Something very satisfying and relaxing watching someone do wood working with only hand tools. No power tool noise, just the peaceful sound of hand tools and a master at work. I always appreciate the patience some have to do things that way since I don't have the patience. So I don't feel too bad about myself I like to think I'm just going for the rough rustic old and weathered look. Enjoyed your video.
Looks great and a wonderful showcase for your skills both as a woodworker and a presenter. Please do a video about the finish, especially the grain filler.
This is a beautiful piece~! I really like your video format and am all in favor of your using tools without power cords. ;-) I've been a power tool woodworker for over 30 years and I've been bringing hand tools into the picture over the last 18 months (thank you to Rob Cosman for his inspiration to do so~!!) This looks like a project idea that I might have to "borrow". Thanks for sharing it~!
Big dummy with no willpower. Excellent humor.🎉 nice to see you going old-school, you’ve got a lot more patience than I do love the video. I think the numerous short scenes really adds a lot to it. Glad to see your subscriber count is rocketing up. Keep up the good work.
Awesome! Not sure if this is helpful but I roughed my plow plane fence rods with 220 sandpaper and it doesn’t slip anymore. I read it somewhere. Cheers man! I love the videos!
That’s hilarious. I’m on jury duty this week so to kill time I’ve been re-reading The Anarchist’s Tool Chest and he recommended the same thing. Definitely doing it in the morning. Thanks, Richard!
Love your videos! They calm my nerves. No power tools is refreshing and so is the fact that you don’t blast ‘power cords’ on the music sound track! Can you tell me when you use an edge trimmer vs a shooting board?
Thanks John. I’m always trying to find that delicate balance between playing some music in the background to keep things a little lively without it being a distraction! I appreciate your input. The edge plane, I believe is only 3/4” wide, so anything wider would go to the shooting board. And it’s really great on parts longer than 16 or 18” when they can get unwieldy on the shooting board. Thanks again for tuning in!
Hi JD. I use Shapton water stones up to 8K grit along with a honing guide. I generally sharpen most tools with a 30 degree microbevel. Maybe a future video, indeed. Thanks for the nice words.
Hi Kristen, I appreciate the kind words. Here are some measurements: 11.25” wide, 8.5” tall, 3.25” deep. The drawers were 1.75” tall. Hope this is helpful!
Loved it. You have a great narration style and the level of detail is great -- informative, but not too much repetitive detail. Love your dry sense of humor too! One question -- what right angle/ edge plane is that?
Thanks for watching and the nice words, John! That is the Lie-Nielsen No. 95 Bronze Edge Plane. Currently out of stock, along with quite a few of their other tools, as Lie Nielsen sorts out their production issues. Thanks again!
Thanks for the nice words, Brad! I use hide glue on dovetails for two reasons. 1. Longer open time than yellow glue. 2. Hide glue is “invisible” to finish. Dry yellow glue that may have soaked into endgrain will show up as stains when finish is applied. Hide glue doesn’t have that issue. Thanks again!
Thanks for watching. Yes. Those are the Carter blocks which are really handy. Still hate that somehow I managed to lose the 1/8” block. I’m sure it’ll turn up the day after I buy a replacement.
That is the Veritas shooting board that I got used for less than half-price. I had to tap some new holes in the rail to accommodate my LN bevel up jack but that was pretty easy. I made a short showing that process: th-cam.com/users/shortsoeK3AaJq07U?feature=share
Something very satisfying and relaxing watching someone do wood working with only hand tools. No power tool noise, just the peaceful sound of hand tools and a master at work. I always appreciate the patience some have to do things that way since I don't have the patience. So I don't feel too bad about myself I like to think I'm just going for the rough rustic old and weathered look. Enjoyed your video.
Thanks for your insight and for tuning in, Daniel.
Than you. I appreciate the attention to design esthetics an every detail.
Thanks for the nice words!
Finally something worthwhile in the torrents of so many woodworking tools videos a simple yet beautiful piece of craftsmanship 😊
That’s very kind of you to say, Aman. Thank you!
Wow. Gorgeous work Kevin. I really enjoyed watching this one, it was a very relaxing process with the hand tools, and you made it look so easy!
Thanks Keaton. And BTW…dying to see your coffee table build!
@@quillwoodworks coming soon!
Great video, lovely piece and true craftsmanship, really enjoyed this.
Hand-tool woodworking is so therapeutic.
For sure, Tom!
❤ Gorgeous! Wonderful videography. I love your hand tool videos! 💯 ❣
Looks great and a wonderful showcase for your skills both as a woodworker and a presenter.
Please do a video about the finish, especially the grain filler.
Thanks for the very kind comment. I just may do a video on that sooner rather than later.
This is a beautiful piece~! I really like your video format and am all in favor of your using tools without power cords. ;-) I've been a power tool woodworker for over 30 years and I've been bringing hand tools into the picture over the last 18 months (thank you to Rob Cosman for his inspiration to do so~!!) This looks like a project idea that I might have to "borrow". Thanks for sharing it~!
Thanks for watching, Andrew. Much appreciated!
Awesome job. Thanks for doing an all hand tool project. Came out great. 👍
Nicely executed. Thank you for sharing. I’ve had a few ideas about making little boxes for my kids. Your video got my gears turning.
Real nice project and video. I enjoyed it.
Big dummy with no willpower. Excellent humor.🎉 nice to see you going old-school, you’ve got a lot more patience than I do love the video. I think the numerous short scenes really adds a lot to it. Glad to see your subscriber count is rocketing up. Keep up the good work.
Much appreciated, Bob!
Definitely fantastic video work.
Beautiful piece, wonderful skills, I think this will be my next project.
I'm impressed by how well you edited out all of the wheezing and cursing after the cuts get started.
It was all AI. 🤖
Enjoyed the video very much sir. Thanks! 🙏
Thanks for watching, Ivan!
Nicely done.
what a nice project. well done
Great stuff.
Really nice. Found your channel today via your tool cabinet video (which was also great!). New subscriber right here.
I appreciate the sub, Jack, and glad you enjoyed the videos!
Fun little project
Awesome! Not sure if this is helpful but I roughed my plow plane fence rods with 220 sandpaper and it doesn’t slip anymore. I read it somewhere.
Cheers man! I love the videos!
That’s hilarious. I’m on jury duty this week so to kill time I’ve been re-reading The Anarchist’s Tool Chest and he recommended the same thing. Definitely doing it in the morning. Thanks, Richard!
Excellent job, thanks for sharing.
Thank you, Frank. Much appreciated.
Love your videos!
They calm my nerves. No power tools is refreshing and so is the fact that you don’t blast ‘power cords’ on the music sound track!
Can you tell me when you use an edge trimmer vs a shooting board?
Thanks John. I’m always trying to find that delicate balance between playing some music in the background to keep things a little lively without it being a distraction! I appreciate your input.
The edge plane, I believe is only 3/4” wide, so anything wider would go to the shooting board. And it’s really great on parts longer than 16 or 18” when they can get unwieldy on the shooting board.
Thanks again for tuning in!
Thanks!
I truly appreciate your support! Thank you kindly.
Beautiful job. I like the contrast of the walnut and ash. What sharpening system do you use? Maybe a video on that.
Hi JD. I use Shapton water stones up to 8K grit along with a honing guide. I generally sharpen most tools with a 30 degree microbevel. Maybe a future video, indeed. Thanks for the nice words.
@@quillwoodworks Thank you for the response and the information.
This is a beautiful piece. Would you be willing to share some measurements so I could make one for a family member?
Hi Kristen, I appreciate the kind words. Here are some measurements: 11.25” wide, 8.5” tall, 3.25” deep. The drawers were 1.75” tall. Hope this is helpful!
Loved it. You have a great narration style and the level of detail is great -- informative, but not too much repetitive detail. Love your dry sense of humor too! One question -- what right angle/ edge plane is that?
Thanks for watching and the nice words, John! That is the Lie-Nielsen No. 95 Bronze Edge Plane. Currently out of stock, along with quite a few of their other tools, as Lie Nielsen sorts out their production issues. Thanks again!
Great videography, commentary, and work. Why did you switch to hide glue for your dovetails? Keep up the good work!
Thanks for the nice words, Brad! I use hide glue on dovetails for two reasons. 1. Longer open time than yellow glue. 2. Hide glue is “invisible” to finish. Dry yellow glue that may have soaked into endgrain will show up as stains when finish is applied. Hide glue doesn’t have that issue. Thanks again!
Are those Carter F.A.S.T. blocks on the bench or self in video? Love the look of the project. Great proportions.
Thanks for watching. Yes. Those are the Carter blocks which are really handy. Still hate that somehow I managed to lose the 1/8” block. I’m sure it’ll turn up the day after I buy a replacement.
What shooting board is that? I think I've seen it before but I thought it was a custom job
That is the Veritas shooting board that I got used for less than half-price. I had to tap some new holes in the rail to accommodate my LN bevel up jack but that was pretty easy. I made a short showing that process:
th-cam.com/users/shortsoeK3AaJq07U?feature=share
That was a nice little build. I hate Bundt cake.