I'm just getting started in woodworking (at age 71!). Until a couple of months ago, I'd never heard of Shou Sugi Ban; I've never seen wood's beauty enhanced with such versatility! Now, having watched dozens of videos, I can't wait to give it a shot.
I recently found out about this,im going to use this technique for a coffee table for a project for my welding class. But im definitely gonna use this with so many other things
Nice work. I have tried different burn strengths and the fully charred and brushed looks great with light colored paints that fill in the Springwood expressing the burned grains. Thanks for the video
I actually stumbled upon this when I was treating wood with fire. Then diesel and engine oil. I then looked st flame painting! Then I saw this method! Now I'm addicted. Lol . Amazing job. Cheers from Australia. Subbed and liked 🙂👍👍👍. Btw: so you can speed up the curing time with a heat gun? I used plywood on a custom knife handle restoration job. And it is coming out beautiful! I know plywood isn't really the best? But it's only going for display. Love this method. I have some black Japan stain! But it's creative pattern of the flame that got me hooked and it really pop out.
I want to do burnt wood on my business sign that we are building. So two questions. After burning what is the best thing to use to clear coat it ? Second question if I do a light stain after I burn it do I need to do a clear coat over the stain? I know nothing about wood so have no clue what is the best clear to put on it
Those came out aweseome! On the second piece, the darker one, was it just a plain resin epoxy that you put over the wood, or was it an actual wood stain. It come out nice and dark, so was curious if it was a stain, but I didn't see it mentioned in your supplies.
شكرا جزيلا لك مقطع فيديو مفيد جدا وشكرا على وضوح الشرح والشفافية وأنا أريد أن أتعلم هذه التقنيةبالإسلوب الصحيح وأن أتقنها هل تنصحني ببعض الروابط أو القنوات الخاصة بهذه التقنية وأكون ممتنا لك وأتمنى لك دوام التوفيق وشكرا
Hi! Tell me please, for how deep burn I have to go, to keep it like charcoal? Without brushing.. just black as it is and with no paint or oil coating? Im gona use a torch. Thank you!
It's spruce.. and pine.. And is it ok to leave without oil.. just fired natural wood.. and the thing what is worried me, is it gona leave coal trace when you touch it?
Try it on a scrap of plywood. My guess is you won’t be able to do a “deep” burn. Like he says “happy trying”. Let us all know how it goes. Maybe do a video to show the outcome. It’s ok to show if it works or if I doesn’t.it is more about sharing the lessens learned
Depending on the weather, for example Malaysia is hot and humid, rain fall through out the year. Soft wood like pine if not treated or coated will start to deteriorate within months to 1-2 years.
@@Puleczech The trick for "long lasting" in timber is to prevent any moisture going inside. Other than Shou Sugi Ban, seal it with sealer or paint to prolong the protection.
how do you keep the strongly charred "dragon skin" efffect and then seal it so the charred carbon doesnt brush away? no one has done a video explaining that
In Japan there is one company that manufactures these for siding, which is pretty much the only way it is used there. They are left unglazed as is (traditional method in Ehime prefecture) or painted with water-based acrylic paint (modern) because oil penetrates rather than forming a surface layer. If the carbon is brushed off, the paint is black or clear. If not, a clear coat is used.
The purpose is to scrub off the charcoal burnt. If you are looking for deeper grain, you may torch it longer. Else, you may lightly torch it for a lighter burnt mark effect. Thank you.
Usually pine or some other kind of soft wood to get really prominent grain finish after burning. Hard stuff like teak is notoriously hard to burn evenly!
Not the essence say it ain't soo. Resin will make it last 10x just because it was done a way 200 years ago doesn't make it best practice traditions change for the better
Though I appreciate the time and effort used for creating this video, I somewhat doubt it is an original Shou Sugi Ban technique. To me it's just a regural wood burning+adding whatever finish you want. If I'm not mistaken, the original Japanese technique doesn't involve epoxy resin which didn't exist in 18th century lol or any other colouring or finishing other than just charring. Here is an example how it is done in Japan - no stain, no paint, no epoxy and other shit: th-cam.com/video/rzVoBog8A_4/w-d-xo.html
I'm thinking he is using the basic method of Shou Sugi Ban as a starting point. Burn wood and brush char off. Then trying different things. So, no not completely traditional Japanese Shou Sugi Ban/ Yukisugi. But he never claimed to be staying completely traditional. I enjoyed seeing what else is possible.
I'm just getting started in woodworking (at age 71!). Until a couple of months ago, I'd never heard of Shou Sugi Ban; I've never seen wood's beauty enhanced with such versatility! Now, having watched dozens of videos, I can't wait to give it a shot.
Great!
i do believe after watching your video i'm finally going to try this, your examples came out beautiful.
Thank you
Black with gold very nice😎✌️
Thank you so much!
I like the way you encourage “happy trying”
Experiment until you get what YOU want!
Thank you.
Thank you very very very much
most welcome.
So beautiful I will definitely give it try thank you for sharing
Thank you so much. Appreciate it.
Great video 👍
Thank you
Very nice!
Thank you! Cheers!
Love your work
Thank you!
I recently found out about this,im going to use this technique for a coffee table for a project for my welding class. But im definitely gonna use this with so many other things
Sounds great! Thank you.
Nice work. I have tried different burn strengths and the fully charred and brushed looks great with light colored paints that fill in the Springwood expressing the burned grains. Thanks for the video
Thanks for sharing!
I’m definitely going to use this technique for future projects. Such a beautiful technique.
Thank you
Awesome demonstration Buddy, Nice Work...
Thank you! Cheers!
Using Yakisugi is meant to be stain free, environmental friendly way of protecting the wood against insert and water.
exactly, this video is about anything but original Japanese technique.
I actually stumbled upon this when I was treating wood with fire. Then diesel and engine oil. I then looked st flame painting! Then I saw this method! Now I'm addicted. Lol . Amazing job. Cheers from Australia. Subbed and liked 🙂👍👍👍. Btw: so you can speed up the curing time with a heat gun? I used plywood on a custom knife handle restoration job. And it is coming out beautiful! I know plywood isn't really the best? But it's only going for display. Love this method. I have some black Japan stain! But it's creative pattern of the flame that got me hooked and it really pop out.
Thanks. Great!
This looks fantastic!
Thank you so much.
Pine ,cedar worked great.have done it with lots of types of wood.but the softer woods tend to char better and still keep the openness for the stains.
agreed.
😃 Thank you for your video, it has inspired me! I've read Shou Sugi Ban is used to preserve wood outside?
Thanks for the video Monsieur
Most welcome. Hope you enjoy it.
The secret to this appereance in the wood with the fire is the high temperature of it? Or you put anything in the wood before burn?
High flames!
BEAUTIFUL
Thank you so much
Exactly what I was looking for 👍 thank you 🙏
Most welcome. please share.
Amazing results from skilled hands. I know what to do with my next guitar.. Great video!
Rock on!
Thanks for inspiration.. how long did you use the heat gun, to dry the resin? Was it dry after heat gun? Thanks✌️
few minutes...but let it dry and cool for a while
Beautiful.
Thank you
Most welcome.
Amazing!! What kind glass have you used?
Very good video fine sir! One of the best techniques in wood grain excavation.
Thank you
@@ATKCeWarehouse Ever stained with a water based stain and then burn? And what are the effects?
Thanks again!
Great video! Very inspiring my friend! Thank you very much...
Thank you for your support!
@@ATKCeWarehouse , are you kidding, its my pleasure sir.
Quarter-sawn:
* Cypress
* Cottonwood
* Bamboo
Finish with spar-varnish.
Exquisite!
Thank you!
I have been playing with this quite a bit. I think a pressure washer is the cleanest method. No dust and you don't leave wire marks on the wood
To dry it completely will be an issue.
I live in Canada..
I used the snow/ ice to scrub the char off! Wash and brush at same time!
Have done this on fir, spruce and maple.
@@tjlabbee7856 Nice, hope to see your sharing too.
Me agrado tu explicación, me animaré a probar la técnica y ver los resultados pronto. Gracias.
Muchas gracias. Nos vemos.
@@ATKCeWarehouse hi I love your work what kind of wood do u recommend for a backdrop
That wood looks like gold...
What exactly did you use???
thank you.
I want to do burnt wood on my business sign that we are building. So two questions. After burning what is the best thing to use to clear coat it ? Second question if I do a light stain after I burn it do I need to do a clear coat over the stain? I know nothing about wood so have no clue what is the best clear to put on it
any good quality clear coating shall be fine. You may choose PU clear for long lasting. However, i would suggest spray on for better effect.
Those came out aweseome! On the second piece, the darker one, was it just a plain resin epoxy that you put over the wood, or was it an actual wood stain. It come out nice and dark, so was curious if it was a stain, but I didn't see it mentioned in your supplies.
Brilliant
Thank you.
Nice! Thank you!
Thank you so much.
Good idea yes inspired me thanks
Thank you
Great job
Thank you.
Awesome Video. Love this technique
Thank you! Cheers!
@@ATKCeWarehouse :-)
@@KundelCrane Thanks.
Excelent video my friend, thanks.👍
Thank you. Please share it with your friends or visit our website at www.ewarehouse.my
شكرا جزيلا لك مقطع فيديو مفيد جدا وشكرا على وضوح الشرح والشفافية وأنا أريد أن أتعلم هذه التقنيةبالإسلوب الصحيح وأن أتقنها هل تنصحني ببعض الروابط أو القنوات الخاصة بهذه التقنية وأكون ممتنا لك وأتمنى لك دوام التوفيق وشكرا
Can I apply your technique to beekeeping hives by burning with a flame only externally without severe deformation of the boards? Thank you.
I am not sure about this.
@@ATKCeWarehouse Thank you.
Fantastic tutorial. Please tell me, can I use oil or water based stains?
I believe that both are equally applicable, just have to rub it with cloth to get the desired finish.
ATKC eWarehouse Home Improvement Store thanks
Does this work on outdoor decks
Yes.
Pressure treated? Works for that too?
@@zonda456 I'm not sure about this.
Hi! Tell me please, for how deep burn I have to go, to keep it like charcoal? Without brushing.. just black as it is and with no paint or oil coating? Im gona use a torch. Thank you!
Depending on the type of wood, softwood is easier to achieve. Keep an eye on it.
It's spruce.. and pine.. And is it ok to leave without oil.. just fired natural wood.. and the thing what is worried me, is it gona leave coal trace when you touch it?
@@janisberzins3923 I have seen video of torching the video and apply epoxy resin on top of it several layers. And, it looks amazingly good!
Is the epoxy good for fence? Sun/water resistant?
It's good
Several coats of clear poly would work just as good as a top coat if you are doing just a thin coat of epoxy, and poly is much less expensive.
Great advice! Thank you for sharing.
Thank you!! I'll be trying this soon!! I also subbed!
Thank you so much.
it's not just japanese, even romans used this technique to preserve wood
Noted. Thanks for sharing.
What do you use to fill in knot holes and flaws?
For this, I didn't.
But when you do, what do you use? CA glue? Epoxy? Wood glue mixed with the soot you brush off? Or something else?
@@paulwojcik6339 just epoxy resin and brush
have you ever done it as a bar top is it flat?
It's not going to be flat, but textured.
If you were going to build a 1.5" (38 mm) thick southern yellow pine exterior door, would you have to char both sides of the door?
Lightly char.
@@ATKCeWarehouse Otherwise it might warp?
@@myownspiritlevel Depending on your climate.
Great job, from italy
Thank you, from Malaysia.
Will this technique work on 4x8x1/2" plywood?
No, plywood is formed by layers. You won't get the visible wood grain finishes.
Try it on a scrap of plywood. My guess is you won’t be able to do a “deep” burn.
Like he says “happy trying”. Let us all know how it goes. Maybe do a video to show the outcome. It’s ok to show if it works or if I doesn’t.it is more about sharing the lessens learned
@@c50ge Noted.
Hey guys especially Malaysians. Please share & subscribe so our friend can do more great DIY contents.
Woww...great to hear that! Thank you for the shout out!
really need to lower the volume (or better cut it out altogether) when you’re sanding… rip headphone users
Noted.
Tanks!
Welcome
Niiiiice!
Thank you. Please share this video with your friends.
Очень красиво👍👍👍💥💥💥
thank you
Domo arigato sensei.
Thanks
Whuuuuuut?.. NIce!
Thank you.
!!Just great my friend!!! Greetings from Mexico :)
Thank you from Malaysia!
Do you supply the torch as well?
please refer to www.ewarehouse.my
To sa mi páči. To u nás nerobia?
I always wash the timber off to get rid of the black soot then let it dry overnight
I will try your recommendation for my next project
What happened to the horn?
which horn?
Can this be used on a teak bathtub?
Heating with blow torch or high temperature may compromise/melt the glue joints. Personally, I don't recommend.
Can this be used for walls for sauna ?!
Pine wood yes.
Hello, what is the estimate for how long can the wood treated like this last? Compared to regular unburnt wood. Thank you.
Depending on the weather, for example Malaysia is hot and humid, rain fall through out the year. Soft wood like pine if not treated or coated will start to deteriorate within months to 1-2 years.
@@ATKCeWarehouse I see, but how long will Shou Sugi Ban treated pine wood (for example) last then? Double that? Triple that?
@@Puleczech The trick for "long lasting" in timber is to prevent any moisture going inside. Other than Shou Sugi Ban, seal it with sealer or paint to prolong the protection.
You need to coat it with a protection but it wears out over time so you will need to re-apply every year which might require some light sanding
So this is where the wax on wax off comes from
Does it work with using rubber wood?
Couldn't I just apply the paint and then just wipe it off ... to achieve the same effect ?
Yes, you may.
Great video mate! So i would like to order for the UK, could i find an equivalent brand of Nippon 999 Gold pain and Exposy resin here in UK?
For Nippon Paint, I am not too sure. For the resin, you can always get in in ebay or amazon.
What kind of wood did you use?
pine wood.
how do you keep the strongly charred "dragon skin" efffect and then seal it so the charred carbon doesnt brush away? no one has done a video explaining that
Noted. Maybe i will.
In Japan there is one company that manufactures these for siding, which is pretty much the only way it is used there. They are left unglazed as is (traditional method in Ehime prefecture) or painted with water-based acrylic paint (modern) because oil penetrates rather than forming a surface layer. If the carbon is brushed off, the paint is black or clear. If not, a clear coat is used.
@@kvogel9245 Thank you so much for the info.
Yes they have. After charring the wood it's mildly cleaned and epoxy is applied. I have seen two videos with that finishing.
@@jellyg.8961 Great!
where do i get this paint
Please visit our store at www.ewarehouse.my or drop us a message then.
Is it important to scrub the heck out of it? What happens if you don’t scrub it a lot?
The purpose is to scrub off the charcoal burnt. If you are looking for deeper grain, you may torch it longer. Else, you may lightly torch it for a lighter burnt mark effect. Thank you.
@@ATKCeWarehouse ok thanks 😊
The gold paint completely ruined it
noted.
What is the type of wood that is used ?
Name?
Usually pine or some other kind of soft wood to get really prominent grain finish after burning. Hard stuff like teak is notoriously hard to burn evenly!
Un poquito fuerte el fuego con el soplete de acetileno.
yes, i want it deep torch.
Yeah
thank you!
Ahh. The odor of burning wood. I can almost smell it from here.😉
Smells like back to nature.
That gold stain!!!
It's gold paint!
It's not on the Japanese way of preserving wood. It's also used in Poland for centuries.
Great info!
Nothing rustic about that flamboyant God awful gold color not a fan but great work and informative video thanks.
Thanks for watching!
正しい発音はshou sugi banではなくyaki sugi itaです
誤った知識を勝手に広めないでください
It would be perfect, but when I realised the synthetic resin is used instead of tung oil :( oh nooooo. Buddy you missed the essence of shou sugi ban!
Noted.
Oh! The trauma. 😂
Not the essence say it ain't soo. Resin will make it last 10x just because it was done a way 200 years ago doesn't make it best practice traditions change for the better
When it was invented resin didn’t exist and that’s the only reason they didn’t use it.
Though I appreciate the time and effort used for creating this video, I somewhat doubt it is an original Shou Sugi Ban technique. To me it's just a regural wood burning+adding whatever finish you want. If I'm not mistaken, the original Japanese technique doesn't involve epoxy resin which didn't exist in 18th century lol or any other colouring or finishing other than just charring. Here is an example how it is done in Japan - no stain, no paint, no epoxy and other shit: th-cam.com/video/rzVoBog8A_4/w-d-xo.html
Thank you for your sharing!
I'm thinking he is using the basic method of Shou Sugi Ban as a starting point. Burn wood and brush char off. Then trying different things. So, no not completely traditional Japanese Shou Sugi Ban/ Yukisugi. But he never claimed to be staying completely traditional. I enjoyed seeing what else is possible.
It will bend like a gymnast 🤦
To by som zvládla aj ja.
Great. Just do it!
👍👍👍,.
Thank you.
To many black sir
ok
Eh
:)
👍🏻🇨🇦
Thank you.
News break.... its just wood burning. Whats the mistery and why the made up name for picking up a torch and burning a piece of wood. Lmao
haha..noted.
Beautiful till the ugly gold stain was out on it
well noted.
I have a lot of spruce boards and some are invested with fungus. Can I still use them i fI burn the surface in this manner?
Be careful with toxins.
Splendidly to see Woodprix have new plans which helped me save some money and energy for this construction.
Thanks for your promotion.
@@ATKCeWarehouse On the Woodprix website, you buy access to thousands of projects once.
@@romanaangersbach1176 You are not the first...
I started with Stodoys plans.
Please like my video, before advertising your plans.
Just go to Stodoys if you want to know how to make it yourself.
Thank you for your highlights.
@@ATKCeWarehouse Fantastic you like it friend 💞
@@hammondmiers3789 Thanks