I think it's encouraging to see more advanced woodworkers still trying new things and realizing they don't have a tool, experience, or clear idea on how to accomplish something cool. As Larry Enticer would say "I'm still gonna send it".
I wasn’t vibing with the sash, until I saw the rough fit after steam bending. That round over reveal is what I think makes the door pop. Great vision to foresee a beautiful result!
I don’t normally post comments but I had to for this video. This has been my favorite video you have made so far. From the level of craftsmanship to the confidence to try something new. Wonderful job.
Beautiful work! Am looking forward to seeing you finish the cabinet. I used to be involved with the Northwest School of Wooden Boat Building. It was great fun to watch them planking up a boat with steam-bent planks. The whole team of six students, with an instructor bellowing at them to move faster, would come running across the shop floor with a huge plank, slam it up against the ribs, heave it into a compound curve and clamp it into place. Quite a show!
Kid's been using wax paper to wax everything from concrete to grind on while skating to slides to go down faster for decades. Back when I was in elementary school there was a summer camp I used to go to with this giant metal slide and we would take those wax coated paper cups from lunch and use those to wax the slide to go down it at mach 5 until the councilors realized what we did and hosed it all down to prevent things like broken arms from kids trying to go down a 30' slide at the speed of light.
Welcome back to the 70’s. I cannot count the number of doorways, windows, kitchen and bathroom joinery units that included arches I built in new and renovated house during the 70’s and early eighty’s. Amazed to see that you may be responsible for bringing this “style” back into vogue.
But not 70s enough to use red oak, ONLY white oak, because red oak was over used back in the day, in his opinion. But now him and all the other TH-camrs are well on their way of overusing white oak and black walnut.
Dude, you ROCK! Beautiful doors. Your construction is fantastic. Those doors look amazing. It's 3am in South Africa, and I am still watching your content. Think I need to get to bed. Keep up the great work. Thanks for sharing.
Amazing job! Have to admit you had me for a second on the routing glass goof. I was like no way, that's never going to work. Then I was like, wait he's just messing with us again. And you were. Best thing I've seen you make in a while and that's saying a lot because the Airstream build was pretty excellent! It's nice to see you doing something different for yourself and not what the boss wants.
Looks great. I would have used some internal braces to act as pressure points, instead of all those clamps. Some pine or other soft wood to provide the spring force needed. Would still need some clamps, but not nearly as many imo. Just a thought I had as a Monday morning quarterback. Also, I would definitely wear a mask while sanding that glass.
When all the great creators are doing Squarespace bits, it gets repetitive. Congratulations on doing a FANTASTIC job of making it a relevant and succinct pitch. I'm already happily familiar with them... but if I wasn't, this would have sold me. Well done. Also, beautiful build! ❤😊
I always keep a roll of waxed paper in the shop. It's good to touch up cast iron tops as well as waxed furniture. Also, a can of clear shoe polish is nearly 100% carnauba wax and is super-convenient. Thx.
So many different ways you demonstrated the extent of your skills in the making of these doors! Incredibly impressive. They came out looking awesome, I'm looking forward to seeing the finished piece.
I learn so much from you, every video is something new and you have the perfect balance between building and product placement. Many others in the field have stopped building and just do product endorsement, this was an amazing video, well done.
I'm remodeling my kitchen and making all new shaker cabinet doors/drawers throughout... 40+ of them. What a PITA because nearly all are different because the cabinets are custom sizes... until I made a spreadsheet. You enter each rough opening, the router bit's tongue length, the desired overhang (plus/minus any desired extra), if any double doors have a center stile or not and the rail/stile stock width. It figures out all the parts needed... rails, stiles and door panels, creating a full cut list accurate to 1/32nd. Saved me so much time and wasted parts.
I love shaker but too much is too much! Glad you did semi shaker/arched doors. I love the mid century you’ve done in the past, maybe try the more modern shaker that’s so popular… I don’t know but I’d love to see you get creative like with this one and the awesome workout bench you recently built
I like this style way better than shaker. My wife insisted on shaker style for ease of cleaning. I like the detail of the raised panel and the beading around the arch
Great video, Jason~! Those doors came out fantastic~! I use waxed paper in my shop and I've never heard of using it that way prior to watching this. Can't wait to see the hutch video(s). Thanks~!
If you make the angled cuts on the raised panels at a slightly lower* angle, and leave the top of the TS blade roughly "inside" the wood, you create a ledge that gives an additional shadow line, giving a bit more detail. (*takes a bit of experimenting to optimize the angle and the placement of the cut)
I love the look of the doors, I know you haven't been woodworking for long, but you have definitely put a ton of cash back into your shop, I'm super jealous. By the way, thanks for putting out the video, everytime you post something, I have to see what you are up to.
That is awesome!! Love the look of that oak. I'm not sure I would call that piece a hutch. That brings to mind a much taller unit or a piece that sits on top of a sideboard or cradenza. I think you are building more of a sideboard.
I couldn’t decide which knob was my favourite. I think they all had their merits, don’t be fooled into thinking they’re just something you pull. Pro tip.
So you have ADD, that's why you're so focused on your work. One question, though - How do you keep so calm when gluing? Creating multiple different samples on the fly + decision making is pretty tough, too. Good to have a partner in those instances ☺️ From what you show in your vids, you're doing good, really 👍🏼 (I know what I'm talking of)
Has anyone else wondered if Jason's beard and mustache were real? I think he must have used the Shaper Origin because, Wow, what a fit, then a little Rubio and Bam aged perfectly. LOL. Great project! You make it look so easy and your jigs are furniture grade! Love your videos and presentation style!
Really great ideas with the steam bending jig and the raised panel. The doors looks pretty neat! I am also amazed again how muscular you are. You are in great shape 🤘
Very nice finished results. In my opinion, these would look even better with the glass sitting at half thickness of the panel. I would have made the groove for the glass much deeper and closed with the same technique + small shims or glass bead mouldings (that you would have to pre-bend also)
Cam didn't have someone there coaching him, and also had a lot more sharp curves to navigate. Not to mention he wasn't sabotaged by his supplier by giving him tempered glass.
I'd love to see you do something with the 5/4 rough sawn wormy red oak I got from my dad in WV years ago. I've built a book case and a TV/entertainment stand from it and it's got character.
Wow great work ! I'm just not sure about one thing, you prefinished the insert and waxed them, but when you finished the whole door you did finish the insert once again, it did not mess with the wax ? Thanks
GREAT project Jason. Can you call a Festool Tool tool a "Chop Saw"?? You just might end up in Festool Hell. I got inspired by this video and went to my "Dado Saw" and realized I don't have one??? AND for the Mrs. - Shaker Style is like a double breasted suit, never "really" out of style. Thanks for the videos and Carpe Diem! !! !!!
A trick to mass producing on a wood lathe: if you cant get every piece exact it is actually better to have all of them a bit off rather than 3 perfect and 1 off. The eye really cant see the small differences if it is all spread out. But if a single one is off it will jump out at you at 10 yards.
Think it’s safe to assume that Jason just learned a very hard lesson concerning Ms. Hibbs. Now every cabinet door must have a raised panel and arched glass. So much for quick and simple shaker doors….. Beautiful door Jason.
I highly recommend wearing a dust mask or respirator when sanding glass! Glass dust is not healthy to breathe in. You can avoid it to some degree by wet sanding, but for dry sanding airway protection is a must.
WoW, WoW WOW ! Those definitely have that Old , Vintage , New Orleans style Bad ass Look ! And what's sooo killer? ,,, There real ! No Plastic , No veneer , REAL !
I think it's encouraging to see more advanced woodworkers still trying new things and realizing they don't have a tool, experience, or clear idea on how to accomplish something cool. As Larry Enticer would say "I'm still gonna send it".
I wasn’t vibing with the sash, until I saw the rough fit after steam bending. That round over reveal is what I think makes the door pop. Great vision to foresee a beautiful result!
I don’t normally post comments but I had to for this video. This has been my favorite video you have made so far. From the level of craftsmanship to the confidence to try something new. Wonderful job.
Beautiful work! Am looking forward to seeing you finish the cabinet. I used to be involved with the Northwest School of Wooden Boat Building. It was great fun to watch them planking up a boat with steam-bent planks. The whole team of six students, with an instructor bellowing at them to move faster, would come running across the shop floor with a huge plank, slam it up against the ribs, heave it into a compound curve and clamp it into place. Quite a show!
Kid's been using wax paper to wax everything from concrete to grind on while skating to slides to go down faster for decades. Back when I was in elementary school there was a summer camp I used to go to with this giant metal slide and we would take those wax coated paper cups from lunch and use those to wax the slide to go down it at mach 5 until the councilors realized what we did and hosed it all down to prevent things like broken arms from kids trying to go down a 30' slide at the speed of light.
12:49 - a quicker way to add stain by using a cotton glove (over top of a rubber glove) to apply it, then throw it out once finished.
Welcome back to the 70’s. I cannot count the number of doorways, windows, kitchen and bathroom joinery units that included arches I built in new and renovated house during the 70’s and early eighty’s. Amazed to see that you may be responsible for bringing this “style” back into vogue.
But not 70s enough to use red oak, ONLY white oak, because red oak was over used back in the day, in his opinion. But now him and all the other TH-camrs are well on their way of overusing white oak and black walnut.
Dude, you ROCK! Beautiful doors. Your construction is fantastic. Those doors look amazing.
It's 3am in South Africa, and I am still watching your content. Think I need to get to bed.
Keep up the great work. Thanks for sharing.
What are the odds that both Cam (Blacktail Studio) and Jason experimented with cutting glass on the same week of uploads lol
I saw that also lol
Me 3.
Me 4
How about Blacktail and Stubby Nubs both using the UV finish?
Last week there were at least 3 content creators bending wood in their projects. Coinkidink?!
Thank you for teaching me how to cut glass; I had no idea!
Amazing job! Have to admit you had me for a second on the routing glass goof. I was like no way, that's never going to work. Then I was like, wait he's just messing with us again. And you were. Best thing I've seen you make in a while and that's saying a lot because the Airstream build was pretty excellent! It's nice to see you doing something different for yourself and not what the boss wants.
Looks great.
I would have used some internal braces to act as pressure points, instead of all those clamps. Some pine or other soft wood to provide the spring force needed. Would still need some clamps, but not nearly as many imo. Just a thought I had as a Monday morning quarterback.
Also, I would definitely wear a mask while sanding that glass.
When all the great creators are doing Squarespace bits, it gets repetitive. Congratulations on doing a FANTASTIC job of making it a relevant and succinct pitch. I'm already happily familiar with them... but if I wasn't, this would have sold me. Well done. Also, beautiful build! ❤😊
Your work is just gorgeous! I want to do doors like this in my kitchen. Just wow! 😮
I always keep a roll of waxed paper in the shop. It's good to touch up cast iron tops as well as waxed furniture. Also, a can of clear shoe polish is nearly 100% carnauba wax and is super-convenient. Thx.
It was great to see more classic design elements here. It's good craftsmanship, and it's a challenge to me to level up. Great work Jason.
Wax paper! 🤯…definitely storing that nugget for later!
Man, that was great craftsmanship. This was old yankee workshop level…with power tools. Great job man.
So many different ways you demonstrated the extent of your skills in the making of these doors! Incredibly impressive. They came out looking awesome, I'm looking forward to seeing the finished piece.
I learn so much from you, every video is something new and you have the perfect balance between building and product placement. Many others in the field have stopped building and just do product endorsement, this was an amazing video, well done.
lemme pause it here... he is about to cut glass with a router.. this needs a cup of tea and a movie snack... I'll be back, how exciting!!..
I'm remodeling my kitchen and making all new shaker cabinet doors/drawers throughout... 40+ of them. What a PITA because nearly all are different because the cabinets are custom sizes... until I made a spreadsheet. You enter each rough opening, the router bit's tongue length, the desired overhang (plus/minus any desired extra), if any double doors have a center stile or not and the rail/stile stock width.
It figures out all the parts needed... rails, stiles and door panels, creating a full cut list accurate to 1/32nd. Saved me so much time and wasted parts.
That sounds very useful. Care to share?
@@trevorburford-reade8685 Sure, but YT does not permit me to give the link in this reply. They just delete the comment.
I'm interested also.
Hello from here in Scotland. Love you're video's Jason. Superb wokmanship. Looking forward to the progress of this project. Cheers 🍻
Truly beautiful craftsmanship. This cabinet will be an heirloom piece.
Thanks for the video, shaker style it is! Waaaayyyyy above my pay grade.
Amazing workmanship. And you haven’t done most of that stuff before. Kudos.
I love shaker but too much is too much! Glad you did semi shaker/arched doors. I love the mid century you’ve done in the past, maybe try the more modern shaker that’s so popular… I don’t know but I’d love to see you get creative like with this one and the awesome workout bench you recently built
You definitely got the hard part done Jason and they do look great! Really nice design.
This was enjoyable to watch. The doors came out beautiful. Can’t wait for the cabinet build next.
Projects like these are my favorite videos!
Great class in door building. Scale it up and you could build a front door for the house. Thank you for sharing the adventure.
.. always nice to learn something new from Master Bourbon.. stay healthy and be safe always.. thanks for sharing..
I like this style way better than shaker. My wife insisted on shaker style for ease of cleaning. I like the detail of the raised panel and the beading around the arch
They turned out really beautiful ❤️
What an awesome beautiful build. Loved the video. You are the best of the best
Excelente proyecto,Master de Master!😮
Jason you are awesome. Those are great looking doors. Can't wait to see the hutch.
I really like the doors and enjoyed the build. I'd like to see the lower panel trimmed out and framed like the upper arch, just an extra custom touch.
Great video, Jason~! Those doors came out fantastic~! I use waxed paper in my shop and I've never heard of using it that way prior to watching this. Can't wait to see the hutch video(s).
Thanks~!
Looking forward to the rest of the build! Also my bourbon blade was able to get in on the first shipment. Cool thing is I live in the bourbon area.
Dude, those doors look amazing! Bravó!
The Doors came out Awesome!
A ton of work with a gorgeous result. Thanks for sharing that... makes being a lazy slug on my couch so much more satisfying!
Those doors are beautiful! Perfectly
If you make the angled cuts on the raised panels at a slightly lower* angle, and leave the top of the TS blade roughly "inside" the wood, you create a ledge that gives an additional shadow line, giving a bit more detail. (*takes a bit of experimenting to optimize the angle and the placement of the cut)
I love the look of the doors, I know you haven't been woodworking for long, but you have definitely put a ton of cash back into your shop, I'm super jealous. By the way, thanks for putting out the video, everytime you post something, I have to see what you are up to.
Those are aDOORable!! Blessings!!!
Fun build. Lots of new techniques from your prior videos coming together. I like it. 🤘🏻
Haha! The Bourbon Blade product placement mention. Love it.
Been watching for years. . . That's probably the sweetest thing I've seen you make ngl. 🤙
That is awesome!! Love the look of that oak. I'm not sure I would call that piece a hutch. That brings to mind a much taller unit or a piece that sits on top of a sideboard or cradenza. I think you are building more of a sideboard.
In England hutches are for rabbits; seems that Americans have hutches with rabbets in them.
One of best project ever!
So true
I couldn’t decide which knob was my favourite. I think they all had their merits, don’t be fooled into thinking they’re just something you pull. Pro tip.
Definitely like the custom pull.
Definitely going to try that wax paper technique . First time seeing it.
So you have ADD, that's why you're so focused on your work. One question, though - How do you keep so calm when gluing?
Creating multiple different samples on the fly + decision making is pretty tough, too. Good to have a partner in those instances ☺️
From what you show in your vids, you're doing good, really 👍🏼 (I know what I'm talking of)
awesome result!
Those are beautiful. Nice work
looks great. I took an authentic #2 this morning. good color :)
Has anyone else wondered if Jason's beard and mustache were real? I think he must have used the Shaper Origin because, Wow, what a fit, then a little Rubio and Bam aged perfectly. LOL. Great project! You make it look so easy and your jigs are furniture grade! Love your videos and presentation style!
Really great ideas with the steam bending jig and the raised panel. The doors looks pretty neat!
I am also amazed again how muscular you are. You are in great shape 🤘
You’ve definitely upped your game with these, very cool!
Very nice finished results. In my opinion, these would look even better with the glass sitting at half thickness of the panel. I would have made the groove for the glass much deeper and closed with the same technique + small shims or glass bead mouldings (that you would have to pre-bend also)
I'm gonna try that wax paper trick. Thanks for the tip
great job ,they look fantastic. I just don't know about the grains going in different directions?
Great Job, Great Look
Waxed paper! I love that, I love a minimal finish - cant wait to try it!
I've used beeswax before but never thought of using wax paper. I'll definitely be giving it a try too.
There are also ultra matte lacquers nowadays. Even extremely durable 2K ones. They are pretty much invisible.
Great job! Tuned out beautiful.
One of my favorite videos you put out in awhile. I mean they are all good but this one was gooder 🤔
Absolutely beautiful work ❤
Incredible build!
I’m sure you put your makers mark on that piece! NICE !
Cool stream box. Now you're ready to start making fishing nets!
Nice,thanks for sharing.
Very beautiful.
I was taught to use the Wax Paper finish trick ....way back in 1980 High School industrial arts class. Amazing right!!
Looks fantastic!!!
Great video full of interesting information.
You are a LOT better at cutting glass that Cam👍🤣🙊🙈👍☀️.
Very interesting project, with all the side projects. Nice doors.
Cam didn't have someone there coaching him, and also had a lot more sharp curves to navigate. Not to mention he wasn't sabotaged by his supplier by giving him tempered glass.
Looks great.
I'd love to see you do something with the 5/4 rough sawn wormy red oak I got from my dad in WV years ago. I've built a book case and a TV/entertainment stand from it and it's got character.
Awesome as ever 👏
Wow great work ! I'm just not sure about one thing, you prefinished the insert and waxed them, but when you finished the whole door you did finish the insert once again, it did not mess with the wax ? Thanks
GREAT project Jason. Can you call a Festool Tool tool a "Chop Saw"?? You just might end up in Festool Hell. I got inspired by this video and went to my "Dado Saw" and realized I don't have one??? AND for the Mrs. - Shaker Style is like a double breasted suit, never "really" out of style. Thanks for the videos and Carpe Diem! !! !!!
I think your process is fantastic, it is the same as mine, figure it out as you go along. I even have the same patented glue spreader.
I love this video
That style of door is how I learned to make cabinet doors in the 1980s when I was an apprentice cabinet maker
A trick to mass producing on a wood lathe: if you cant get every piece exact it is actually better to have all of them a bit off rather than 3 perfect and 1 off. The eye really cant see the small differences if it is all spread out. But if a single one is off it will jump out at you at 10 yards.
Think it’s safe to assume that Jason just learned a very hard lesson concerning Ms. Hibbs. Now every cabinet door must have a raised panel and arched glass. So much for quick and simple shaker doors…..
Beautiful door Jason.
Looks nice.
True artist! You’re killing dude!
That's some nice work
Very good 👍🏻
Very nice work
I highly recommend wearing a dust mask or respirator when sanding glass! Glass dust is not healthy to breathe in. You can avoid it to some degree by wet sanding, but for dry sanding airway protection is a must.
Pretty❤
exceptional
Good job.
WoW, WoW WOW ! Those definitely have that Old , Vintage , New Orleans style Bad ass Look ! And what's sooo killer? ,,, There real ! No Plastic , No veneer , REAL !