Good job. The only thing I would have done different is by using a small grinding burr and create a pocket for the staples to lay flush in to the wood.
Looks good. The whole way through the video I was having an internal battle, thinking it looks crap but I don't want to give him a dislike. And then you cut it up and bam! It looks great! You turned that frown upside down and turned a dislike into a like and a subscriber
Hi. I just stumbled across your channel while going down a RU-vid rabbit hole and found this vid. VERY nice! I adore the purposeful rusticness(?) of this pot. The bronze wiring is a brilliant touch! Well done!
Wow, initially those rings, with the shadows, had an amazing and weird 3D perspective! 🤔 Almost as if they were at a different (flatter) angle than the wood itself!
Hi Joel. Thanks! I should have mentioned it in the description. I was using Milliput (www.milliput.com/). Once set it is hard, it can still be worked with normal woodworking tools. I don't enjoy working with glass fibre style resins, they feel too harsh on the tool and spoil the experience for me.
Thanks. I try and keep my hand behind the blade in case something goes wrong. I also think it is a function of how strong the bandsaw is vs how thick the wood is. The wood it has to cut through in this case is pretty thin.
No entiendo nada de inglés, observare su vídeo ya que estoy intrigado en lo que pueda ser. Ya le contestaré a un nuevo comentario. Saludos desde Sevilla .
I'm a beginner and all i have to show for my skew effort is lots of waste metal, and the ability to find every possible catch point in any piece of wood, I still haven't even got the grind right yet. Grrrrrrrrr Good luck in your future skew skills, And have an awesome day Cheers 🍻 Matt Queensland Australia 🇦🇺
Thanks! I'm mostly using a bedan. It is very similar to a beading and parting tool, that can be used as a parting tool but also as a skew. Mine is home made but all the major suppliers have them