I watched this whole video just to see it set up as a charcuterie board. I wanted to see the end product with food on it. Well on to the next vide! Great job! I love the finish product.
Love that you give your friend a shout out on your video. Two things I'm always looking for -- a quality DIY channel, and a quality Christian apologetics channel. Got you both a sub.
After a wash or 2 you’ll need to apply more butcher block oil. After you repeat that more and more, less and less oil is needed. Eventually when the board is seasoned with oil you’ll only have to do it once a month if you’re using it regularly.
i too use packing tape for my epoxy projects, i found the best success with the Duck brand tape, i get it in the 3" width online, i think their plastic film is thicker and easier to work with because it starts and tears cleanly, and the extra inch width of tape is nice.
Just found your channel and I subscribed, amazing work, great video's, positive vibes but the best part is you actually take time to answer people's questions!! Most people just post video's and never answer any questions!! After watching just a few of your video's I'm getting ready to try a few small practice projects!! Thanks for your time, you're a natural teacher!! You make it look so easy!!
Another idea for Tuesday. How to guesstimate how much epoxy you need for a pour. I’m not Einstein so I have a hard time making the right judgment. Also your draw string at the beginning of the video was setting my OCD off like the 4th of July.
Nice project. I'm just starting out using epoxy. I got myself a beautiful piece of Manitoba cherry. Was 33x16 inch. Cut it to about 16 inches by 16 inches by 2 inch thick with live edge. Natural oranges and reds flow through it. My plans are to make a reverse river. I'm prepping the wood, removing bark. I'm noticing a lot of small surface cracks between the grains. My question is, how do you calculate the amount of epoxy needed? I don't want to waste more than I have to. If needed I'll post a quick video with the plans.
You are absolutely brilliant! I love watching your videos, so informative and easy to follow, keep up the good work and especially THANKS for sharing! ❤️
I wouldn’t seal the edges. The products a available these days are much better than they once were. Just make sure you keep the temp down and shouldn’t have any bubbles.
Help!!! I thought I was ordering the right stuff!! Anyway I wanted to make serving boards with the epoxy in the center. I ordered some Total Boat epoxy resin. Now I see that it is table top so needs to be done in 1/8 increments. Not what I thought! What should I have gotten?? Thank you in advance!
@@GoodViewWoodworks Thanks so much! I have this now so have to use it. How dry can it get before you put another thin coat over it? Tacky I believe they say but can it get dry. It would take all day and night to do only a little depth. You do a great job in your videos and I watch them over and over wishing I could do that! Thanks again!
Nice work! Would love to see a break down of cost of materials and total working time on projects like this. I'm going to try and get a wood shop up and running, ultimately I would love for these live edge projects to be my primary production. So it would be interesting to see the cost breakdown.
My mom loves to cook and I want to make her something she can use everyday! Only problem is hiding it from her while I'm making it! It's beautiful, great video!
Finally a video that is explained from start to finish. Great video!!! Only question is do you plan the rough live edge before the video. I never made a epoxy board and I'm very interested in making one so trying to learn every step?
Hey I took your advise and subbed. This is your first video that I've watch and i can tell that I'll like following your channel. The project was awesome, great job.
Great video..it really helped for when I made my cutting board. Quick question I did the same thing as you with the sanding and then oil. When you let it sit over night after it dried were you able to see any scratches in the epoxy? I can see some and I'm pretty bummed. What can I do to fix it?
Thanks for a great video! Im about to make my first board. Just wondering if i can use an electric hand planer, rather than the big automatic one you have?
You do a great video and job!Have a couple of questions for you! When you drill the hole and put the fine coat of epoxy on does enough get to go into the holes to make a difference ? I see in another video you did you say not to coat where the bark was. Were you talking about on all things or just the table you were working on? Does the epoxy hurt the knifes on a planer?
The holes is an older technique. I don’t do that anymore because I use a casting epoxy that takes a longer time to setup which in turn absorbs into the edges much deeper. This gives the strongest bond. I do this on all things now. The epoxy is a little harder on the blades but it’s barely noticeable.
does the heat trick only work on that epoxi or could you use it on others as well Im going to start making my own pen blanks and typically you put it in a vacuum chamber or pressure pot to get bubbles out
Hi Nathan! It's been a little over a year since you made this cutting board, I remember watching it and think I wonder what it would look like after it's been used. I'd love to know have you used it, how often, and what does it look like now? I think it would make a cool TH-cam video "Before & After" just a thought
Marco Velez hey brother that’s a great idea. The only problem is I sent it to a fellow TH-camr several states away 😅. I’ll try and see if he has any pics.
Richard Weiss great question! I just take a paper towel and wipe it off after i let it sit and drip for a few mins. I had this drill mixer for over a year and haven’t needed to replace it yet.
Hi fun stuff lovin it! I also live that you give your friend a plug BUT chiming in because you mentioned In another video we don't have to worry about the wipe because it just helps get a better surface to mix everytime. Do we need to clean it each time?
Question for you. I have watched a few of your videos working with wood and epoxy, like the 4 or 5 part coffee table build. I believe this is the first time I have seen you drill the hold on the inside of the boards so that the epoxy can act as dow rods. Why was it needed this time and not when you did the coffee table? How can I tell if my project I am working on is going to require me to do that? I am a complete beginner and looking to begin my first project soon. Thanks for the great videos!
Great question! The only reason you would need to do that is if you’re not going to encapsulate the entire piece. If you notice, in this video I didn’t pour a flood coat. Hope this helps!
Since you're doing multiply pours you don't have to color the bottom pour. Mineral oil from the drug store is cheaper than the butcher block oil. I just let the cutting board soak for 30 minutes or so in a mineral oil bath. Let it drain off until there is no standing oil than rub it dry. Mix up some melted bees wax and mineral oil in a 2:1 ratio. Apply the wax for a final coating on the cutting board. Tell the customer only hand wash and clean it with half a lemon and kosher salt once a month then rub it down with some mineral oil. I also tell the customer that I'll resurface the board once a year. That way you stay in touch with a customer. If they bought once, they'll buy again.
Looks brilliant! ! One question though, how will it stand to actually being used ? Unless your mom has got a huge kitchen, it really looks too big to just sit around looking really cool.
Do you find that the sandpaper discs need to be tossed after one use on the resin? The white resin residue seems to stick to the pads and make them useless after one use.
I had the same question. Also, this is the only one of his epoxy projects that I can recall seeing this "dowel" idea used. I'd like to know if that's because it causes problems or because it's just unnecessary.
It’s because it’s unnecessary. If you use the correct type of epoxy (slow setting casting epoxy) the dowels are not needed because the epoxy has time to soak into the edges creating the strongest bond.
I had to re-watch this video after a year. It's the cid that got me hooked on Goodview, Nathan and resin crafting. Still lovin' it all.
Lost Sailor thanks bro!!! I appreciate that!
I'm just a beginner and your video was the best I've watched thus far...awesome...thank you.
I watched this whole video just to see it set up as a charcuterie board. I wanted to see the end product with food on it. Well on to the next vide! Great job! I love the finish product.
Great job at doing a step by step tutorial. Most videos just do it without explaining. This was very educational.
King Leo thanks! That’s one of our goals here on TH-cam, to teach people. Thanks for watching!
The dowel holes are game changing
Beautiful job Nathan
Thank You for your fast reply!
You freaking help me so much. Your so simple not all these crazy tools I don’t have lol you the best!!
Nice job. I didn't know you could use clear packing tape for the mold. Thanks for the learning experience.
Thank you! You’re very welcome 😉
Great video! You make me feel like I can really do this myself with the steps you demonstrate. Thank you for taking the time and effort.
I really like the translucency of the epoxy
Best tutorial I've seen sooooo far. It is even better than the ones from the "big channels" thank you so much ☺️
I’ve been having a hard time clamping my form to my table but I see how you raised it, that a great idea, thanks!
Hey love your work .... thank you for your time....God bless you, your friend from Canada....
Thank you so much!!
Wow! Great job and great job at showing us how to do this! Thanks! Can't wait to make one!!
Thanks so much!!
Nice job Nathan. Now I need to find some live edge wood and try it. 😊
Dustright has a 5micron bag that fits your planer. It's less than $40 and works. Great videos, keep it up
Thanks! I’ll check them out!!
I like your tutorials...... you are good.
GoodView Woodworks
Very Good !!!
Thank you!
@@GoodViewWoodworks Nothing, I have to learn a lot from your videos
Your Videos helped me finish my first river table. Thank you. Your work is fantastic 👍.
That was a really great tutorial, thanks 😁
Thank you!
I agree!!!
Love that you give your friend a shout out on your video. Two things I'm always looking for -- a quality DIY channel, and a quality Christian apologetics channel. Got you both a sub.
That’s awesome man! Thanks!!
Great video. Iv been planning on doing something similar and your video is extremely helpful. Thank you from the U.K. 🇬🇧
Great job!
What about cleaning that stuff with water after use, doesn’t it leave water marks?
After a wash or 2 you’ll need to apply more butcher block oil. After you repeat that more and more, less and less oil is needed. Eventually when the board is seasoned with oil you’ll only have to do it once a month if you’re using it regularly.
Nooice!! Great job and I love the color!
thomas heroux 🤣 thanks bro!
what a great job. I will be making one now, Thanks and keep it up
Great job and you’re a hoot
This was a fantastic tutorial
Thank you!
Question, wouldn't the dowels be more efficient if the holes were drilled after the sealing epoxy? 🤔
Amazing end result, keep up the great work
i too use packing tape for my epoxy projects, i found the best success with the Duck brand tape, i get it in the 3" width online, i think their plastic film is thicker and easier to work with because it starts and tears cleanly, and the extra inch width of tape is nice.
Nice! I’ll check it out
Just found your channel and I subscribed, amazing work, great video's, positive vibes but the best part is you actually take time to answer people's questions!! Most people just post video's and never answer any questions!! After watching just a few of your video's I'm getting ready to try a few small practice projects!! Thanks for your time, you're a natural teacher!! You make it look so easy!!
Thank you so much. If you have any questions please don’t hesitate to ask.
good work👍
Thank you
Awesome work !
Thank you!!
Another idea for Tuesday. How to guesstimate how much epoxy you need for a pour. I’m not Einstein so I have a hard time making the right judgment. Also your draw string at the beginning of the video was setting my OCD off like the 4th of July.
Great idea! Bro you are hilarious! 🤣😂
You just need a little multi-variable calculus.
Nice project.
I'm just starting out using epoxy.
I got myself a beautiful piece of Manitoba cherry. Was 33x16 inch. Cut it to about 16 inches by 16 inches by 2 inch thick with live edge.
Natural oranges and reds flow through it. My plans are to make a reverse river. I'm prepping the wood, removing bark. I'm noticing a lot of small surface cracks between the grains.
My question is, how do you calculate the amount of epoxy needed?
I don't want to waste more than I have to.
If needed I'll post a quick video with the plans.
th-cam.com/video/yB0zLPwDO9k/w-d-xo.html
Check out this video. Hope it helps.
@@GoodViewWoodworks Perfect. Thank you for the link.
Side note,
Subscribed.
Keep up the awesome work.
WELL DONE!!
Oh I want one of those. I love your creations.
Thank you!!
I used fomwood apoxy for cutting board is it safe to cut on it ,chemical wise ,did not look into ,nice looking board u made ,thx in advance
Really nice!
You are absolutely brilliant! I love watching your videos, so informative and easy to follow, keep up the good work and especially THANKS for sharing! ❤️
Wow, what a beautiful cutting board.Lots of work though. I'm jealous of all your cool toys :)
Awesome video.
Appreciate the hard work! After watching several of your videos, this is, by far, the best music (to me)... Thanks for sharing!
Your last name is one letter away from mine
Nicely done sir, enjoyed watching this video :)
Thanks D1
any tips for uneven sided tray sealing
I’m not sure what you mean
@@GoodViewWoodworks I’ve got a piece of wood that the sides are not even ‘or square but I still need to seal them right
I wouldn’t seal the edges. The products a available these days are much better than they once were. Just make sure you keep the temp down and shouldn’t have any bubbles.
Wonderful gift from the heart 👍
Thanks Mike
Great board, why did you have to do 2 pairs instead of one?
Hi Nathan. What is the material you poured at 16:28?
Is it epoxy?
It looks something like gel
It’s a butcher block conditioner
Help!!! I thought I was ordering the right stuff!! Anyway I wanted to make serving boards with the epoxy in the center. I ordered some Total Boat epoxy resin. Now I see that it is table top so needs to be done in 1/8 increments. Not what I thought! What should I have gotten?? Thank you in advance!
If you’re going to use total boat, then you need to get their “thick set” epoxy.
@@GoodViewWoodworks Thanks so much! I have this now so have to use it. How dry can it get before you put another thin coat over it? Tacky I believe they say but can it get dry. It would take all day and night to do only a little depth.
You do a great job in your videos and I watch them over and over wishing I could do that! Thanks again!
You can just wait until it’s the consistency of thick honey.
Thanks for the info and great looking project.👍🔨
No problem, thanks for watching!
Nice work! Would love to see a break down of cost of materials and total working time on projects like this.
I'm going to try and get a wood shop up and running, ultimately I would love for these live edge projects to be my primary production. So it would be interesting to see the cost breakdown.
Thanks so much! It cost me about $37.50 to make this board.
@@GoodViewWoodworks how much do you charge for a piece like that? BTW excellent channel, love it, keep up the good work!!!
My mom loves to cook and I want to make her something she can use everyday! Only problem is hiding it from her while I'm making it! It's beautiful, great video!
Awesome thanks!
Finally a video that is explained from start to finish. Great video!!! Only question is do you plan the rough live edge before the video. I never made a epoxy board and I'm very interested in making one so trying to learn every step?
How do I clean the edges up after I take it out of the form? Can I use a power hand saw?
What was the name of the oil you used on it at the end?
Can this be done without using a planer?
Yes it can. You can use a router to flatten the piece as well.
Question: how does the epoxy stand up to sharp kitchen knives? Thank you. Beautiful work!
RMG CBG great question! Sharp kitchen knives will score the surface. But you can always scuff and recondition the surface.
Hey I posted on my channel a cutting board I made with 1200 color pencils and epoxy cool as hell. Thanks for your advice on Facebook
No problem bro!
Question did you add the second layer of the same epoxy on the second day
Awesome job can it be used as actual cutting board ?
Hey I took your advise and subbed. This is your first video that I've watch and i can tell that I'll like following your channel. The project was awesome, great job.
Thanks a lot!!
Beautiful job!!!
Hey thanks Jennifer!!
How would you clean this board after having food on it
How think is that board?? Inch??
Do you use the Cups more than once ?
Yes I let the epoxy cure in the cup then pull it out and it’s good to reuse.
@@GoodViewWoodworks thank you for answering my dum question
Hi Nathan. How did u determine the right amount of epoxy to use ? Is there a formula ? Tks greg
th-cam.com/video/yB0zLPwDO9k/w-d-xo.html
Nice one!
Great video..it really helped for when I made my cutting board. Quick question I did the same thing as you with the sanding and then oil. When you let it sit over night after it dried were you able to see any scratches in the epoxy? I can see some and I'm pretty bummed. What can I do to fix it?
Just need to make sure you sand thoroughly. Also you may want to go to a higher grit as well. Hope this helps.
What was the last application you put on
How does the apoxi affect my knives. Is it going to dull them? Your board looks amazing!
quick question how thick is this board and whats a good thickness size for cutting boards thank you
It’s 1” thick. Between 1-2” it’s good
@@GoodViewWoodworks thanks man i left it at 1 1/4 i still have to run it thru the planner
No problem Manny
Thanks for a great video! Im about to make my first board. Just wondering if i can use an electric hand planer, rather than the big automatic one you have?
Yes you can !!
Great job as always Nathan good idea about putting holes in the sides do u think that would work on bigger things like tables maybe?
Nick Garza absolutely !!!
You do a great video and job!Have a couple of questions for you!
When you drill the hole and put the fine coat of epoxy on does enough get to go into the holes to make a difference ? I see in another video you did you say not to coat where the bark was. Were you talking about on all things or just the table you were working on? Does the epoxy hurt the knifes on a planer?
The holes is an older technique. I don’t do that anymore because I use a casting epoxy that takes a longer time to setup which in turn absorbs into the edges much deeper. This gives the strongest bond. I do this on all things now. The epoxy is a little harder on the blades but it’s barely noticeable.
What do you charge if you don’t mind me asking. I’ve made only one and kept it.
Around $150
Thank you. Mine didn’t look as nice as yours.
Great videos is there a minimum thickness needed for these ?
Planning to make a
Bench as
Well ,same question minimum. Thickness ?
I would say no thinner than 3/4” and for a bench, no thinner than 1.5”
my friend. very nice. thank you so much. be happy.. bravo
Thank you!
Hi, what or which polish did you use? What would you recommend for walnut board? Thx
Where did you get the slab of wood ? great job, plan on making a cutting board soon !
Nice video, I’ve got some leftover pieces of wood that I can use to make some of these
Thanks! You should!!
I started playing/working in my uncles cabinet shop when I was 9, but I never worked with epoxy till about two months ago and I’m hooked!!🤩😎
It’s a lot of fun, isn’t it!?
Do you get snipe on the end of your board when you run it through your dewalt planner.
what size, and thickness do you make cutting boards?
12”x24”x1.5”
does the heat trick only work on that epoxi or could you use it on others as well Im going to start making my own pen blanks and typically you put it in a vacuum chamber or pressure pot to get bubbles out
It works on most epoxies
Is there still a layer of epoxy on the wood after planing? Or do you plane down to the surface of the wood?
Great question. I plane it down to the surface of the wood.
Hi Nathan! It's been a little over a year since you made this cutting board, I remember watching it and think I wonder what it would look like after it's been used. I'd love to know have you used it, how often, and what does it look like now? I think it would make a cool TH-cam video "Before & After" just a thought
Marco Velez hey brother that’s a great idea. The only problem is I sent it to a fellow TH-camr several states away 😅. I’ll try and see if he has any pics.
You used a drill with a stirrer to mix the epoxy. How did you get the epoxy off the stirrer or do you just throw them away ? TIA
Richard Weiss great question! I just take a paper towel and wipe it off after i let it sit and drip for a few mins. I had this drill mixer for over a year and haven’t needed to replace it yet.
Hi fun stuff lovin it! I also live that you give your friend a plug BUT chiming in because you mentioned In another video we don't have to worry about the wipe because it just helps get a better surface to mix everytime. Do we need to clean it each time?
Won’t the cutting board get scuffed when cutting on it? Great job!
Question for you. I have watched a few of your videos working with wood and epoxy, like the 4 or 5 part coffee table build. I believe this is the first time I have seen you drill the hold on the inside of the boards so that the epoxy can act as dow rods. Why was it needed this time and not when you did the coffee table? How can I tell if my project I am working on is going to require me to do that? I am a complete beginner and looking to begin my first project soon. Thanks for the great videos!
Great question! The only reason you would need to do that is if you’re not going to encapsulate the entire piece. If you notice, in this video I didn’t pour a flood coat. Hope this helps!
I can’t find the link on how to make the wooden square which you set everything up in
Do u make molds?
Since you're doing multiply pours you don't have to color the bottom pour. Mineral oil from the drug store is cheaper than the butcher block oil. I just let the cutting board soak for 30 minutes or so in a mineral oil bath. Let it drain off until there is no standing oil than rub it dry. Mix up some melted bees wax and mineral oil in a 2:1 ratio. Apply the wax for a final coating on the cutting board. Tell the customer only hand wash and clean it with half a lemon and kosher salt once a month then rub it down with some mineral oil. I also tell the customer that I'll resurface the board once a year. That way you stay in touch with a customer. If they bought once, they'll buy again.
Thanks mike! I really appreciate that!!!
Actually you do need to color the bottom pour because you will see that layer on the end.
im wondering what the epoxy looks like after you have cut stuff up on it over time? Im guessing it gets pretty scarred up.
Yeah it gets scratched up. The cool part is that you can just sand it down and re apply butcher block oil.
Looks brilliant! ! One question though, how will it stand to actually being used ? Unless your mom has got a huge kitchen, it really looks too big to just sit around looking really cool.
😂 it will get scratches from the blade. It will be the same as any wood cutting board. It’s really not very big. The finished size is 12x20
Which liquid do you use after sanding for finishing/polishing with piece of cloth?
It’s called detail spray.
How much epoxy did that project take?
Do you find that the sandpaper discs need to be tossed after one use on the resin? The white resin residue seems to stick to the pads and make them useless after one use.
Yes however if you pause periodically and wipe the dust from the surface of your project while you sand it helps them last longer.
Can you use a pre-built cutting board from Walmart and cut it in half and then do it that way
Yes you can!
Great job Nathan - quick question - I like the “epoxy dowel” idea but doesn’t it create more air bubbles sources, just as you precoat the live edges?
I had the same question. Also, this is the only one of his epoxy projects that I can recall seeing this "dowel" idea used. I'd like to know if that's because it causes problems or because it's just unnecessary.
It’s because it’s unnecessary. If you use the correct type of epoxy (slow setting casting epoxy) the dowels are not needed because the epoxy has time to soak into the edges creating the strongest bond.
What was the finish you used at the end. Food grade oil? Which kind? Appreciate your videos and an answer :-) Great work!
It was butcher block conditioner. It is linked down in the description. Thanks for watching!!
What r u using as the bottom that u taped up and placed the frame on?
It’s just a piece of 3/4” melamine.