Two things for today. 1) All future videos should include the words "squigly wiggly" and 2) I have started organizing a union so that you children can have hot chocolate whenever they want. FREE THE HOT CHOCOLATE!
Beet juice is also a great wood stain! I'm a parrot owner and I've used it for coloring home-made and uncolored store bought bird toys since one of my birds is obsessed with the color red and has a bad habit of destroying all the red pieces of a toy and then abandoning the rest of the toy.
I'm late to the party but wanted to second coffee followed by mineral oil if humidity is going to be the bane of nearly everything you decide to attempt.
One of my favorite things about this channel. Some woodworkers barely register emotion when they make things - I still cheer out loud when things work!
I was thinking the same thing. I also thought just when you could not get any more excited about a project, you proved me wrong. 1) Proving me wrong isn't all that much of a challenge. 2) It IS a VERY CLEVER project.! 😁👍
Something I've found: People seem to be willing to pay more money for items that have small imperfections than for items that are perfect. I believe this is because the imperfections show that it was made by hand, that a human being put in the time and effort into making that item.
Everything, including your set of hand-blown green glass dishes with the tiny bubbles and imperfections, little bits of sand, proof they were crafted by the honest, simple, hard-working indigenous aboriginal people of wherever Did you really “find” that or did you just watch fight club?
@@pigbenis2812 the trend of paying for obviously handmade items was well established before Fight Club. That's why the movie mocked it. It's a known form of consumerism.
@@PopeGoliath It's not really a bad thing though. Sure there are some annoying vanity cases, but without people valuing the hand-made, those crafts would fade away.
I used to experience that all the time when I was selling screen printed patches, I'd usually put my misprints and the weird marbled prints that I'd get from changing ink colors into a discount bin but people started offering extra tips for the weirdest misprints.
Your attitude makes such a difference compared to a lot of other woodworking channels. I love the "whatever" comments if you make a mistake and you chalk it up to a learning process. That is a talent I wish I had!! Keep up the good work!
I love your videos! I really enjoy that you show your problem solving and errors. So many woodworkers share their videos like they never make mistakes and that's simply not true to woodworking.
You can also make the first 'ring' of the bowl twice as thick as the rest. That way you do not have to glue and drill two rings together. On the oval bowl, keeping the wood where the handle will rest a bit longer would alow you to cut a dado in it for the handle to rest in. Nice work. Love the oval one.
Awesome project. My mother-in-law has a bowl like this that is apple-shaped, and I've always loved it. Now I'll have to look into trying to make one for myself.
I was going to add that you could glue an extra piece to the side of the base that is flush with the top of the "flat pack". Or another idea is to make a slot mortise on the handle and a matching tenon in the base to stop sideways movement. Regardless, love the videos and keep up the good work 👍👍
I've used the angled cut with a scroll saw to make the design raise above the main surface. When I cut in 1 direction, it raises the design, but when I cut in the other direction, it lowers the design by the same amount (as long as you don't change the angle). This let's you make a thinner design that looks like it "pops" out of the main board.
Great project. I think the biggest thing I'd add is maybe some magnets for the handles. That way the ends wouldn't want to slip off and would have a satisfying snap when you open the bowl!
I have watched things on TH-cam about woodworking for about 4 years now and this is the first time TH-cam has every shown me your videos. I hate how they do things because this should be seen. That was some great thought on how to make these. Great how you explain and keep us both educated on some new ideas as well as being friendly and wish I was there kind of instruction. I look forward since I just subscribed to see other videos you have made and am hoping you still make new content. Such a Great New thing I found to start off 2024 with new things to try.
Again, thank you for showing the detail. Also for sharing the small mistakes you make and the way you fix them. Makes me feel a little better about my shop errors.
Remember back in highschool when you took trig and didn't know how it would apply in the real world? Well... THIS! The optimum angle can be found with a little bit of trig once you know 3 things: Your kerf width, your board thickness, and your overlap amount. I don't know the formula off the top of my head, but I'm sure it wouldn't take too long to figure it out when sketching out how the kerf cuts through the wood at different angles and seeing where the overhanging cut face overlaps the underhanging cut face. This is the beauty of trig, you can derive formulas from pencil and paper sketches.
This gave me a great Idea. Ty for reminding me u can do this. I bought a well made christmas themed one years back from a friend that was made by her great grandfather. Can't let these old but amazing tricks be forgotten
What’s old is new again. This was a high school shop project in 1982. Fun and nostalgic to watch. Thanks for the memories! The angle will very a bit depending on blade width. Blades with an aggressive set and Carbide saw blades will need more angle.
I thought both of those were gorgeous. I love that you have no qualms about sharing your mistakes either. I have been following you from the time you were starting up.It's not easy to have your ingenuity or your gusto and I doubt if I will ever make them but still you are awesome and inspiring. I really fail to understand who would give a thumbs down for your effort. Ignore those idiots. Thanks.
Thanks so much! We all make mistakes. It’s all in how you deal with them.... I don’t look at the thumbs downs.... only a negative person puts negativity in the world. And just gotta to feel bad for those ppl!
Wow!! I am 100% building one of these, amazing job!!!! As always 😉 Also I’ve seen people use coffee and tea to stain wood which would also obviously be food safe.
FYI: in order for the spiral to not fall through the tangent of the angle should be smaller than the ratio of the thickness of the wood to the width of the cut. Or: angla alpha < atan (thickness / sawwidth).
You are such a great teacher and a very talented woodworker. I really like how you show everything including mistakes. It reminds us that we all make a mistake now and then and then try to fix them. Many others just show what went right and delete anything that might show a flaw. You have a great personality and are so much fun to watch. I wish you years of success. 👍
So you can calculate the angle you need with trigonometry sin-1(kerf/material thickness)=minimum angle. at 7 degrees, with .75in plywood it looks like you've got about a 3/32 kerf :)
Love how the ice cream sandwich version turned out. Looks like you could use it as a bread basket which flatpacks away. With regards to your issue with the handle slipping off the sides, would it be an idea to add small vertical risers on the outside of the cross piece, to prevent the handle from slipping off?
You can still fix the problem with the handle coming off. Take it off, steam it for a little bit and bend the tips towards each other an inch or two. This will put some tension on it so it is constantly pulling closed and will be less likely to pop out. Another way would be to put a couple decorative tabs on the end of each leg, that would trap the handle in the locked open position. They could even have a pin inserted to lock the handle from rotating, and lock the entire mechanism in the open or closed position. I'm thinking brass or stainless steel.
I really love how the oval bowl turned out the different colours. By messing up or failing on a projet like you said we earn skills on how doing it different, better the next time. Have a nice warm time in your garage Greetings from Luxemburg
"You go to school on the first one". The oval ice cream sandwich design looks so nice. It's a good thing that you tried two ideas so that second one turned out better.
Hi, I really like the failed one because to me it looks like an antique chinese basket. Very beautiful. Congrats with the succes. Great idea. Thank you.
You laugh, giggle and point out your mistakes, show true excitement and joy with what you do....you are so entertaining to watch....and very talented too! Keep up the great work and hope it’s not another month till your next vid!! Cheers
It is sooo nice you show your hits and your mistakes as well. As always your work is top quality. Love how it looks! Thanks for sharing Greetings from Chile
Tamar, I agree with the other comments about your infectious positivity! I also appreciate your opinion of what you consider a fail, where would we be without making mistakes to learn from. I have not seen many variations of these, and absolutely love the oval bowl! Wants to make me go out in the shop, fire up the bandsaw, and attempt one of these! Keep up the fantastic content, helping us all learn from mistakes, and the positivity! Thoroughly enjoy your content and always look forward to more!
Thanks for the experiment. It went well. I've wondered why people making bandsaw boxes so often cut and glue across the grain. You point out what should be done, and demonstrate how hard it is to keep everything in mind at the same time. (Not to mention the extra challenges of children and cold.) Keep up the good work!
For your slightly short oval handles, perhaps a countersink into the bottom handle end, and a short domed dowel to fit over in the base, would help lock it open.
Really cool concept, I'm saving this idea/video away for future reference! I think I can adapt this idea to work with thinner wood on one of my CNC Lasers! Nifty video, thanks for sharing! Now I have yet another thing I need to design! The list is forever growing longer and longer!
What an exceptional finish. That worked out far better than I had expected that it would. Thank you for sharing your excellent work Tamara. I always enjoy your work but this is a cut above. Think that I’ll have to make one for my mum and another for my sister, they will love them but hmmm walnut is wicked expensive here in Australia so another wood will have to do. Again, thanks Tamara, a really great job and thank you for the instruction, easy to follow and understand, thank you
This has been really enjoyable to watch and will def be digging into my own similar project for some gifts. Thanks for your joyful, humble, and thoughtful approach to the craft! Keep it up sister!
This channel is amazing Tamar , just love your tips and tricks. The way you explain everything is very acurate and easy to understand. Thank you Greetings from Portugal
Two things for today. 1) All future videos should include the words "squigly wiggly" and 2) I have started organizing a union so that you children can have hot chocolate whenever they want. FREE THE HOT CHOCOLATE!
😂😂😂
#3: make "🎶 Wher's my push-stick 🎵" the official jingle of the channel!
@@saveriog.825 that should be my new intro song 😂
You looks lika a very nice person, with high level wood skills and
ofcourse, you are so beautiful.
Thanks for share you knowlentage.
I'll say squiggly wiggly 2 times 😉
i always like how you explain your project. you're always excited and that makes me excited.
So awesome to hear. Thanks!
My favorite food safe stain is extremely concentrated instant coffee
Beet juice is also a great wood stain! I'm a parrot owner and I've used it for coloring home-made and uncolored store bought bird toys since one of my birds is obsessed with the color red and has a bad habit of destroying all the red pieces of a toy and then abandoning the rest of the toy.
I'm late to the party but wanted to second coffee followed by mineral oil if humidity is going to be the bane of nearly everything you decide to attempt.
I love seeing how excited you are for each of your projects.
I love learning all this stuff!
Super awesome, awesome, awesome it's a pleasure watching your projects and I admire you enomoursly thanks for sharing
One of my favorite things about this channel. Some woodworkers barely register emotion when they make things - I still cheer out loud when things work!
I was thinking the same thing. I also thought just when you could not get any more excited about a project, you proved me wrong. 1) Proving me wrong isn't all that much of a challenge. 2) It IS a VERY CLEVER project.! 😁👍
Something I've found:
People seem to be willing to pay more money for items that have small imperfections than for items that are perfect.
I believe this is because the imperfections show that it was made by hand, that a human being put in the time and effort into making that item.
Everything, including your set of hand-blown green glass dishes with the tiny bubbles and imperfections, little bits of sand, proof they were crafted by the honest, simple, hard-working indigenous aboriginal people of wherever
Did you really “find” that or did you just watch fight club?
@@pigbenis2812 the trend of paying for obviously handmade items was well established before Fight Club. That's why the movie mocked it. It's a known form of consumerism.
@@PopeGoliath It's not really a bad thing though. Sure there are some annoying vanity cases, but without people valuing the hand-made, those crafts would fade away.
I used to experience that all the time when I was selling screen printed patches, I'd usually put my misprints and the weird marbled prints that I'd get from changing ink colors into a discount bin but people started offering extra tips for the weirdest misprints.
Your excitement about your projects is infectious!
Glad you think so!
In case it hasn't been said yet, it's a collapsi-bowl.
Just came to see if anybody said it.
Superbowl
What is it. Collapsable or collapsible.
@@youremybiggestfan Collapsible. Google told me so.
"black" food colouring is actually just really dark green.
That's why the wood came out the colour it did.
Yes. That’s what I discovered here.
It's still beautiful!
I first found out it was dark green after eating some "black" Halloween cupcakes.
Licorice is actually a very dark green too 😳
we can tell what it is by what it does
Your attitude makes such a difference compared to a lot of other woodworking channels. I love the "whatever" comments if you make a mistake and you chalk it up to a learning process. That is a talent I wish I had!! Keep up the good work!
Thanks!
I really love how you had like a little bar status when you were talking about the sponsor. It was really satisfying to watch
Glad to hear!
I love your videos! I really enjoy that you show your problem solving and errors. So many woodworkers share their videos like they never make mistakes and that's simply not true to woodworking.
I’ve yet to make a project without any mistakes!
nice!
wattup wilson
!!!
So cool to see you here Martin!
Now I know how I ended up here :D
Your smile and excitement is contagious, a real pleasure to watch.
☺️☺️
The walnut one looks so good!!
Thanks so much!
You never cease to amaze young lady. Great job.
Thanks!
i can’t be the only one who thought it was an expandable tub by seeing the thumbnail
Absolutely brilliant. Love the fact you show your fails. Really inspiring to see even pro’s have disasters.
תודה 😉
You can also make the first 'ring' of the bowl twice as thick as the rest. That way you do not have to glue and drill two rings together.
On the oval bowl, keeping the wood where the handle will rest a bit longer would alow you to cut a dado in it for the handle to rest in.
Nice work. Love the oval one.
Awesome project. My mother-in-law has a bowl like this that is apple-shaped, and I've always loved it. Now I'll have to look into trying to make one for myself.
Thanks! I saw the apple shaped one in my research!
Could you add magnets to the ends of the handle and the edge of the base to lock it in better and keep it from dropping off he edge?
That’s a great idea!
I was going to add that you could glue an extra piece to the side of the base that is flush with the top of the "flat pack".
Or another idea is to make a slot mortise on the handle and a matching tenon in the base to stop sideways movement.
Regardless, love the videos and keep up the good work 👍👍
@@whatdaf11 all great ideas!
I've used the angled cut with a scroll saw to make the design raise above the main surface. When I cut in 1 direction, it raises the design, but when I cut in the other direction, it lowers the design by the same amount (as long as you don't change the angle). This let's you make a thinner design that looks like it "pops" out of the main board.
@@whatdaf11 yes, exactly what I was going to post. Fortunately I checked to see if anyone else had suggested it first :)
Fantastic, you overcame
Your expectations. It is brilliant to see your eyes and smiles for the satisfaction of the work.
Congratulations.
Thanks so much! So fun to make this stuff
Honestly my first instinct on hearing that you needed food-safe dye was to use food to dye it. Like pomegranate or tumeric.
Do you think Neapolitan ice cream might do the trick?
I AM FROM BRAZIL AND A ALWAYS WATCH YOUR PROJECTS.CONGRATULATIONS!
Great project. I think the biggest thing I'd add is maybe some magnets for the handles. That way the ends wouldn't want to slip off and would have a satisfying snap when you open the bowl!
I have watched things on TH-cam about woodworking for about 4 years now and this is the first time TH-cam has every shown me your videos. I hate how they do things because this should be seen. That was some great thought on how to make these. Great how you explain and keep us both educated on some new ideas as well as being friendly and wish I was there kind of instruction. I look forward since I just subscribed to see other videos you have made and am hoping you still make new content. Such a Great New thing I found to start off 2024 with new things to try.
Working on lots of big stuff! Stay tuned!
Another great project, I like how you explain each step. I love Ariat clothing and boots.
Thanks so much! I’m so impressed with all this stuff
Again, thank you for showing the detail. Also for sharing the small mistakes you make and the way you fix them. Makes me feel a little better about my shop errors.
Remember back in highschool when you took trig and didn't know how it would apply in the real world? Well... THIS! The optimum angle can be found with a little bit of trig once you know 3 things: Your kerf width, your board thickness, and your overlap amount. I don't know the formula off the top of my head, but I'm sure it wouldn't take too long to figure it out when sketching out how the kerf cuts through the wood at different angles and seeing where the overhanging cut face overlaps the underhanging cut face. This is the beauty of trig, you can derive formulas from pencil and paper sketches.
This gave me a great Idea.
Ty for reminding me u can do this.
I bought a well made christmas themed one years back from a friend that was made by her great grandfather.
Can't let these old but amazing tricks be forgotten
Glad it gave you a good idea!
I don't even own a bandsaw (yet) but I love being inspired by your creativity and enthusiasm! Always something interesting on this channel !!
Awesome! Love it
It could be done with a scroll saw.
What’s old is new again. This was a high school shop project in 1982. Fun and nostalgic to watch. Thanks for the memories!
The angle will very a bit depending on blade width. Blades with an aggressive set and Carbide saw blades will need more angle.
Yup! They’ve been around for a while! Was so fun to experiment with it
Maybe it's just me, but the black line in the circular bowl makes it look like a dragon eye!
I thought both of those were gorgeous. I love that you have no qualms about sharing your mistakes either. I have been following you from the time you were starting up.It's not easy to have your ingenuity or your gusto and I doubt if I will ever make them but still you are awesome and inspiring. I really fail to understand who would give a thumbs down for your effort. Ignore those idiots. Thanks.
Thanks so much! We all make mistakes. It’s all in how you deal with them.... I don’t look at the thumbs downs.... only a negative person puts negativity in the world. And just gotta to feel bad for those ppl!
Wow!! I am 100% building one of these, amazing job!!!! As always 😉
Also I’ve seen people use coffee and tea to stain wood which would also obviously be food safe.
Thanks! Have fun! Yes! I’ve used tea in the past. Totally forgot about that one...
Love 💗 the imagination and creativity!! Fantastic experiment and instruction!!🙌👍
Thanks!
I used to buy these in Afghanistan as gifts. Everyone back home loved them.
They’re so cool
FYI: in order for the spiral to not fall through the tangent of the angle should be smaller than the ratio of the thickness of the wood to the width of the cut. Or: angla alpha < atan (thickness / sawwidth).
Just so you know, most wood stain is food safe if you give it 30 days to cure. great video!
Love the mechanism that locks it open! Mind was blown 👏
Thanks Marie! These were so fun to make
I just kept hearing her talk about "the meatball core" and I was so intrigued, but I guess a maple core is good too!
Haha maybe the ice cream sandwich made up for that 😂
GEORGIOUSLY DONE GAL!!
Lots of natural food safe stains. Personally I've used coffee and charcoal. Also could use berries, turmeric, juice any veggie, ect.
You are such a great teacher and a very talented woodworker. I really like how you show everything including mistakes. It reminds us that we all make a mistake now and then and then try to fix them. Many others just show what went right and delete anything that might show a flaw. You have a great personality and are so much fun to watch. I wish you years of success. 👍
Glad you enjoy all my fails ha
So you can calculate the angle you need with trigonometry
sin-1(kerf/material thickness)=minimum angle.
at 7 degrees, with .75in plywood it looks like you've got about a 3/32 kerf :)
The Finished product looks great! Again, thanks for sharing.
Thanks!
Hmm. Depending on the sander's design you might be able to sand the inside of the kerf with a table top belt sander and a narrow belt...
I enjoy your enthusiasm. You are an excellent mad scientist too. It's so cool.
Hahah! Thanks!
Love how the ice cream sandwich version turned out. Looks like you could use it as a bread basket which flatpacks away. With regards to your issue with the handle slipping off the sides, would it be an idea to add small vertical risers on the outside of the cross piece, to prevent the handle from slipping off?
Thanks! Great idea!
So cool. They're simple, elegant, compact, I love it
Awesome to hear! Thanks!
What a journey. Conflict, adversity, lessons learned, happy resolution. Great video.
Hahah! Like a great Hollywood picture! 😂
Gadzooks! She's got it.
Took three days.You had to make dinner,help with homework,tuck hubby in,bake cookies,sew knees in jeans.
Hahahah! You know the deal 😂
Ohh I love how exited you always are it makes it even better to watch
Awesome explanation thanks for the awesome video’s❤
You can still fix the problem with the handle coming off.
Take it off, steam it for a little bit and bend the tips towards each other an inch or two.
This will put some tension on it so it is constantly pulling closed and will be less likely to pop out.
Another way would be to put a couple decorative tabs on the end of each leg, that would trap the handle in the locked open position.
They could even have a pin inserted to lock the handle from rotating, and lock the entire mechanism in the open or closed position.
I'm thinking brass or stainless steel.
I really love how the oval bowl turned out the different colours. By messing up or failing on a projet like you said we earn skills on how doing it different, better the next time.
Have a nice warm time in your garage
Greetings from Luxemburg
Thanks! No better way to learn!
"You go to school on the first one". The oval ice cream sandwich design looks so nice. It's a good thing that you tried two ideas so that second one turned out better.
Totally! So happy I cut the round one first!
Hi, I really like the failed one because to me it looks like an antique chinese basket. Very beautiful. Congrats with the succes. Great idea. Thank you.
There’s definitely an old world feeling about it!
Missed an opportunity to call it a collapsi-Bowl
I’m really mad at myself for that...
This person puns right!
You laugh, giggle and point out your mistakes, show true excitement and joy with what you do....you are so entertaining to watch....and very talented too!
Keep up the great work and hope it’s not another month till your next vid!!
Cheers
So glad you like it! Ha! Thanks so much!
Thanks for stressing the cut time factor, i'm always rushing cuts!
Yeah! If I showed it in real time, no one would watch!
Thanks for talking through the process as you go. It's great to hear those insights.
Glad you like it!
I’ll say you took 20 mins to produce the cut on the oval project.
Really good guess 😉
a very compact picnic basket... love it!
☺️☺️
Your explanations are great! You are an amazing teacher. Love that you mixed the experimentation with your experience and intuition
Glad to hear! Thanks!
The ‘mess up’ gives it character - nice,work.
Thanks!
Great work! I found one of the bowls 4 years ago. It gave me an amazing idea for a kinetic sculpture!
Thanks! So fun
Cool projects!!! Enjoy watching you as always!! Take and be safe!!
תודה!!
תותחית על!!!!
Thank you so much for posting your trials and tribulations with the finishes. Your videos always are so informative and fun.
Glad you like them! Thanks!
It is sooo nice you show your hits and your mistakes as well. As always your work is top quality. Love how it looks!
Thanks for sharing
Greetings from Chile
Thanks so much! Glad you like it!
Welcom back Tamara . Nice to see you again and im so lucky to find your channel
Glad to be back! Thanks!
Cool project and thanks for teaching me a new word. I have never heard of successed but hey it’s all about learning.
Stumbled across your videos. I love how you walk us through the experience and show all successes and fails. Great job, keep learning, and thank you!
Thanks so much!
Tamar, I agree with the other comments about your infectious positivity! I also appreciate your opinion of what you consider a fail, where would we be without making mistakes to learn from. I have not seen many variations of these, and absolutely love the oval bowl! Wants to make me go out in the shop, fire up the bandsaw, and attempt one of these! Keep up the fantastic content, helping us all learn from mistakes, and the positivity! Thoroughly enjoy your content and always look forward to more!
Thanks so much! If this video made you want to go out in the shop, I did my job! That’s the goal! 🤘🤘
Those bowls are really cool and I love the oval bowl so much!! 👍👍👍👍👍
Thanks so much! I can’t stop playing with it 😂
Love the walnut one. As with failures they are good to see as we are learn from mistakes. 😊
Thanks! Yup! Happy I tried it out!
As always, a nice project with a friendly smile from Tamar.
Glad you liked it!
Thanks for the experiment. It went well. I've wondered why people making bandsaw boxes so often cut and glue across the grain. You point out what should be done, and demonstrate how hard it is to keep everything in mind at the same time. (Not to mention the extra challenges of children and cold.) Keep up the good work!
For your slightly short oval handles, perhaps a countersink into the bottom handle end, and a short domed dowel to fit over in the base, would help lock it open.
Amazing project! Love the way you explane all you do. Here is freezing too. Hugs from Ushuaia, south of Patagonia Argentina.
Glad you like it. Thanks!
so creative, i love that you tried food colouring!
Thanks! Always fun to experiment
Sehr gut erklärt !
Dankeschön für die wirklich praktische Anleitung !
Congratulations on the accuracy and ..... patience! 👍
Thanks!
Love your enthusiasm!
This piece is very ambitious! Good work.
Thanks!
Really cool concept, I'm saving this idea/video away for future reference! I think I can adapt this idea to work with thinner wood on one of my CNC Lasers! Nifty video, thanks for sharing! Now I have yet another thing I need to design! The list is forever growing longer and longer!
This was honestly amazing.
Glad to hear!
Love your videos, you have a wonderful way of presenting and explaining what you are doing! Thanks for sharing! I always learn a lot from your videos.
Glad you like them! Awesome to hear!
Tamar, in times like this I find your videos to be a great stress reliever.
That’s really so awesome to hear. We all need a distraction....
Hi, Tamar,
Cool idea, never seen on TH-cam.
Nicely done.
Keep it safe, it is not over yet.
Willy from Belgium.
😷😷😷
Thanks so much! Glad you liked it!
@@3x3CustomTamar I like everything you do. I am a fan of women that can handle tools.
Willy from Belgium.
👍👍👍
What an exceptional finish. That worked out far better than I had expected that it would. Thank you for sharing your excellent work Tamara. I always enjoy your work but this is a cut above. Think that I’ll have to make one for my mum and another for my sister, they will love them but hmmm walnut is wicked expensive here in Australia so another wood will have to do. Again, thanks Tamara, a really great job and thank you for the instruction, easy to follow and understand, thank you
Awesome! Have fun making them!
The slide in and out of frame just cracks me up everytime... It is you signature move!
Haha! Clearly I laugh at myself too 😂
OMG! That is so way cool! Thank you for all of the tips, I have to try this now! Take care!
Have fun!
Super cool. You always have interesting projects and your notes are very helpful. Thanks for sharing and being honest.
Awesome to hear! Thanks!
Cool idea with using the tape first and then gluing the template on top.
Glad you liked it!
Wow that oval bowl turned out beautifully. A project like this makes me wish I had a bandsaw.
Thanks so much! A scroll saw Would probably be even better!
Love the outtakes at the end of recent vids.
Glad to hear!
Thank you for sharing this week Tamara! Thank you for showing your mistakes because I really learned a lot this week! Oh now I need a band saw!
Awesome! Glad you liked it! The bandsaw totally changed the way I work...
This has been really enjoyable to watch and will def be digging into my own similar project for some gifts. Thanks for your joyful, humble, and thoughtful approach to the craft! Keep it up sister!
Glad you liked it!
Love this. I'm going to say it took 45 minutes to cut the bowl. Thx for the video!
Thanks! Not that long!
This channel is amazing Tamar , just love your tips and tricks.
The way you explain everything is very acurate and easy to understand.
Thank you
Greetings from Portugal
Awesome to hear! Thanks!
Wow, what a nice idea. Well done!
Thank you! Cheers!
Beautiful basket, thank you for showing
Glad you like it. Thanks!