. You mentioned that the project took 9 months at about 15 minutes a day. If you had done the work fulltime and not had to wait for drying hours during finishing, how many work days do you think it would have taken? Also, how much of that time might have been related to the learning processes as a 1st project?
Why did you remove the sheet rock? Why not just tack up the wood to the sheet rock? If you have original plaster walls - would you have to demo/rip them out to install wood paneling? Thx!
The glue seam is super strong. No risk of breaking it. I cut the hole with a 2inch hole cutter like you would use for installing a doorknob. It just needs to be big enough for the wires to go through ;)
I've tried every keyword search possible and yours is one of only a very few videos on making solid wood wall paneling. Also one of the best! Maybe I missed a detail? Did you rabbet those rails and stiles to receive the panels?
@@cerupsly It really is beautiful. I'm not a big fan of oak because the grain can be very aggressive but your finish really evened it out nicely. The irony is I paneled my office in Walnut and used furniture grade plywood for the insets. The Danish oil made the darker spots darker but only brought attention to the lighter spots. Any chance you have a suggestion to even out the wood tone in Walnut?
@@nickbailey202 I never really have used Danish oil very much. I tend to prefer finishes that leave a coating on top to finishes that soak in and Harden. I suppose you could try a stain or something to cover up the light spots, but I’ve never had good luck with stain. Do you have a link to some pictures? I’d love to see your work!
Lot of work I don’t have time for....I’d need to be doing time in prison woodwork shop to do that detail....good voice though,,,,you ought to think about voice overs, narration like "how it’s made" , announcing or industrial,technical instructional sound tracks..you can wear pajamas to work and shave less frequently.....In a world where panel construction brings men to tears, there "panelnator" coming to theaters this holiday season!!!!!
What a labor of love! Beautiful work. Great craftsmanship!
Great job...I have always wanted my living room panelled like that ...with shelves and a fireplace like an English library....beautiful work!!!!
Wow bud you could do this for a living. Do the hole room
Awesome! I live in an old tudor home and I decided to extend the existing paneling. It def a labor of love. I had to match the existing quarter sawn wood which was a pain to find but it's all worth it! You should do the whole room and create a nice library!
Great job!
AMAZING work, top class, Love it.
Incredible work
great video and explanation! well done mate! thanks for sharing!🙏🏻
That turned out looking really awesome
Thanks ;)
Great video. Exactly what I was looking for to get me started on my next project.
As a kid my dad let me destroy walls and it is great fun for kids. Fantastic work on the panels and a great reminder for the scope of a project like this.
im jealous cause you have all that free labor.
Fantastic 😊
Great work! Beautiful. Finish is right on. About blue tape - smart.
Stunning!
Looks amazing 👍🏻 great effort 🔨🪚
Thanks!!!!
Beautiful project. I highly recommend you try dissolving shellac flakes in denatured alcohol yourself. It is so much nicer to use.
Amazing job
Wow, it's great u have the knowledge to do this kinda wk...this would cost a fortune if u were to hire someone, that's if u can find someone, that will do good wk and won't rip u off...
This gives me some great ideas for my office, thanks for sharing!
I musta say that looks good!
That’s really cool
Beautiful!
love what you did! i'd love to see the moulding & trim
Huge improvement. I'd love to have walls like that
Wow, what a great video. Thank you for sharing. Why didn’t you just put the paddle on to the drywall? why did you take the drywall down? I am thinking about doing the same thing in my office,
Wow this is some quality craftsmanship. Could you post an update with the crown molding?
Sadly I moved. 😭
When cutting raised panels, do the end grain cuts first, because you're likely to get some tearing of fibres. This will be removed when you subsequently do the cuts along the grain. The same applies when you're machining on a router table or spindle moulder (shaper).
Smart
Great stuff! Just be careful with the bottom-right method used at 9:20
Great job. You mentioned that the project took 9 months at about 15 minutes a day. If you had done the work fulltime and not had to wait for drying hours during finishing, how many work days do you think it would have taken? Also, how much of that time might have been related to the learning processes as a 1st project?
Wow! That is gorgeous!! Not a DIY I will try though...lol
Nice
Why did you remove the sheet rock? Why not just tack up the wood to the sheet rock? If you have original plaster walls - would you have to demo/rip them out to install wood paneling? Thx!
Had to do a lot of wiring in the wall. Thought it would be easier that way
I wanted to see how you put the lights in! How big of a whole did you need? How did you cut into the glued seam without breaking the two pieces apart?
The glue seam is super strong. No risk of breaking it. I cut the hole with a 2inch hole cutter like you would use for installing a doorknob. It just needs to be big enough for the wires to go through ;)
@@cerupsly looks beautiful I like it 😊😊😊👍👍👍👍👍
I've tried every keyword search possible and yours is one of only a very few videos on making solid wood wall paneling. Also one of the best! Maybe I missed a detail? Did you rabbet those rails and stiles to receive the panels?
Yup! The panels are just floating in there.
@@cerupsly It really is beautiful. I'm not a big fan of oak because the grain can be very aggressive but your finish really evened it out nicely. The irony is I paneled my office in Walnut and used furniture grade plywood for the insets. The Danish oil made the darker spots darker but only brought attention to the lighter spots. Any chance you have a suggestion to even out the wood tone in Walnut?
@@nickbailey202 I never really have used Danish oil very much. I tend to prefer finishes that leave a coating on top to finishes that soak in and Harden. I suppose you could try a stain or something to cover up the light spots, but I’ve never had good luck with stain. Do you have a link to some pictures? I’d love to see your work!
Same
Where did you find those lights?
🤩👍👍
What type off wood Did you use pleasr
it's oak!
You should have installed at least 1/2" plywood on the wall first.
why remove the drywall?
Because of the electrical work hanging the lights
What was the stain colour you used in the first instance?
First was aniline dye. First coat was golden shellac. Second was walnut gel stain. Then satin poly
@@cerupsly Is there a specific shade of aniline dye?
Lot of work I don’t have time for....I’d need to be doing time in prison woodwork shop to do that detail....good voice though,,,,you ought to think about voice overs, narration like "how it’s made" , announcing or industrial,technical instructional sound tracks..you can wear pajamas to work and shave less frequently.....In a world where panel construction brings men to tears, there "panelnator" coming to theaters this holiday season!!!!!
Hi
Hi
😍👍🙏🧿❤👌