Immerse yourself in a world of creativity and craftsmanship. From breathing new life into vintage artifacts to transforming objects into extraordinary works of art, let's contemplate the remarkable talents of the craftspeople who truly are the Masters Of Craft.
This is not restoration, this is renovation. After such repairs!, the violin lost its value. The guy has talented hands, in 10-15 years he will be able to carry out a real restoration
And i came to see him precisely tape a ripped page. That was never shown. Interesting process. Careful work, except tosses his shears into the delicate pages he's working on! Fun to watch, in spite of the comments. Not a book binder so i don't care about parsing words. Whatever the result, that is between him and the customer.
I love how the narrator in these Masters Of Craft videos never has any clue what they are talking about and most likely haven't seen the video, it's a bit like a Steven Seagal movie, entertainingly bad :p Great restoration/rebuild btw.
Have you ever lied? stolen? hated? been prideful? gossiped? swore? Or other bad things? I Can say without a doubt we’ve at least done something that was considered bad, consciously that we shouldn’t have done. this is called sin. It’s the act of doing something against what God wants in our lives. Think about this. You have just invited someone over to your house, and that means you can place rules on what they do - because it’s your home! Now lets say this said person directly disobeyed the rules you’ve placed while they were there. you would be offended right? This is exactly the situation with us and God. We are the person staying over in His creation, yet we consciously disobey- which is called Sin. We all have this problem and because of this God has to send us to hell because He is so just can’t just let these wrong doings pass. Think of it as a guilty criminal having to be sentenced to jail because the Judge knows it’s right. We are the guilty criminal. Hell is our punishment. And God is that Judge. Well, this would mean that everyone would go to hell because we’ve all committed sin-disobedience from God, consciously. But here’s the good news. Jesus came to die on the cross, taking our punishment upon Himself, for our sins so we don’t need to go to hell. Think of that same analogy with the criminal. Now there is a person that’s willing to bail that criminal out and if that criminal accept that gift of bail, then they will be able to legally be free. If we accept that, Jesus died on the cross for our sins and repent- turn away from sin-then we will be saved because we take His bail that He offers for free so we can go to heaven.
I suppose it’s not absolutely germane to the topic, but it would have been nice to know exactly what the volume was and why it was deemed worthy of conservation. Sorry to nitpick an otherwise magnificent job and an intriguing video!
Bullshit AI generated narration... sometimes I even wonder if the actual video is real. These bots , once they get an idea of your interests , the bots are of an running, making AI generated channels and content almost tailor made for us. All for the clicks. I hate the way things are going.
I have seen countless instrument restorations on RU-vid, and they are either some luthier/repairman who decided to (unskillfully) video his (skillful) work, or some clickbaity channel erasing the history and charm of gorgeous old instruments. This video was neither; the work itself was skillful and respectful of the instrument's past, and the video was well-produced, complete with corny intro. I could go on forever about this, but I am lazy and you probably don't want to read my ramblings. Bravo, and please keep doing this. It gladdens my heart to see these old instruments brought back to life without erasing the life they had before.
100-Year-Old Book? C'mon, there was television 100 years ago. Books were mass produced long before 100 years ago. This book is probably more like 400 years old. Great craftsmanship though. I think this guy has done this job a time or two. His tools speak to generations at the trade. Some folks griping about the cover aesthetics. I agree, but I don't think the bookbinder chose the look. Maybe this is exactly how it looked previously.