Mr. Schade is more than a craftsman. He is an artist with wood, fiberglass, carbon fiber and epoxy. A labor of love and infinite patience. Thank you for the experience of watching you work. A pleasure, Sir.
This is jewelry! Many years ago I bought an issue of Popular Mechanics magazine, with the striking surprice of a wooden canoe as project. I’m not a handcrafter nor have the shop to even consider making a chair, let alone a useful canoe. But I’ve been always fascinated for thoes gifted handcrafters that put love into their work, making it a pure plasure just to watch them transform objects. Thank you for sharing.
It's impossible to see a job like that without being overwhelmed. The level of quality, zeal and love that you put in your work, awakens in those who see, a deep reverence and respect. Congratulations. God bless you
We have been building in wood for 4 generations. My great great Grandfather made musical instruments. My Grandfather and Father built fine furniture. At age 13, an owner of custom made furniture asked me to work for him. Your craftsmanship is unequalled. My hats off to you. Carry on!
I am currently building a Guillemot from Nick's book. The book alone is educational enough to learn what needs to be done, but the videos are priceless when actually building one of these amazing boats. I have watched all of them, some of them multiple times as I move into different stages of construction. Thank you Nick for teaching me such an awesome, relaxing, and rewarding new skill, the results of which will last generations.
Sir, I am not going to talk about your canoe as all that spectacular detail originated from an high level activity in your mind that we cannot see. As I myself come from a family of traditional boat builders in the Mediterranean Sea, at 8:02 I could not help admiring how you moved your hand along that hull and I knew what your fingers felt and about what you were conscious and seen. At 8:05 those nimble fingers, without any sign of clumsiness handled that shaping tool with grace and a feeling for every movement and the sharpness of that blade, I have no doubt that you honed it yourself with all your respect for that edge which you must look after with great care. At 8:20 the diagonal strokes indicate clearly that you are a natural master craftsman, with a sensitive feel at the tip of your fingers which aided by shadows you can avoid the smaller radius of curvatures to give that hull the best maximize and largest curves with its length. At 8:26 while your right hand is working to produce the desired surface curve , your left hand is not exactly idle but those fingers are feeling the hull for all the strokes you generate and they are measuring how kind you are to it. The manner in which the swarf and shavings roll off that very sharp scraper, what remains has no option but to obey your demands as far as finishing is concerned, where you do not even allow the scratches of the grit of sanding, scrapers in the hands of a master craftsman is more than enough. It is such a pity that all that workmanship is hidden between layers of epoxy and fibres which were laid with such gentleness and all such a meticulous manner including the vacuum which ensures lightness with strength. I need not go further, any boat that is supervised or made by these human movements, shown by this man and seen in this video , will definitely be a work of engineering art, to be treasured in one's life. This is what I admired most as the boat itself is circumstantial, and the product could be anything as it will contain the same quality of excellence. Congratulations, Sir, I raise my hat to you.
Bowcase or tens of thousands of hours of hard work, practice, and tutelage.... but yeah.... might as well Rob that from him and give all of the credit to space ghost
Through using one word such as "beautiful" or "nice" one is being too economical and one is only thinking of the product itself, Creating an item of beauty its originator goes through many delicate actions to create beauty and it is not fair for different people as dancers, craftsmen, musicians, singers, furniture makers and shipbuilders and plane makers to call their product " beautiful". It is the the person himself that one should admire and not only the item in question and so one need to comment on the fact that one appreciated a particular action or a set of actions by the craftsman to achieve beauty, Beauty has multiple and diverse components and most of the beauty is in the movement of the craftsman mind which is reflected through the hands and limbs, That is real beauty, the movement and the gentleness and the ability to sharpen tools and move them in such a manner that another beauty is created. So do not be so economical with words when you meet a craftsmen, find words to describe the craftsman himself and though you will never refer to him as " beautiful" you may hint that you admired his movements and his delicate actions in knowing what to do to create a beautiful product. The real beauty is not in the item but in the many components and actions of the craftsman. That is what one should admire and one needs to know what makes beauty in dancing , singing, various arts, building boats , varnishing.......... discussing the creation of what is beautiful is much better than just saying that something is " beautiful " or " nice".
Some people have an innate talent for this kind of craftsmanship. Nick, you are one of those people. My hat is off to you. These vessels are exquisite!
I am just completely blown away. Started off with beautiful craftsmanship. Then the carbon fiber, and inlay took it to a whole other level. A true craftsman. Great work!
Not sure what was better, the amazing craftsmanship, the quality of the result, or the cinema-quality video production. O, and the music was great, too. THANK YOU!
You are not just a Kayak builder, Nick, you are a wood working god. I am nothing compared to you but there is something spiritual about "becoming one" with a project like this. It put a tear to my eye.
Nik конечно молодец , отличный мастер своего дела, но вы наверняка не наблюдали за работой мастеров изготовляющих музыкальные инструменты из дерева , там нужна точность покруче
Nick - absolutely amazing. It's guys like you that make what are country is today. Needless to say I would never have the patients , but I love to canoe and have 5 of them. Cheers to you !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
It’s three years since the last comment surely it’s been viewed since then? This deserves praise every day. I did build a canoe myself once. I was proud of it and I got praise but obviously they had not seen this level of skill
I have watched this video 20 + times Nick, and I never get tired of it. You are an inspiring man, and because of you, I've decided to try this myself. I never get tired of watching this and I so badly want to be like you.... so relaxed, and so in tune with nature. When I've had a rough day I come here to this video for inspiration. This video alone is such a great place to come and meditate. I think I've commented before, but this is in my favorites / saved videos. I'd love to meet you in person one day. That would be the best day ever in my life! Thank you for this.
I work in the handcrafted solid wood furniture industry...this is what I truly want to get into, handcrafted custom masterpieces. A table is simple. However, mastering the technique of building a one of a kind kayak...is magnificent.
The best video I have seen in a long time. Just the work being done and not a word spoken. Many in the film industry could learn allot from this and how not every seccond does someone need to be saying something. Thank you.
I've built 4 strip canoes and one of the greatest moments is when you pour on the resin and the beautiful color of the cedar pops out. Of course, nothing beats dropping it in the water for the first time. Thanks for the video.
Your knowledge and skill is impressive. Watching the process was revealing. I build engines and other mechanical devices and show them at engine shows. People view them and enjoy them, but have no way to appreciate them fully because they weren't there for the process. I find that the inner pleasure of knowing and understanding what I've accomplished has to be enough and that, ego aside, that is what it was all about anyhow. That and getting away from the wife for a while!
Woodcraft always look easy until you try it out yourself, this video really got me emotional, i honestly cant explain how much im grateful for this video, you my friend, have an amazing talent. Thank you
these men were gifted and are on a whole other planet when it comes to wood crafts I shudder to even think of a tempting to build anything near as good as this and that music and landscape to calm and build to makes it all worth while still it would never turn out to float if I tried this you guys are really awesome builders you took it to a totally whole new level I have to watch your video all over thanks for showing me things that are totally out my reach can't find the words to say now just lost for words your to good way to far to good
Mr. Schade; i now know what it would have felt like watching over the shoulders of Leonardo Divinci at work by a totally know nothing student artist... thank you for allowing us to enter your world, it was like hearing a Beatles song for the very first time it came over the radio. you just knew there wasn't anything like it in the world. it was more than impressive, but will be a fond memory to recall and enjoy many more times to come my only regret, i failed to summon up in words the wonderful feelings watching this presentation...
This kayak goes on the wall in a wall street board room or in some retired politician's 3rd house's boat house. Otherwise Nick isn't getting paid what he's worth.
This is probably the greatest thing I’ve ever watched, an hour after I had finished watching I’m still trying to figure out who’s better the craftsman or the videographer!! Thanks for sharing it was a treat.
I'm not sure how many times I said "wow" during that video. I'm glad there was no dumb voice over. The mans skill did all the talking that video ever needs. I would love to see this little beauty in action.
I came here because I thought the boat looked nice in the thumbnail, reminded me of a ww2 German U-boat minus its conning tower lol... very beautiful form. Ended up watching a very relaxing and well put together video of some guy crafting with zen. just brilliant, and I won't bemoan the use of fibres and resins, I enjoyed the surprises of the techniques employed... nice 20 minutes.
This is a tour de force in exquisite workmanship. Very few can ever aspire to such high standards. I wonder if watching this many folk might discount the possibility of building a DIY example?
Thanks for the reply Nick. Just a question: how did you get into this field of woodworking? Honestly making a career out of doing things like this and woodworking is a dream of mine. Is it a good profession to go into?
I started while I had a different job, doing it for my own pleasure until I got to the point where I felt it would work. You might want to read this: www.guillemot-kayaks.com/guillemot/blog/admin/so_you_want_build_and_sell_boats
This has become a deal with making these boats and now that it has long been achieved I am not all that impressed with it (NS is a great builder I don't mean that, but beginers build their boats this way too). Gene Jensen the great canoe designer, could turn out a canoe that would win races and go on to be pulled for molds and sold by one of the major canoe companies, in 4 days. That is hand drawing the plans for a new model, lofting full size and making, outfitting and launching and paddling the boat. So yeah these are pretty boats, but there is a whole world of making boats for real uses efficiently up to boats 60 of 100 feet long, using strips and epoxy and that seems little observed in the rush to create small often badly designed boats (not here) that look like a coffee table. And people seem to feel pushed to ever more expensive, heavy, and time consuming to build designs, for what are boats. They need to be well designed, fair, able to hold their shape, light, and durable. So am I am watching the video because I love this boat, and all, but as a builder just throwing out the fact that great boats can be made relatively simply with this system right up to the size of major yachts.
This is truly extraordinary work. I hope that with time I will develop the skills, devotion, and patience you have mastered in your craft. Thank you for contributing your talents to the world.
Standard wood glue is stronger than the wood itself. Since the whole boat is clad with fiberglass or carbon fiber set in epoxy, the wood never gets wet, so the non-waterproof nature of the glue is not an issue.
Nick, you are extremely generous with your knowledge to have created and posted these videos. They, like your boat building, are art in themselves. It is a joy to see a true obsessive at work!
My distant friend, I think you have an insight about what a meaningful life is, 1000 times more than a Jeff Bezos. Making things with your, hands and taking the right time to do it is the path of wise enlightened souls. Would hang one in my living room in the city of Rome for the beauty of looking at it :)
@@VV-cy9gf I could also mention literature such as www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5024483/ or general knowledge such as www.craftscouncil.org.uk/articles/4-reasons-craft-is-good-for-your-mental-health/
In any case it's my 6 decades of personal experience giving me this opinion. Your mileage might vary and have no interest whatsoever in convincing you.
@@RobertAlexanderRM I highly doubt you have known Jeff in person for any amount of time let alone 60 years. The reason I wrote the comment was because I very often see derogatory comments targeted at successful people. It saddens me. #richlivesmatter #successtakeswork
@@RobertAlexanderRM You didn't post these studies when you first responded. While you have 'no interest whatsoever in convincing you' (sic) , it looks like this topic might be at least important enough for you to take time out of your finite life and warm up google in order to link the studies. I will not contest the benefits of manual labour, I do believe humans will benefit from doing that at this point in time (in millions of years, the human body will have adapted to eating big macs and driving cars with no physical labour). My goal is not to change your mind about having more respect for the successful people, but to convince the passive people reading the comments, who are on the fence on their view of the world. It is beneficial for your life to respect everyone, including the rich. As Mr. Milton Friedman so eloquently put it - if you have more than zero dollars on your bank account, it means you have given the world more than you have taken from it. Understand and internalize this profundity and great things will happen to you. Tegusat päeva!
wow! just wow! Do you teach any class? I'd love to be your student. This deff would help me out in building my future catamaran. Loved it! I'm in awe in how you created this masterpiece! Teach me master.
I'm just back from teaching a class in Maine. For more information about classes visit: www.guillemot-kayaks.com/guillemot/kayaking_information/products/workshops_and_classes
Wow. Thank you. I'm not trying to be a smartass either, but that was spiritual! I'm building a SUP out of foam and fiberglass. I haven't built anything out of wood since junior high. My ultimate goal is to make a strip kayak. I learned more watching you work than the instructional videos I've seen and you didn't say a word. If you lived nearby I would clean your shop and mow your lawn all year if you let me sit in the room and watch. I've got to find a boat builder that needs a shop hand. Thanks again.
World class boat and video! Honored to have had a very small part in the making of this masterpiece (infusion assistant) One question: what the heck is going on with the frying pan and hotplate at 16:51?
+Dave Grainger I believe he's using the heated sand to slightly darken and 'shade' some of the lighter pieces to give them depth. Look at the point in the video where he's scraping off the tape and you'll see how the lighter wood around the eagles head has dark shadows. Nice touch.
Hello Nick . ..the your video perfectly expresses the sentiment that surrounds the birth of a kayak homebuilt . The magic that goes beyond a building 's sake . You are a true artist congratulations .Gianni Iandolo
Beautiful craftsmanship and stunning marquetry. I can appreciate all the work put into that pair of kayaks. Many years ago I built a 19.5 ft 20" beam West Greenland style kayak that was effortless to paddle. The Santa Barbara coastline saw much of me paddling along the shores often with dolphins near sunset. That boat would surf on the swells and put a huge grin from the inside out.
Hats off to you....It's a work of art,and like any masterpiece, it costs a lot of money...But for true connoisseurs of quality, this is not a problem!:))))))
That was super satisfying to watch. And I was thinking the kayak might not be very strong with such thin wood, but then you put fiber glass on it...then carbon fiber and then my concern disappeared.
Guessing it is a method of burning the wood for color contrast. More precise than using a torch and more subtle than using a wood burning iron. If you look closely at the edges of the inlay at 17:41, you will see the darkened portions.
The level of craftsmanship that went into this creation truly exceeded my expectation. I was already impressed before you applied the marquetry, but that really tipped it over the edge. The beauty of natural timber married with the functionality of modern composite materials make for a craft that is not only a pleasure to behold, but no doubt a delight in its purpose. Thanks for sharing.
I was dreaming through the entire video about the sheer joy of making one of these beautiful boats, but when I saw the finished product at the end, sadly, I was forced to accet the reality that I cannot. You are a true craftsman, and I applaud you...
Rare and extraordinary craftsmanship, thank you for sharing. Many years ago I had the pleasure of spending the day with another master craftsman, Sam Maloof. Words fail to describe such artistry.
The Bob Ross of boats. He starts carving a hole on a perfectly laid surface and I'm all: _Oh no... ruined, what good can come of that? And boom, shinny bald eagle!
I purchased your first book many years ago but I've never taken the time to build a kayak. Your techniques have changed a lot since that book but the care and craftsmanship is still there. After watching this I have to finally take the time to do it. Thank you for a beautiful design and amazing inspiration.
+ Yidris It's an incredible build - absolute attention to detail. Probably more like 5 mm wood core. Yes, misleading name, I agree. But look at the result...
Ant Mallett I agree, it's an exceptional result. im just not keen on someone calling an item "wooden" when the majority of the construction is composite.
+ Yidris The majority of the workmanship is in wood, the rest is something anyone could do. So perhaps the term wooden is still true? I feel that if this kayak was made 1000 years ago, the wooden shell would be smothered in tar, or an equivalent, inside and out. And perhaps the tar would have sinews laid into it as it dried? Who knows?
Ant Mallett good points, all of them. and I agree, the majority of the 'workmanship' is in wood. all of the special skills and craftsmanship required is in carpentry and fine wood working techniques. but I still maintain that the majority of the 'construction' is composite, so that takes away from the term 'wooden'. it's the same as if I made an acoustic guitar out of carbon fiber, yet i had wooden bracing inside, and then I insisted on calling it a "wooden" guitar... it's not. after he shaped the wood, and scraped it, then sanded it, the 3/16" thick wooden strips were whisper thin, really all they were was a design. they served no function other than providing a form on which the composite layers could be set. and once the boat was finished, the wood was essentially just a visual design inside of a composite boat.
+ Yidris I wasn't aware that he started with 3/16, or properly said, about 5 mm. I agree, after planing, spokeshaving and sanding the crap out of the wood, he probably had spots in the 1 to 2 mm range, most of it though, I would think would be 3 mm thick at least. That's 1/8 " for you colonials... You said 'the 3/16" thick wooden strips were whisper thin, really all they were was a design. they served no function other than providing a form on which the composite layers could be set.' I agree with you on that. The fact that the outer layer of glass fibre was put in place first, before any of the formers were removed, shows that the wooden shell has no implicit integrity. And only after the outer FG shell has cured, is there enough rigidity to pull a vacuum as the inner epoxy/CF lining is applied. I think you hit the nail on the head, 'just a visual design inside of a composite boat.' So after all that work, and the attached price tag...
Mr. Schade is more than a craftsman. He is an artist with wood, fiberglass, carbon fiber and epoxy. A labor of love and infinite patience. Thank you for the experience of watching you work. A pleasure, Sir.
Agree
This is jewelry! Many years ago I bought an issue of Popular Mechanics magazine, with the striking surprice of a wooden canoe as project. I’m not a handcrafter nor have the shop to even consider making a chair, let alone a useful canoe. But I’ve been always fascinated for thoes gifted handcrafters that put love into their work, making it a pure plasure just to watch them transform objects. Thank you for sharing.
It's impossible to see a job like that without being overwhelmed. The level of quality, zeal and love that you put in your work, awakens in those who see, a deep reverence and respect. Congratulations. God bless you
We have been building in wood for 4 generations.
My great great Grandfather made musical instruments.
My Grandfather and Father built fine furniture.
At age 13, an owner of custom made furniture asked me to work for him.
Your craftsmanship is unequalled.
My hats off to you.
Carry on!
I am currently building a Guillemot from Nick's book. The book alone is educational enough to learn what needs to be done, but the videos are priceless when actually building one of these amazing boats. I have watched all of them, some of them multiple times as I move into different stages of construction. Thank you Nick for teaching me such an awesome, relaxing, and rewarding new skill, the results of which will last generations.
This guy is on the far upper end of craftsmanship, hard to believe it only took 20 minutes...
A dying breed I'd say
Sir, I am not going to talk about your canoe as all that spectacular detail originated from an high level activity in your mind that we cannot see. As I myself come from a family of traditional boat builders in the Mediterranean Sea, at 8:02 I could not help admiring how you moved your hand along that hull and I knew what your fingers felt and about what you were conscious and seen. At 8:05 those nimble fingers, without any sign of clumsiness handled that shaping tool with grace and a feeling for every movement and the sharpness of that blade, I have no doubt that you honed it yourself with all your respect for that edge which you must look after with great care. At 8:20 the diagonal strokes indicate clearly that you are a natural master craftsman, with a sensitive feel at the tip of your fingers which aided by shadows you can avoid the smaller radius of curvatures to give that hull the best maximize and largest curves with its length. At 8:26 while your right hand is working to produce the desired surface curve , your left hand is not exactly idle but those fingers are feeling the hull for all the strokes you generate and they are measuring how kind you are to it. The manner in which the swarf and shavings roll off that very sharp scraper, what remains has no option but to obey your demands as far as finishing is concerned, where you do not even allow the scratches of the grit of sanding, scrapers in the hands of a master craftsman is more than enough.
It is such a pity that all that workmanship is hidden between layers of epoxy and fibres which were laid with such gentleness and all such a meticulous manner including the vacuum which ensures lightness with strength.
I need not go further, any boat that is supervised or made by these human movements, shown by this man and seen in this video , will definitely be a work of engineering art, to be treasured in one's life. This is what I admired most as the boat itself is circumstantial, and the product could be anything as it will contain the same quality of excellence. Congratulations, Sir, I raise my hat to you.
Carmel Pule' Amen and amen. Truly gifted by God.
Bowcase or tens of thousands of hours of hard work, practice, and tutelage.... but yeah.... might as well Rob that from him and give all of the credit to space ghost
well with that kind of comment I gues just saying "beautiful" would say as much. =)
Through using one word such as "beautiful" or "nice" one is being too economical and one is only thinking of the product itself, Creating an item of beauty its originator goes through many delicate actions to create beauty and it is not fair for different people as dancers, craftsmen, musicians, singers, furniture makers and shipbuilders and plane makers to call their product " beautiful". It is the the person himself that one should admire and not only the item in question and so one need to comment on the fact that one appreciated a particular action or a set of actions by the craftsman to achieve beauty, Beauty has multiple and diverse components and most of the beauty is in the movement of the craftsman mind which is reflected through the hands and limbs, That is real beauty, the movement and the gentleness and the ability to sharpen tools and move them in such a manner that another beauty is created. So do not be so economical with words when you meet a craftsmen, find words to describe the craftsman himself and though you will never refer to him as " beautiful" you may hint that you admired his movements and his delicate actions in knowing what to do to create a beautiful product. The real beauty is not in the item but in the many components and actions of the craftsman. That is what one should admire and one needs to know what makes beauty in dancing , singing, various arts, building boats , varnishing.......... discussing the creation of what is beautiful is much better than just saying that something is " beautiful " or " nice".
Carmel Puleq
Some people have an innate talent for this kind of craftsmanship. Nick, you are one of those people. My hat is off to you. These vessels are exquisite!
I am just completely blown away. Started off with beautiful craftsmanship. Then the carbon fiber, and inlay took it to a whole other level. A true craftsman. Great work!
Not sure what was better, the amazing craftsmanship, the quality of the result, or the cinema-quality video production. O, and the music was great, too. THANK YOU!
that's one of the most beautiful things I've watched in quite some time.
Exactly what I was thinking Blair,that was truly amazing and what a pleasure to see.
Not sure if I'd put it in the water or hang it on my wall.
You are not just a Kayak builder, Nick, you are a wood working god. I am nothing compared to you but there is something spiritual about "becoming one" with a project like this. It put a tear to my eye.
Nik конечно молодец , отличный мастер своего дела, но вы наверняка не наблюдали за работой мастеров изготовляющих музыкальные инструменты из дерева , там нужна точность покруче
Absolute perfection, a true craftsman in action. These aren’t boats they are works of art.
Nick - absolutely amazing. It's guys like you that make what are country is today.
Needless to say I would never have the patients , but I love to canoe and have 5 of them. Cheers to you !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
It’s three years since the last comment surely it’s been viewed since then? This deserves praise every day. I did build a canoe myself once. I was proud of it and I got praise but obviously they had not seen this level of skill
A work of craftsmanship, traditional & modern materials and art.
That is a true labour of love - and the work of a master craftsman. A beautiful creation.
I have watched this video 20 + times Nick, and I never get tired of it. You are an inspiring man, and because of you, I've decided to try this myself. I never get tired of watching this and I so badly want to be like you.... so relaxed, and so in tune with nature. When I've had a rough day I come here to this video for inspiration. This video alone is such a great place to come and meditate. I think I've commented before, but this is in my favorites / saved videos. I'd love to meet you in person one day. That would be the best day ever in my life! Thank you for this.
The best 20 minutes spent watching a You Tube video. And not a single word heard either!
I work in the handcrafted solid wood furniture industry...this is what I truly want to get into, handcrafted custom masterpieces. A table is simple. However, mastering the technique of building a one of a kind kayak...is magnificent.
The best video I have seen in a long time. Just the work being done and not a word spoken. Many in the film industry could learn allot from this and how not every seccond does someone need to be saying something. Thank you.
Nothing like watching a true craftsman at work.
This was so satisfying to watch. True admirable craftsmanship. You've set the pinnacle for wooden kayaks.
This entire video is a demonstration of the pleasure you feel at work.
I've built 4 strip canoes and one of the greatest moments is when you pour on the resin and the beautiful color of the cedar pops out. Of course, nothing beats dropping it in the water for the first time. Thanks for the video.
AATW Brother!
Your knowledge and skill is impressive. Watching the process was revealing. I build engines and other mechanical devices and show them at engine shows. People view them and enjoy them, but have no way to appreciate them fully because they weren't there for the process. I find that the inner pleasure of knowing and understanding what I've accomplished has to be enough and that, ego aside, that is what it was all about anyhow. That and getting away from the wife for a while!
Woodcraft always look easy until you try it out yourself, this video really got me emotional, i honestly cant explain how much im grateful for this video, you my friend, have an amazing talent.
Thank you
these men were gifted and are on a whole other planet when it comes to wood crafts I shudder to even think of a tempting to build anything near as good as this and that music and landscape to calm and build to makes it all worth while still it would never turn out to float if I tried this you guys are really awesome builders you took it to a totally whole new level I have to watch your video all over thanks for showing me things that are totally out my reach can't find the words to say now just lost for words your to good way to far to good
Mr. Schade;
i now know what it would have felt like
watching over the shoulders of Leonardo Divinci at work by
a totally know nothing student artist...
thank you for allowing us to enter your world,
it was like hearing a Beatles song for the very first time
it came over the radio. you just knew there wasn't anything
like it in the world.
it was more than impressive, but will be a fond memory to recall and enjoy many more times to come
my only regret, i failed to summon up in words the wonderful feelings watching this presentation...
I have to say , honestly ; I have never in my life , seen such craftsmanship . The finished products speak for itself .... absolutely beautiful !!
The skill & creativity in this video is overwhelming
That folks is wood working and boat building masterclass... Very well done! You deserve every last penny you sell those for.
This was pretty awesome. But, I have to admit, I really wanted to see it gliding through the water that you showed so often through the video.
You can watch the launching of a similar kayak here: th-cam.com/video/nmUN9FJK89c/w-d-xo.html
This kayak goes on the wall in a wall street board room or in some retired politician's 3rd house's boat house. Otherwise Nick isn't getting paid what he's worth.
Attention to detail makes this a true work of art. It inspires.
Extraordinary craftsmanship!
This is probably the greatest thing I’ve ever watched, an hour after I had finished watching I’m still trying to figure out who’s better the craftsman or the videographer!! Thanks for sharing it was a treat.
I'm not sure how many times I said "wow" during that video. I'm glad there was no dumb voice over. The mans skill did all the talking that video ever needs.
I would love to see this little beauty in action.
Go here now if you want the best boat plans online: HotBoat.info
By far the best woodwork I have ever seen. Congratulations!!!!!
that Sir is true art ! it gave me goosebumps .... i actually was really moved by this .... so beautifull
Такие мастера , это гордость их РОДИНЫ ! Очень красивая , достойная работа .
Это произведение искусства ❤!
I came here because I thought the boat looked nice in the thumbnail, reminded me of a ww2 German U-boat minus its conning tower lol... very beautiful form. Ended up watching a very relaxing and well put together video of some guy crafting with zen. just brilliant, and I won't bemoan the use of fibres and resins, I enjoyed the surprises of the techniques employed... nice 20 minutes.
What a pleasure to see an artist in action... Thank You
Some nice craftsmanship Nick and the editing is first rate as well. The inlay was amazing.
I see real craftsmanship spirit from this great master of art.
This is a tour de force in exquisite workmanship. Very few can ever aspire to such high standards. I wonder if watching this many folk might discount the possibility of building a DIY example?
yeah i pretty much did
Craftsmanship at its finest, such a pleasure to watch.
Wow, a masterpiece from a master, beautiful work.
This is beyond beauty. Incredible craftsmanship.....
Wow, awesome craftmanship, don’t see that very often these days.
Unbelievably inspirational. A masterful work of art at its finest.
So you don't use any nails or staples to hold the strips in place? Just clamps and tape?
Clamps and tape and the occasional dab of hot glue to hold a strip to a form.
Thanks for the reply Nick. Just a question: how did you get into this field of woodworking? Honestly making a career out of doing things like this and woodworking is a dream of mine. Is it a good profession to go into?
I started while I had a different job, doing it for my own pleasure until I got to the point where I felt it would work. You might want to read this: www.guillemot-kayaks.com/guillemot/blog/admin/so_you_want_build_and_sell_boats
Nick Schade
Really appreciate the reply, Nick. I'll definitely check it out!
This has become a deal with making these boats and now that it has long been achieved I am not all that impressed with it (NS is a great builder I don't mean that, but beginers build their boats this way too).
Gene Jensen the great canoe designer, could turn out a canoe that would win races and go on to be pulled for molds and sold by one of the major canoe companies, in 4 days. That is hand drawing the plans for a new model, lofting full size and making, outfitting and launching and paddling the boat. So yeah these are pretty boats, but there is a whole world of making boats for real uses efficiently up to boats 60 of 100 feet long, using strips and epoxy and that seems little observed in the rush to create small often badly designed boats (not here) that look like a coffee table. And people seem to feel pushed to ever more expensive, heavy, and time consuming to build designs, for what are boats. They need to be well designed, fair, able to hold their shape, light, and durable.
So am I am watching the video because I love this boat, and all, but as a builder just throwing out the fact that great boats can be made relatively simply with this system right up to the size of major yachts.
I am in awe at how much tedious work goes into the beautiful kayak. Amazing.
Absolutely beautiful...a work of art.
Hello sodaraku saya sangat terpukau dengan teknik pembuatan canoe 🛶 yang sangat rapi dan ahli❤❤❤🎉🎉
This is truly extraordinary work. I hope that with time I will develop the skills, devotion, and patience you have mastered in your craft. Thank you for contributing your talents to the world.
The awesome camera work and music made the hard wood work so nice to watch. great work both!
that i some fine craftsmanship much patience needed.but regular wood glue?
Yes, regular wood glue. The boat is encapsulated in epoxy and fiberglass so the regular wood glue is only a holding technique.
thank you. I realize that. so no long term effects on those glue joints? Amazing who would have thought that would hold.
Standard wood glue is stronger than the wood itself. Since the whole boat is clad with fiberglass or carbon fiber set in epoxy, the wood never gets wet, so the non-waterproof nature of the glue is not an issue.
Awesome craftsmanship. I´m out of words. This is not a kayak, this is a masters piece of art
That's not a kayak that Is a work of art 👍👍👍👍👍😎 I wish I had a wall big enough to hang it on
What a build, it sure can last any man a lifetime, kudos
Trabalho muito bem feito, parabens....
Nick, you are extremely generous with your knowledge to have created and posted these videos. They, like your boat building, are art in themselves. It is a joy to see a true obsessive at work!
That is a beautiful kayak!!! Nice art of hands!! Good job man of kayaks!!!👍👌✌😇 i liket a lot!!!!
Wow. Impressive level of craftmanship.
My distant friend, I think you have an insight about what a meaningful life is, 1000 times more than a Jeff Bezos. Making things with your, hands and taking the right time to do it is the path of wise enlightened souls. Would hang one in my living room in the city of Rome for the beauty of looking at it :)
How much do you know about both people to draw this conclusion?
@@VV-cy9gf I could also mention literature such as www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5024483/ or general knowledge such as www.craftscouncil.org.uk/articles/4-reasons-craft-is-good-for-your-mental-health/
In any case it's my 6 decades of personal experience giving me this opinion. Your mileage might vary and have no interest whatsoever in convincing you.
@@RobertAlexanderRM I highly doubt you have known Jeff in person for any amount of time let alone 60 years. The reason I wrote the comment was because I very often see derogatory comments targeted at successful people. It saddens me. #richlivesmatter #successtakeswork
@@RobertAlexanderRM You didn't post these studies when you first responded. While you have 'no interest whatsoever in convincing you' (sic) , it looks like this topic might be at least important enough for you to take time out of your finite life and warm up google in order to link the studies. I will not contest the benefits of manual labour, I do believe humans will benefit from doing that at this point in time (in millions of years, the human body will have adapted to eating big macs and driving cars with no physical labour). My goal is not to change your mind about having more respect for the successful people, but to convince the passive people reading the comments, who are on the fence on their view of the world. It is beneficial for your life to respect everyone, including the rich. As Mr. Milton Friedman so eloquently put it - if you have more than zero dollars on your bank account, it means you have given the world more than you have taken from it. Understand and internalize this profundity and great things will happen to you. Tegusat päeva!
Mind blowing detail in a throw away world. Hats off.
wow! just wow! Do you teach any class? I'd love to be your student. This deff would help me out in building my future catamaran. Loved it! I'm in awe in how you created this masterpiece! Teach me master.
I'm just back from teaching a class in Maine. For more information about classes visit: www.guillemot-kayaks.com/guillemot/kayaking_information/products/workshops_and_classes
I was just telling a buddy the other day about the class in maine. And now i am here
Both the kayak and the video are extremely well made. Thanks!
How much is one of these masterpieces worth ?
A lot... www.forbes.com/sites/hunteratkins/2014/11/21/handmade-30000-kayak-for-the-adventurers-wish-list/#121624e75463
stunning video ..and even more stunning workmanship .patience personified .thank you sir
Is this the Kerbal Space Programm music?
Yes it's the music that kicks in when you reach space :-)
+Julien Sorosac Oh, that's where I knew it from
Go here now if you want the best boat plans online: HotBoat.info
I knew I had heard it somewhere.
Wow. Thank you. I'm not trying to be a smartass either, but that was spiritual! I'm building a SUP out of foam and fiberglass. I haven't built anything out of wood since junior high. My ultimate goal is to make a strip kayak. I learned more watching you work than the instructional videos I've seen and you didn't say a word. If you lived nearby I would clean your shop and mow your lawn all year if you let me sit in the room and watch. I've got to find a boat builder that needs a shop hand. Thanks again.
World class boat and video! Honored to have had a very small part in the making of this masterpiece (infusion assistant) One question: what the heck is going on with the frying pan and hotplate at 16:51?
+Dave Grainger I believe he's using the heated sand to slightly darken and 'shade' some of the lighter pieces to give them depth. Look at the point in the video where he's scraping off the tape and you'll see how the lighter wood around the eagles head has dark shadows. Nice touch.
Hello Nick . ..the your video perfectly expresses the sentiment that surrounds the birth of a kayak homebuilt . The magic that goes beyond a building 's sake . You are a true artist congratulations .Gianni Iandolo
Wizardry. Thank you for sharing.
Beautiful craftsmanship and stunning marquetry. I can appreciate all the work put into that pair of kayaks. Many years ago I built a 19.5 ft 20" beam West Greenland style kayak that was effortless to paddle. The Santa Barbara coastline saw much of me paddling along the shores often with dolphins near sunset. That boat would surf on the swells and put a huge grin from the inside out.
Hats off to you....It's a work of art,and like any masterpiece, it costs a lot of money...But for true connoisseurs of quality, this is not a problem!:))))))
More time, expertise, and patience than money I suspect. Now if you want to pay him to build you one we talking money. LoL
Absolutly beautiful... Im speachless! Workmanship from another world!!!
That was super satisfying to watch. And I was thinking the kayak might not be very strong with such thin wood, but then you put fiber glass on it...then carbon fiber and then my concern disappeared.
I can't even fathom the level of skill and patience this takes. You take wood and make masterpieces. Absolutely stunning work.
What is the sand being sprinkled on the wood pieces? What's that all about?!?!
Guessing it is a method of burning the wood for color contrast. More precise than using a torch and more subtle than using a wood burning iron. If you look closely at the edges of the inlay at 17:41, you will see the darkened portions.
As Tom said, I am scorching the veneer to darken the tone of the wood.
Nick Schade
Wow....interesting.
Thank you both for the reply.
The level of craftsmanship that went into this creation truly exceeded my expectation. I was already impressed before you applied the marquetry, but that really tipped it over the edge. The beauty of natural timber married with the functionality of modern composite materials make for a craft that is not only a pleasure to behold, but no doubt a delight in its purpose. Thanks for sharing.
Run lessons please. One day all these boat building skills will be lost if not passed on.
I have several classes coming up next year: www.guillemot-kayaks.com/guillemot/event_list
I guess it won't get any better than this! Your dedication for details and quality is very impressive!
Amazing, never thought that so much hard work went through making these. Most of time I believe is just automation lol
Goes to the store. Yes I would like all your wood glue please
I was dreaming through the entire video about the sheer joy of making one of these beautiful boats, but when I saw the finished product at the end, sadly, I was forced to accet the reality that I cannot.
You are a true craftsman, and I applaud you...
I truly appreciate that these are very skilled carftsmen but at the end of the day it's a fiberglass/carbon fibre kayak. Nice video though.
Rare and extraordinary craftsmanship, thank you for sharing. Many years ago I had the pleasure of spending the day with another master craftsman, Sam Maloof. Words fail to describe such artistry.
When I was a lad at school. our woodwork teacher built one just like that, beautiful wood.
Til he painted it blue.
This hurts my heart.
The awesome build up is brilliant and then there is the filming and editing. God bless you folks.
The Bob Ross of boats.
He starts carving a hole on a perfectly laid surface and I'm all:
_Oh no... ruined, what good can come of that?
And boom, shinny bald eagle!
Beautiful would love to get my hands on the form and build one myself
Damn it show them in the water!
+Matthew Murdock They sink like a rock.
+Calvin Smith why would they
+Calvin Smith No they wouldn't.
I purchased your first book many years ago but I've never taken the time to build a kayak. Your techniques have changed a lot since that book but the care and craftsmanship is still there. After watching this I have to finally take the time to do it. Thank you for a beautiful design and amazing inspiration.
it's more a carbon sport supercar than a traditionnal wood job...
Wow! Just plain old wow!!! A true master craftsman.
thats gotta be an expensive kayak!!
i think saying im impressed would be a understatement.
so... it's a 1mm thick wooden core kayak with many layers of composite that actually do the work.... the name is misleading.
+ Yidris It's an incredible build - absolute attention to detail. Probably more like 5 mm wood core. Yes, misleading name, I agree. But look at the result...
Ant Mallett I agree, it's an exceptional result. im just not keen on someone calling an item "wooden" when the majority of the construction is composite.
+ Yidris The majority of the workmanship is in wood, the rest is something anyone could do. So perhaps the term wooden is still true? I feel that if this kayak was made 1000 years ago, the wooden shell would be smothered in tar, or an equivalent, inside and out. And perhaps the tar would have sinews laid into it as it dried? Who knows?
Ant Mallett good points, all of them. and I agree, the majority of the 'workmanship' is in wood. all of the special skills and craftsmanship required is in carpentry and fine wood working techniques. but I still maintain that the majority of the 'construction' is composite, so that takes away from the term 'wooden'.
it's the same as if I made an acoustic guitar out of carbon fiber, yet i had wooden bracing inside, and then I insisted on calling it a "wooden" guitar... it's not.
after he shaped the wood, and scraped it, then sanded it, the 3/16" thick wooden strips were whisper thin, really all they were was a design. they served no function other than providing a form on which the composite layers could be set. and once the boat was finished, the wood was essentially just a visual design inside of a composite boat.
+ Yidris I wasn't aware that he started with 3/16, or properly said, about 5 mm. I agree, after planing, spokeshaving and sanding the crap out of the wood, he probably had spots in the 1 to 2 mm range, most of it though, I would think would be 3 mm thick at least. That's 1/8 " for you colonials...
You said 'the 3/16" thick wooden strips were whisper thin, really all they were was a design. they served no function other than providing a form on which the composite layers could be set.' I agree with you on that. The fact that the outer layer of glass fibre was put in place first, before any of the formers were removed, shows that the wooden shell has no implicit integrity. And only after the outer FG shell has cured, is there enough rigidity to pull a vacuum as the inner epoxy/CF lining is applied.
I think you hit the nail on the head, 'just a visual design inside of a composite boat.'
So after all that work, and the attached price tag...
I am genuinely more than blown away at the craftsmanship involved in this and how labor intensive. Absolutely beautiful!