I would love to see some of the final product after the craftmen and woodworker get ahold of this beautiful wood. In my minds eye I see beautiful dining room tables and chairs , a lovely cabinet,or a wonderful carved headboard.
Wow! Before you flipped the log the pieces with the rounded ends looked like ghosts. Would be neat to see them all lined up next to each other. Thank you for the video! Great work!
Master Yoshihiro, it's good to see more of your videos! Domo! That walnut looks dazzling! I hope sometime in other videos you or the camera operator can show a close up of the grain, swirls, lines, & color. Domo ari gato!
Another video from before I subscribed to your channel! A friend bought an old scared and painted table. First he sanded it to remove the paint. Finding out that it was black walnut. Then he took it to a big woodworking shop that had a large woodplainer where they removed just enough to get rid of the deep scratches! It polished up nicely and greatly increased in value! The best part is he only paid $10 dollars for the table and his friend only charged him $50 dollars for the use of the plainer!
My father had a Medows saw mill when I was in my teens, we cut alot of Walnut, and oak some boards were over twenty inches wide. This was very hard work, I could appreciate it more now than then. I have built a lot of furniture out of some reclaimed wood from and old farm house and buildings built in 1840.
Mr Sadada, how thick is your blade setting cut on this, and similar logs? Beautiful cutting. Love your videos. I just had about a 100 yr old water oak fall in my yard. it was about 7' high on it's side at the base. would love to have seen what you would've done with that! I"m all the way in Ga, USA! Blessings, sir.
@@josephoneil3093 my dad told me that the best white oak veneer logs he ever saw in his life came out of central Indiana. I live in extreme North Alabama, we don’t have the quality here that the northern appalachians have.
@@bryans5339 I have a white oak on my property that’s 49” diameter. I like white over red because they’re shorter and rounder. They really enhance a property
Walnut, White Oak, Cedar, and some pine trees are what make up most of the trees around my apartment building. Probably the types of trees that make up most of Frankfort Kentucky.
Some people see a big beautiful tree and the only thing they see is what they can build out of the wood why can't they just see it for an oxygen giving tree