Years ago, you were one of the channels that really, deeply, put the idea in my head of pursuing woodworking as a career. I didn't start green at all, coming from a design background, a life of making as a hobbyist, and both parents being architects, but now I'm almost done with my 4th year as a professional in high-end residential cabinetry and millwork. I'm the new-school rookie in a shop full of veterans with 20+ years on me, but I can still knock out an entire rift sawn white oak, true inset kitchen on my own with no supervision largely because watching your channel, Four Eyes, and Keith Johnson for years beforehand set me up with so much knowledge ahead of my first year in it. I've even shown a few old heads some tricks I've learned from you first! Thanks.
It actually blew my mind seeing you and hearing you call out the differences in processes and the machinery blowing your mind. You're crazy talented, so I just assumed a lot of those things you pointed out were just some unspoken stuff you did we didn't see in your videos. I can tell Josh is super successful just based on his operating procedure, efficiencies, and organization. Like outsourcing drawers, that's a definite production shop thing. I definitely subscribed because becoming Josh is my goal in the next 5 to 10 years. I hope to see you incorporate some of these procedures, maybe even some of the equipment onto the Bourbon Moth Channel.... You're already super talented and a great educator, so you could do alot of good in multiple ways doing it...Facebook has some Cabinetmaker groups that are GREAT sources of knowledge that bridge the gap between a Woodworker and a Cabinetmaker if you're interested
Hello Bourbon Moth, I want to thank you for all the amazing work you are doing and showing the tricks for new woodworkers like me. I want to ask you what kind and brand you are using for your Sliding Table Saw.
I've been using a slider since the mid-2000s...and it was actually painful when I had to go back to a cut down cabinet saw in temporary space while my new shop building here at a different property was getting built. I'm glad you had a good experience with the one is Northeast's shop!
I’d love to see more of these videos where you go to other makers shops and do one of your style of video going through their process and all the interesting learnings you find. It was fun to watch!!
They are very nice units. Pricey but do work very well at getting stuff out and easier to access. However, stop the video and examine the unused space around the unit itself. Possibly one of the biggest waste of overall space in a corner especially at the cost compared to other options. Anything you do in a corner is a very delicate balance of maximizing space used, functionality and cost. Changing any 1 will definitely impact the others!
@ I know of only one other blind corner unit that would optimize the space better, which is the Magic Corner 2. It brings only a few extra square inches of storage, but it cost more and is more complicated to install (more time = more $).
It's so freaking fascinating to see both perspectives. Because your buddy is so accustomed to work in this cool, awesome, ready-to-go environment that he doesn't even mention it in his videos. It's so funny to me, dude seems to have little idea that his setup is A.W.E.S.O.M.E. All the specialized powertools are insane. Like the one made just to create the holes in the cabinet, for the shelves. I didn't know that existed. I'm just in awe.
Just building 5 cabinet boxes was enough to max out my 2 car garage available space. I couldn’t imagine doing a full kitchen, seems like you’d have to do it in phases. I get it, full kitchen buildout is a lot of work and could take a month or more. Pretty cool he knocked out a whole phase of the build in hours and learned a few tricks. Never occurred to me to oversize cabinet doors, well damn that would make things so much easier!!
I build cabinets for a living and do it in a much more cramped space than your current garage shop. Probably a similar size garage but I have way more space taken up with lumber and sheet goods and tools like that same sliding table saw as your buddy Josh. It's not easy sometimes but it's definitely doable and it's definitely not a shop space for 2.
Missed a big opportunity to show us how to build nice cabinets in a small shop like most of us have. The collab is great, but I wanna see the small shop builds!
Jason has shown building cabs in his original shop a bunch and I doubt it'd be different in his garage. I really enjoyed seeing how the pros do it, plus the explanation of differences in techniques.
This. Its almost insulting for him to call it a "small shop" when I've built cabinets in my actual 1 car garage... That still has a car in it. I'd love to see him do some real builds in there but it seems like its only for show right now.
Yeah honestly I thought the small shop was to show us we could do the same thing in our small shops and how he would tackle to issue of small spaces 🤷♂️
The right tools for the job, I'm jealous. I just made 40 doors and drawer fronts for my kitchen with nothing more than my table saw and router table... the same basic design you did (shaker, but with inset panel/beveled edge - Freud 99-762 and solid drawer faces). They came out really well, but took me bit longer... about two weeks total. Haha
@@davidvasquez3564 Depends. This is a kitchen. You don't know what you're going to put in those cabinets, you might need to adjust the position of the shelves depending on your needs at any given time. Those needs might also change throughout the years. It makes sense. Also, since those are closed cabinets, you're never gonna see the holes, so who cares?
“Wu Tang loving freak” 😂😂😂😂 loved this collab. Waiting a week for the next video is torture. Only thing missing is the FOREMAN keeping you all in line.
Oooh, the danger of visiting a workshop with bigger/better/more/different tools than your own shop 🙈👍. The URGE to get some for yourself. Well done. 👍👍👍👍👍
Can't build cabinets in a small shop!? My kitchen is bigger and I built mine in half of a two car garage! The parking area with a pop-up canopy helped. And a Harbor Freight carport tent for a spray booth in the side yard added some SF to my work area. 😁😁Jason rocks!
Watching the pro was very eye-opening. But, I was thinking the same as you. A few years ago I built 21 lowers and 14 uppers and a 48" X 96" pantry. There was a combo of drawers, doors, shelves, etc. This included an "L" shaped island. All with Euro style hinges, drawer slides, knobs, shelf pins, etc. My shop is a 1 car garage that shared space with my mower ( I since added a shed for the lawn equipment). I couldn't roll tools out of the garage, but did use a canopy to spray like you. The remodel also included me installing new flooring, drywall, backsplash and relocating plumbing & electrical. It took me longer, but the results were the same. Definitely can be done. Thx.
I wasn't inspired by the title but really great to see pro ideas. Also Josh, the true pro, keeps working straight faced while a giant man baby rolls around his shop. Never change Jason.🍼👶
Make the doors 2 mil bigger than finished size, then use an outside profile shaper that's set to take off one millimeter. Run all four sides then done. Plus no saw marks to sand out
Search blind corner pullout and you will find images and links to similar to what he used. Since he didn’t say, we don’t know exactly what brand, model or size was used but there are options.
Bro I make sure to tell clients to upgrade to maple. It may cost 15% more in cost but itll last 10x longer. Mable can take a beating. Especially corners and doors
Do you have any resources or recommendations for building cabinets under a curved staircase? or curved fixed shelves? I am struggling so hard rn trying to do it. I cant seem to find any guides. the curve is not consistent.
Oh look, a shop with all tool you actually need to do this stuff! The rest of us have to draw the line somewhere. The drum sander is something I have found to be very very useful.
What if I told you that there was no reason you can't install the drawer slides on the gables before you even assemble the cabinet, while they're lying flat on your bench?
How long do you wait for glue to dry? I always felt the need to wait 24 hours but based on the timeline it seems like you were waiting 3-6 hours? Have I been wasting so much time?
"...and if you haven't guessed already, that's what this video is about." Aw. I expected a trippy buddy flick where you and Josh abandon the woodwork to follow Wu-Tang on tour.
It must be very satisfying to have all of the tools set up and ready to go. Oh and I think you should give the N/E in the N/W a couple of bucks for the donuts. lol
Beyond your skills as a maker, I appreciated your skills as a storyteller. However, I have one complaint about your wife (yeah, I am about to step into dangerous waters). My mother taught me that if you by nice stuff, use it. Things are made to be used. If you have a nice ceramic bowl. Bol (the goddess of bowls) wants those bowls to be used for salads, mixing, etc. The one thing they should not be used for is collecting dust. And if something gets chipped, well, that becomes a story of the life of the bowl. Then again, you can take the safe was and just listen to your wife. Anyway, keep up the good story telling and thanks for your channel.
Face frames? Come over from the dark side and embrace frameless euro cabinets. So much better from an aesthetic perspective and saves a ton of milling work.
With all do respect losing space on the inside of the cabinets is a matter of how the frames and cabinets are desinged, built and integrated. Both are truths depending on what you’ve seen or been exposed to.
Years ago, you were one of the channels that really, deeply, put the idea in my head of pursuing woodworking as a career. I didn't start green at all, coming from a design background, a life of making as a hobbyist, and both parents being architects, but now I'm almost done with my 4th year as a professional in high-end residential cabinetry and millwork. I'm the new-school rookie in a shop full of veterans with 20+ years on me, but I can still knock out an entire rift sawn white oak, true inset kitchen on my own with no supervision largely because watching your channel, Four Eyes, and Keith Johnson for years beforehand set me up with so much knowledge ahead of my first year in it. I've even shown a few old heads some tricks I've learned from you first! Thanks.
Man I clench every time I see you guys not using push blocks or sticks
It actually blew my mind seeing you and hearing you call out the differences in processes and the machinery blowing your mind. You're crazy talented, so I just assumed a lot of those things you pointed out were just some unspoken stuff you did we didn't see in your videos. I can tell Josh is super successful just based on his operating procedure, efficiencies, and organization. Like outsourcing drawers, that's a definite production shop thing.
I definitely subscribed because becoming Josh is my goal in the next 5 to 10 years.
I hope to see you incorporate some of these procedures, maybe even some of the equipment onto the Bourbon Moth Channel.... You're already super talented and a great educator, so you could do alot of good in multiple ways doing it...Facebook has some Cabinetmaker groups that are GREAT sources of knowledge that bridge the gap between a Woodworker and a Cabinetmaker if you're interested
Hello Bourbon Moth, I want to thank you for all the amazing work you are doing and showing the tricks for new woodworkers like me. I want to ask you what kind and brand you are using for your Sliding Table Saw.
I really enjoyed seeing a shop that was optimized for this process.
I've been using a slider since the mid-2000s...and it was actually painful when I had to go back to a cut down cabinet saw in temporary space while my new shop building here at a different property was getting built. I'm glad you had a good experience with the one is Northeast's shop!
I’d love to see more of these videos where you go to other makers shops and do one of your style of video going through their process and all the interesting learnings you find. It was fun to watch!!
Agreed. This was fun and interesting to watch.
I watched both of his videos as well. Lots of good information in those. Interesting to hear it from two different perspectives.
4:40 The WU-TANG FOREVER sign made me spit my tea out I laughed so hard!
5:35 IS THE MONEY SHOT
Man, that's some nice kit in that shop. Not for the first time, I'm finding myself in envy of you US-based guys with so much free space...
Yeah, us Americans are fortunate, all having shops exactly like that. 😂
@@RaffBuilding You read my post, and that's what you thought I was implying? That all Americans have very large, well-equipped wood shops? Really?
@@dasnutnock6408 #sarcasm
It is nice to have a shop like that.
Would love to see how you measured the space to come up with the cabinets.
Very cool shop
That S curve lazy suzanne was insane!!
It’s a Kesseböhmer LeMans, and yes, it is.
They are very nice units. Pricey but do work very well at getting stuff out and easier to access. However, stop the video and examine the unused space around the unit itself. Possibly one of the biggest waste of overall space in a corner especially at the cost compared to other options. Anything you do in a corner is a very delicate balance of maximizing space used, functionality and cost. Changing any 1 will definitely impact the others!
@ I know of only one other blind corner unit that would optimize the space better, which is the Magic Corner 2. It brings only a few extra square inches of storage, but it cost more and is more complicated to install (more time = more $).
I subscribed to Josh’s channel because of your collaboration. He is very talented. Wu-Tang Rocks!
Ayyyyy Josh has good taste in music- Great to see an Aesop Rock poster in a wood shop!!
That's crazy using the patented glue spreaders to push boards through the jointer!
It's so freaking fascinating to see both perspectives. Because your buddy is so accustomed to work in this cool, awesome, ready-to-go environment that he doesn't even mention it in his videos. It's so funny to me, dude seems to have little idea that his setup is A.W.E.S.O.M.E.
All the specialized powertools are insane. Like the one made just to create the holes in the cabinet, for the shelves. I didn't know that existed. I'm just in awe.
It's a Line Boring Machine, just so you're aware buddy
Just building 5 cabinet boxes was enough to max out my 2 car garage available space. I couldn’t imagine doing a full kitchen, seems like you’d have to do it in phases. I get it, full kitchen buildout is a lot of work and could take a month or more. Pretty cool he knocked out a whole phase of the build in hours and learned a few tricks. Never occurred to me to oversize cabinet doors, well damn that would make things so much easier!!
I build cabinets for a living and do it in a much more cramped space than your current garage shop. Probably a similar size garage but I have way more space taken up with lumber and sheet goods and tools like that same sliding table saw as your buddy Josh. It's not easy sometimes but it's definitely doable and it's definitely not a shop space for 2.
Best good dame vid re topic i have seen. Laughed and learned, just more than usual. Awesome.
Dude has some serious equipment. In his shop. Man. Thousand of dollars in equipment. Nice. 💪🏾
Missed a big opportunity to show us how to build nice cabinets in a small shop like most of us have. The collab is great, but I wanna see the small shop builds!
Jason has shown building cabs in his original shop a bunch and I doubt it'd be different in his garage. I really enjoyed seeing how the pros do it, plus the explanation of differences in techniques.
Same thing but you use the drive way. Use your imagination
Instead in spite of your whining you saw the best way to do it
This. Its almost insulting for him to call it a "small shop" when I've built cabinets in my actual 1 car garage... That still has a car in it. I'd love to see him do some real builds in there but it seems like its only for show right now.
Yeah honestly I thought the small shop was to show us we could do the same thing in our small shops and how he would tackle to issue of small spaces 🤷♂️
The right tools for the job, I'm jealous. I just made 40 doors and drawer fronts for my kitchen with nothing more than my table saw and router table... the same basic design you did (shaker, but with inset panel/beveled edge - Freud 99-762 and solid drawer faces). They came out really well, but took me bit longer... about two weeks total. Haha
U Matt Cremona?
Good to hear. I would like to make new fronts for my cabinets. I have a router but not a router table. Hope that will be enough.
@@sbffsbrarbrr A router table, coping sled and R&S bit set are much easier, but you can certainly do it entirely on a table saw.
That's awesome dude!! When you do finally upgrade to tools that make processes easier. You'll be that much better of a woodworker/cabinetmaker.
In the UK it’s a spindle moulder. We also use a planer/thicknesser instead of your jointer.
That Powermatic is the big daddy of power-feeders!
The face frame feet looks cool but seems like a floor cleaning nightmare. Awesome build!!
great Josh impersonation!!! 😂 dudes got the best taste in music IMO. FYI Wutang is Forever
lol you were probably green with envy upon seeing this shop loaded with all those nice machines
Best woodworking videos on TH-cam. Always Informative and entertaining. Thanks, Jason.
Any chance you could share a link to the dowel pins you mentioned when you attached the drawer face to the box. Thx
I'm jealous over the shelf holes. I grew up doing it with a stick template and a drill...one hole at a time.
Way too many holes for two or three selves.
I use my CNC
@@davidvasquez3564 Depends. This is a kitchen. You don't know what you're going to put in those cabinets, you might need to adjust the position of the shelves depending on your needs at any given time. Those needs might also change throughout the years. It makes sense. Also, since those are closed cabinets, you're never gonna see the holes, so who cares?
Great build y'all
“Wu Tang loving freak” 😂😂😂😂 loved this collab. Waiting a week for the next video is torture. Only thing missing is the FOREMAN keeping you all in line.
Josh has a notepad & pencil. Josh is a great man.
Keep motivating !
I try to avoid blind corner storage, even with cool caddies. They eventually break...
Oooh, the danger of visiting a workshop with bigger/better/more/different tools than your own shop 🙈👍. The URGE to get some for yourself.
Well done. 👍👍👍👍👍
Can't build cabinets in a small shop!? My kitchen is bigger and I built mine in half of a two car garage! The parking area with a pop-up canopy helped. And a Harbor Freight carport tent for a spray booth in the side yard added some SF to my work area. 😁😁Jason rocks!
Watching the pro was very eye-opening. But, I was thinking the same as you. A few years ago I built 21 lowers and 14 uppers and a 48" X 96" pantry. There was a combo of drawers, doors, shelves, etc. This included an "L" shaped island. All with Euro style hinges, drawer slides, knobs, shelf pins, etc. My shop is a 1 car garage that shared space with my mower ( I since added a shed for the lawn equipment). I couldn't roll tools out of the garage, but did use a canopy to spray like you. The remodel also included me installing new flooring, drywall, backsplash and relocating plumbing & electrical. It took me longer, but the results were the same. Definitely can be done. Thx.
@@richpeggyfranks490 Sounds like we had similar scopes. Well done!
3:08 Shop teachers across the world give you a high 2 and a half.
Great video enjoyed
I wasn't inspired by the title but really great to see pro ideas. Also Josh, the true pro, keeps working straight faced while a giant man baby rolls around his shop. Never change Jason.🍼👶
What was the wax they put the Kreg screws in before install?
Make the doors 2 mil bigger than finished size, then use an outside profile shaper that's set to take off one millimeter. Run all four sides then done. Plus no saw marks to sand out
Wow, what a great video.
You have a great friend in Josh! I can't imagine what it cost to make these kitchen cabinets! $35, 000.00 installed?
Now that you mention it, how much this would have cost would have been interesting to know.
This dudes shop exudes C.R.E.A.M.
😂
You have to try to crumb donuts at Sister‘s Bakery.
Sisters Bakery is the best!
Josh's shop is absolutely dailed.
Genuine question: if you have a jointer, what's the point in a planer? Can't you just use the jointer for all sides?
10:27 So Craig and the foreman were still with you on this build, in a roundabout kinda way.
I was expecting a joke like that here, honestly weird that Jason didn’t make that joke
Very timely series for me! Can you add a link for those blind cabinet swing out thingies? Can't find them.
Search blind corner pullout and you will find images and links to similar to what he used. Since he didn’t say, we don’t know exactly what brand, model or size was used but there are options.
Bro I make sure to tell clients to upgrade to maple. It may cost 15% more in cost but itll last 10x longer. Mable can take a beating. Especially corners and doors
Do you have any resources or recommendations for building cabinets under a curved staircase? or curved fixed shelves? I am struggling so hard rn trying to do it. I cant seem to find any guides. the curve is not consistent.
Anyone know what the pivoting shelf at 26:00 is?!?! Itd be perfect for my kitchen corner cabinets
Awesome video 😊
jointing with fingers and the guard locked open.. my pucker got tight.
A cabin , home, big shop - small shop- lucrative, fun. No complaints. You have a nice style
can we get a link for that weird lazy Suzan thing?
Hey how thick is that MDF for the panels in the beginning? I assume .5?
How do you stop your inset doors from closing too far in?
very cool Lazy Susan .
WU-Tang?? Not a fan. 😳
Nice shop though. Definitely a cabinet makers dream shop. 😊
Wow!
"I'm going to show you how to make a small shop work for you." Borrows a huge shop.
Where in your store are those blades / pocket knife carver things at?
Oh look, a shop with all tool you actually need to do this stuff! The rest of us have to draw the line somewhere. The drum sander is something I have found to be very very useful.
Can we get a link to that jacket in the intro?
Wu-Tang is forever!!!
After seeing a professional cabinetmaker’s shop, I feel a lot better about my less than perfect cabinet-making skills. 😂
Funny how josh said your way of installing drawer faces was great and want to use thar instead
wu. tang, Wu. Tang. WU! TANG!
i had to remind myself multiple times during this video that i'm not a professional cabinet maker and i dont need these tools
Can you provide the contact info, website etc. for the person who built the drawers?
can you provide a link to that lazy suzan thing?
Enjoy the content.
Hell yeah.
Why do I see a sudden shopping spree for Jason and his new shop coming up? Lol
Building doors oversized and cutting them down later is a game-changer.
Been a thing for decades nothing new nothing invented. Glad you learned something 🤡🤣
Killer bees on the swarm. It ain’t safe no more.
Who makes the rust colored jacket you wear at the end of the video?
10:25 It took me too long to realize you were saying Kreg jig and not Craig jig...
What if I told you that there was no reason you can't install the drawer slides on the gables before you even assemble the cabinet, while they're lying flat on your bench?
Wu Tang is for the kids!!
😮
Josh has way cooler banners in his shop than you do. Wu Tang is Forever
How long do you wait for glue to dry?
I always felt the need to wait 24 hours but based on the timeline it seems like you were waiting 3-6 hours?
Have I been wasting so much time?
"...and if you haven't guessed already, that's what this video is about."
Aw. I expected a trippy buddy flick where you and Josh abandon the woodwork to follow Wu-Tang on tour.
It must be very satisfying to have all of the tools set up and ready to go. Oh and I think you should give the N/E in the N/W a couple of bucks for the donuts. lol
It would be cool to see Josh's girlfriend build those boxes
Beyond your skills as a maker, I appreciated your skills as a storyteller. However, I have one complaint about your wife (yeah, I am about to step into dangerous waters). My mother taught me that if you by nice stuff, use it. Things are made to be used. If you have a nice ceramic bowl. Bol (the goddess of bowls) wants those bowls to be used for salads, mixing, etc. The one thing they should not be used for is collecting dust. And if something gets chipped, well, that becomes a story of the life of the bowl.
Then again, you can take the safe was and just listen to your wife. Anyway, keep up the good story telling and thanks for your channel.
Isn't that more or less exactly what we usually call Shaker style?
Northeast may be deceptive but to be fair I don't think I have seen a moth in your videos
Josh is young. Old Josh will have no fingers.
I've got a harbor freight table saw, ryobi chop saw, and husky circular saw... wanna build me an outdoor kitchen cover? Ill cook you some killer BBQ
Face frames? Come over from the dark side and embrace frameless euro cabinets. So much better from an aesthetic perspective and saves a ton of milling work.
Frameless is pure scrap and a cheap look
You have more room on the inside of the cabinets with frameless
Nicky you obviously didn't think about your comment before posting it😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
With all do respect losing space on the inside of the cabinets is a matter of how the frames and cabinets are desinged, built and integrated. Both are truths depending on what you’ve seen or been exposed to.
Presidents are temporary, Wu-Tang is FOREVER!!!
I feel like I already have seen this...😂
Josh's boy friend built kitchen cabinets in his shop
Kitchen renovation and cabin overhauls may come and go, but Wu-Tang is forever.