PRO Woodworking Techniques Everyone Should Know
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 3 พ.ค. 2024
- Let our sponsor BetterHelp connect you to a therapist who can support you - all from the comfort of your own home. Visit betterhelp.com/biscuittree and enjoy a special discount on your first month.
Woodworking doesn't have to be that difficult. There are some simple skills and techniques that you need to learn that can take your projects to the next level!
=============================
Watch This Next:
🌟 • Have a Table Saw? You ...
🌟 • Rockler doesn't want y...
🌟 • Setup and Review of th...
=============================
=============================
Help Support the Channel!
Patreon ➡️ / biscuittreewoodworks
=============================
=============================
Tools and Products Mentioned in this video:
Best Mechanical Pencils: amzn.to/4d4Byr1
Festool Domino: amzn.to/3xMQ6vd
Low Angle Jack Plane: amzn.to/3W53apW
Block Plane: amzn.to/49MRwTJ
Makita Track Saw: amzn.to/3UhyMGu
Dewalt router: amzn.to/3U7X1GL
Rockler Bandy Clamps: amzn.to/49NzwJ3
Jorgensen Cabinet Maker Clamps: amzn.to/3QdlGbO
West Systems Epoxy: amzn.to/44cpUGn
Kreg Pocket Hole System: amzn.to/3W8YvTK
Bosch Miter Saw: amzn.to/3w1vnn0
MicroJig Gripper: amzn.to/3UrUIj9
Magswitch Pro: amzn.to/3Qd20VG
BLUM Tandem Plus BLUMOTION Drawer Slides: amzn.to/3Qen91P
BLUM Drawer Slide Jig: amzn.to/4aLmvB5
Rockler Panel Clamps: amzn.to/49LBqde
Floor Buffer Pads: amzn.to/4b5Wqfw
Izzy Skirt Washers: infinitytools.com/products/iz...
=============================
=============================
Connect with me!
Website ➡ www.biscuittreewoodworks.com/
Instagram ➡ / biscuittreewoodworks
Facebook ➡ / johnswoodworkingcreations
Some product links are affiliate links which means if you buy something I'll receive a small commission at no additional cost to you. - แนวปฏิบัติและการใช้ชีวิต
I wish that fellow woodworkers would stop apologizing for using pocket holes. Used for appropriate applications they are the correct joinery and are not a “new” technique. While the commercial jigs have been around since the 80’s, the concept of pocket hole joinery has been used for table skirting and cabinet base assembly for centuries.
Great point, pocket hole joinery has been around for a very long time and it often gets a bad rap. I think it's mainly because the jigs are so beginner focused that some people think pocket hole joinery is beneath them. But just like other methods and techniques, it's just another tool in the toolbox that can be the perfect thing for the right application.
I don’t like pocket holes because I don’t want to buy expensive jigs and special screws when you can just do something else and maybe learn different skills to join stuff
Some my early projects before jigs, I would use a counter sink bit and drill at an angle.
Your teaching style made this vid along with strong attention to detail and point outs. As a retired toolmaker I can reflect, one thing I'd like to add. . .If your having a BAD day remember safety first. . . .walk away . . .shit happens, and having it happen around machinery well lets say it goes south fast. Stay safe . . . .looking forward I have subscribed . . . I'm a fan
I did tool and die work many years ago before I went into engineering. You are absolutely right! Not paying full attention when working around machinery can go bad VERY quickly!
Nothing short of "AMAZING"!!! Really beautiful piece and the tips and instructions are off the chart!
Thanks so much!
I watched your entire video from start to finish. Learned a lot. Admired your skills as a woodworker and as a video producer. As I began to feel worthless as a human being I remembered your title that said it took years to learn your skills. That gave me hope as a beginner woodworker. Thank you!
Yes, it takes a long time to learn this on your own! That's why I put a lot of these things into my videos to help newer woodworkers learn it faster and start to make better projects!
Great job taking us through your design and techniques, all at a pace that was easy to follow & absorb. Skipping distracting music, and your humble presentation style were both appreciated. Sincerely, Grateful Subscriber.
Awesome, thank you!
he's not kidding. after tons of frustration with most power tools i absolutely LOVE the feeling and accuracy of planes and chisels to clean up the rough work
Power tools are nice, but hand tools are really great to work with!
Absolutely beautiful work. I've been watching more and more of your quality craftmanship. Thanks for your tips, tricks and all around professional wood crafting. You're my new go too.
Thank you so much! I'm glad you are enjoying the videos!
As a computer programmer, I have long known to continue breaking down large problems into smaller manageable tasks and steps. Yet I failed to apply this to my woodworking, so I very often limited myself to smaller projects where I could hold the entire task in my mind. I have started analyzing and planning wood projects as I do programming projects, and now have complete confidence in taking on bigger projects. With every step written down, I always know what to do next, and can schedule subtasks as I have the time or materials ready.
Great, glad that process is working out for you!
I made a small step stool it took me 3 months to complete. When I can’t see the picture in my head I wanted I start to lose interest
@@nicholaslopez8830 When it gets too complicated to visualize in my head, I start with drawing by hand. When that gets too complicated, I draw it in my computer with Sketchup.
@@nicholaslopez8830 I know that feeling very well
When using caul clamps or just plain cauls, I _always_ put nonstick (paper that will not stick to glue) to prevent the cauls or clamps from sticking to the wood panel (or whatever). This is a big time saver: no messy dried glue on my cauls / clamps to clean. Great video...
I use wax on my clamps, but box tape or wax paper work great as well!
I love your work and your down-to-earth style. Your practical tips are always super helpful, thank you!
I restore antique furniture. When determining whether or not a piece can be repaired, reversible glue joints (made with hide glue) are often the deciding factor. Your beautiful work is going to mean a lot to your kids & grandkids. If way down the road they want to repair or restore a piece to its original glory, those epoxy joints are going to limit the possibilities. And the quality of your work IS going to last generations, I guarantee it.
NOTHING is more stressful than a hot hide-glue clamp up, I totally get it. But I would love to see you teach the world how to do them.
Thanks again for all your excellent content - you seem like a lovely person.
Thank you and I'm really glad you like the videos! I've never actually worked with hot hide glue, that's something I'll have to dive into one day. Hopefully not literally "dive into", but I wouldn't mind trying it out on a project or two!
It's a pain for sure! I know your methodical approach will be the very thing.
@@biscuittreewoodworks On the plus side of hide glue is the open time.
Great video, information, delivery. Subscribed and 👍. Just might build a dresser.
Awesome! Thank you!
Every step is very well explained. Beautiful dressoir 👏👌
Thank you so much!
Beautiful work! Great teaching as well. Great job!
Thanks! That's great to hear!
Great build! Hope all is well
Thanks!
3:18 😂Working on a project now and realized my clamps are not long enough. Clamp the clamps together- brilliant!
Thanks! Glad that helps!
Excellent information for novice and pro! I was in the woodworking field and I made some of the same slip ups you did . I also wish I had those jigs you used back when? Very good video.
Thank you!
Very nice. Love your voice over and explanation of everything that you did. I am a newbie at woodworking and just trying to get my feet wet and I love videos like this to help me along the way.
Thanks! Glad it was helpful!
Fantastic video mate! I learned more here in one video than the whole week watching TH-cam. 😅
Glad you enjoyed it!
Agreed. I also appreciate including the inescapable mistakes because we all face them and it's incredibly helpful to see how others fix them.
Great video, really liked this one. Your methodical but relaxed approach is great. This is all the therapy I need!
Thank you!
I have been in woodworking for 68 years, and found a couple of tips that was new to me. One was the use of a spoke shave. I guess another tool is in order!
Glad I introduced you to something new! Spokeshaves are awesome! They can be a little finicky until you get the feel for it. You also need to consider whether you need a concave, convex, or flat bottom, or just get all three!
Beautifully done! This chest will last for years unlike most of the rubbish you can buy. Really enjoyed watching you work and I wish I had a workshop as well kitted out as yours.
Thank you! It has taken a long time to get where I’m at with the shop and still a lot I’d like to change!
Awesome build my guy
Thank you!
Beautiful job
Thank you!
Awesome learned a lot.
Glad to hear it!
Great vid, watched it all and although I was surprised you used the metal drawer runners I loved the end result. Thank you for your tips and tricks and will try and use some on my woodworking journey. thank you for sharing this and I look forward to more of your vids. One thing I like doing is your mix of manufacturers and tools you have that I assume is your preferences and personal relationship with them as I find some manufacturers over price and some achieve great tools for less. If you'v enot already done so can you step through your tools and why you chose them etc.
I have a shop tour video on the channel where I talk about a lot of the tools in my shop, what I like vs what I don't. Some of the bigger machines I just went with a low to mid-tier option and may upgrade to something a little better suited later on.
Nice piece. Thanks for the tips! Cheers 🍻
Thanks!
Beautifull dresser.
Thank you!
Great tip with the clamp extension. Thanks. Awesome video.
Thanks!
Thank you for all your time and effort. 1in7
👍
Beautiful. I really enjoyed your video. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you so much!
This dresser is gorgeous. Simple sleek design. But not boring at all. I love it. This was a great video as well. Learned a lot.
Thank you so much!
Very nice piece.
Thank you!
Really like your method to install the drawer fronts. Thanks for sharing the great content!
Thanks for watching!
Не каждый мастер знает что на ножках торцевые волокна нужно расположить так чтобы они смотрели на диагональную ножку ,И особенно когда ножки кабриоль, 👍👍👍✋🇹🇷. На 1,24
👍👍😁
Very well done ! You're videos have come a long way from the first ones I stumbled upon a year or two ago.
Thank you! Trying to get a little better with each one!
Awesome work
Thank you!
Great video! I inspire to become as talented as you one day
You can do it! Just take it one step at a time!
Brilliant mate! I hope this video is goes viral to all the makers-the tips & strategies apply to all forms of craftsmanship-of all skill levels. Also, the quality of your videos just keep getting better.
Thank you!
Man that ambrosia maple is gorgeous!
Yes, it looks really nice when paired with cherry or walnut!
Super helpful and enjoyable video, thanks! I learned a lot include my Japanese pull saw has to be super dull-
Yours cut the reliefs for the drawer slides like butter 😂
Awesome, thank you! I highly recommend the Suizan Japanese saws. Great price and very good quality!
Great build!
Thanks!
The wood you used to make your boxes/drawers is really cool.
Thanks! That's ambrosia maple.
@@biscuittreewoodworks Of course! I am still a new woodworker (~3 years), but I haven't seen it with such reduced streaks-I really like it. Video, was, as always, of course, excellent. Thank you!
That came out so nice. Thank you for all the tips.
Thanks for watching!
I just found your channel. I love it! Thank you for putting these out!!
Welcome!
Just beautiful!
Thank you!
Beautiful piece. And lots of cool toys.
Thanks!
Thanks mate. Great video.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Very informative. Nice! Thumbs up!
Glad you liked it!
Great tips, gorgeous work.
Thanks so much!
Very nice, great job
Thank you very much!
Great video! Thank you for sharing some great information.
Thanks for watching!
Awesome video - beautiful dresser!! Thank you!
Thank you!
Excellent! This looks amazing.
Thank you!
Great video, really enjoyed the information.
Glad to hear it!
Very nice build!
Thanks!
thank you
You're welcome!
Beautiful piece, nice work
Thank you very much!
Enjoyed the video a lot. It's a great-looking piece. One question: when you were sanding the top, you applied what looked like CA glue and accelerator and then sanded it. Did you have some tear-out to fill some other issue? Have you done a video explaining that technique? Thanks!
There was a couple cracks in the wood. It's just what you saw; fill with CA glue, use accelerator to speed up the cure time, then sand it smooth. Hope that helps!
Gorgeous dresser, nice video and I learned a few things... Thanks so much for sharing that.
Thanks! Glad it was helpful!
Great piece and great video! Well thought out and covers a lot of ground. Much of the advice will apply to any woodworking. Not just this dresser. Very nice!!
Thank you very much!
Outstanding video and great tips that will bring the project to the next level. Thanks and subscribed!
Awesome, thank you!
Nice video man, great demo of useful tips!
Thanks!
Great video. Very informative. I liked the curve sander block. I have not seen that before
Thanks! Glad you liked it!
Great job my friend! I learned something and that is what counts 😀
Thank you, that’s great to hear!
Well done! Fantastic video, delivery and results. Good call on the epoxy, use it all the time.
Thank you very much!
Very good work
& the vid fantastic
Thank you i just subscribed
Awesome, thank you!
Thank u... Go one... U r prof in wood
Thanks!
Wow amazing thank you so much for the video you are truly amazing
Thank you!
Great video. I love the design and execution. I wish you continued success.
Thank you very much!
The best video. 💪🏻
Glad you liked it!
@@biscuittreewoodworks so much so that I want to model my kitchen island after this design. Plus, I have tool envy!
Fab video 👌🇬🇧
Thank you! 👍😁
Beautiful piece of furniture. The only question I would have is about the wax finish you put on it. While it looks really great, doesn't it leave the wood vulnerable to being damaged? Especially from people setting things on the dresser top?
Thank you!
The finish I used is Rubio Monocoat. It was designed for premium hardwood floors. It dries very hard and offers decent protection. The real benefit is if it gets damaged, it is very easy to repair. You just lightly sand and apply more finish in the damaged area. With other finishes like polyurethane or other varnishes, you have to completely strip the old finish and refinish the piece.
@@biscuittreewoodworks Learn something new every day. Thank you for the information.
This video earned a subscription.
Beautiful build. Personally I think the simple side panel was perfect. The added piece ruins that perfection and gives the appearance of multiple pieces of wood with a decorative element to hide a poor union. Why would I say that? Because I have done just that after an attempt to join wood without the tools or skill. So I hid my bad joint with a similar decorative piece. Ok I do admit it was not on fine furniture although I hope to reach a point where I am making something that people may call fine furniture.
Thanks!
Nice video. However I'm a bit puzzled by the way you have attavhed the top panel. It feels like the hardware on the side panels will prevent correct wood movement. They will prevent back/front movement of the panel
The hardware I'm using allows the screw to slide in a slot and it also can pivot so you have multiple degrees of freedom for wood movement.
@@biscuittreewoodworks it does allow to slide but just in one direction from the looks of it. So if you put several in different direction (from all 4 sides) then it basically cannot move at all.
@@AdrienLeGuilloux They are designed to be able to rotate which gives you movement in all 4 directions. That is why I chiseled out the recess a bit to give it more room to move.
Izzy give a quick demo here. th-cam.com/video/YTgNJU0rbOc/w-d-xo.html
I love how he mentions that he goes to workshop to relax, only for him to talk about very stressful glue ups couple of minutes later. 😅
I know, it's sounds counter intuitive! Think of it kind of like going to the gym and putting in a really hard workout. It's difficult and maybe even painful while your in the middle of it, but after it's done you feel amazing! The blood gets flowing, your endorphins are up, and the feeling of accomplishment when it all comes together just can't be beat!
Where do you buy your wood? Pre-planed and jointed?
I have a local hardwood dealer I go to. Most of what I get is S3S, which means surfaced 3 sides, or skip planed.
Beautiful work? Where do you get those wide mouth F - clamps?
You mean these?
amzn.to/3wtFu3Z
What ear protection do you use?
Most of the time just the cheap foam earplugs. I think I used pair a Jaybird earbuds when I did the sanding in this video. I also just bought a pair of Isotunes that I’m trying out and they are great so far.
busted knuckles , oh my he is great and very funny.
He's a great guy. We meet and talk about videos pretty often.
Good sir,
Why does your bench rock so much when using the hand plane? Is it a setup issue, or a bench design / age issue? (Early on in the video) Lots of good content here.
It's an old bench and one of the first things I build when I started woodworking. A new bench is on my list for one day!
thats a really beautiful dresser. not very good at guessing cost in materials but how much do you think you spent to complete this? thanks
About $1200 for the wood, $250 for the drawer slides, and another $200 or so for miscellaneous supplies like screws, sandpaper, rags, glue, finish, hardware, etc.
Excellent project. How much would you sell a piece like this? I still struggle with pricing my work and to often I feel like I'm not charging enough.
Something like this would start at about $6000. Different wood species or options would drive the cost up from there.
@@biscuittreewoodworks That's what I mean. I would have sold this for about $3,000, but I think your price is absolutely correct.
I cut my tapers on the table saw. Much easier and, with a simple sled, easier to make identical repeat cuts.
Also, I don't have a band saw.
A tapering jig on the table saw works great, I have one I use from time to time. I just find it faster to use the bandsaw for small cuts like this.
Nice job on the dresser. Just a side note: if you are spending days hand cutting dovetails then you need more practice.
Very true! I definitely need more practice! I only hand cut dovetails a couple times a year so I take my time and try to get it right.
Do I hear a bit of Tarheel in your voice?
I’ve lived all over the southeastern US but I’m originally from Mississippi.
Your craftsmanship is 2nd to non!. I'm not on your level sir, and one day I will!.
You can do it! Just takes a bit of practice and lots of patience!
You do know that you don't really need the "activator" to get the CA glue to harden......
Correct, but it causes the glue to instantly cure so I save that 20-30 seconds of holding it in place!
too many sharp corners and sharp edges, no radie or chamfers
I would never hire you,
Wow, what a relief! I’ve been worried for weeks that you would place an order and I would have to actually build something for you! I mean seriously, I don’t even know where I would find a radie!