A collection of some of the work we make at Jory Brigham Design.
About: We are a small group of artists, designers, and builders with a passion for creating by hand. Our designs are dynamic while remaining timeless. We love to take materials that are often overlooked and bathe them in imagination and inspiration to make a statement. We want our work to express the love, care, and thought we put into each design, so our pieces will be passed on for generations.
We are conscious of the footprint we leave behind, so we're committed to sustainably sourcing or locally reclaiming wood products, minimizing the use of hardware, and choosing solid woods over veneers.
I just recently learned about you by a reference from John Malecki and a piece he was working on. I have been simply amazed with every one of you pieces and now can't get enough of your videos. I've only been into wood working for about two years since is retired and don't think I will live long enough to come anywhere close to your craftsmanship. Thanks for sharing your world with us.
this is definitely on of tTHE most inspiring woodworking channel i have seen so far. So much ideas and creativity ... especially doing things a bit differently than many others to achieve outstanding results ...
Fantastic craftsmanship, but what about the climatic adjusters in the feet, the side-to-side tensioners to bend the playing field concave, and the end-to-end tensioners to bend the field concave? A shuffleboard is shaped like a bowl and if it's not and can't be adjusted for room, floor, humidity, and heat, then you're up shit creak.
@@JoryBrighamDesign I appreciate the reply :-) You're an expert carpenter and designer, I'm not trying to armchair you. But as a shuffleboard player, unless the table has 3 legs (which none do), then you're going to run into leveling issues on such a long stretch of floor without climatic adjusters in the feet, especially with a 1-piece, rigid frame like the one on your table, though I don't know the length. Then for the playing surface, I'm not sure if we're talking about the same thing because the climatic adjusters in the feet are just to space them up and down, to compensate for floor differences and level the cabinet/playing surface. Whereas the tensioners (unfortunately also called climatic adjusters sometimes) under the board are not about leveling the playing surface, they're about using force to make the entire thing slightly bowl-shaped; slightly rounded up on both edges left+right, slight dip in the middle end-to-end. That's interesting that your boards have climate adjusters on the playing field, too bad I didn't catch them in the video and can't quite see how they're adjusted once the board is in place through that beautiful sheet of orange steel. It's a beautiful shuffleboard, the brass inlays and stain turned out amazing.
@@Benjamin.McGuire you would put 3 sets of legs on a 12’ table? Each leg has levelers so you’re able to make the playing surface level at any time. I didn’t put the climate adjusters on for the pictures.
Your gonna blow up soon your the best woodworker on RU-vid hands down. And anybody else see his view, looks like a Van Gogh painting those hills are insanely stunning there no wonder we’re the inspiration comes from.
Dude, wear a mask when you’re in sawdust. You don’t want your kids to someday be in the position that I am in, with my mother suffering the consequences of never taking the basic safety measures.