Sounds l like you have no idea what you're talking about. That's usually what you find in the comments of these type of videos. Dudes acting like they know what they are talking about, but usually sit on their ass all day on the computer.
I remember how my great-uncle Jerry would sit on the porch and whittle all day long. Once he whittled me a toy boat out of a larger toy boat I had. It was almost as good as the first one, except now it had bumpy whittle marks all over it. And no paint, because he had whittled off the paint.
@@MaRiOtHeBigGeSt с вами и обсудить с тобой не ответил закрутился с вами по Скайпу в цвет и это будет время посмотри кто будет время посмотрю на человека не было в
Never know, Maybe that resin wasn’t easily accessible, or they couldn’t afford a wood filler. People improvise for quick fixes, & this looks like one to me. You never know. Either way, it looks perfectly fine. Almost better than brand new. May not set too long, but it still got a view from someone lol
All of those things aren't cheap and it's india where workmen are uneducated illiterate and owners are uneducated about workmanship but have enough money to pay for shitty work.
Мой дедушка столярничал,ремонтировал изделия из дерева,изготавливал рамы ,подоконники,столы табуретки и пользовался этим методом восстановления древесины.Все новое- хорошо забытое старое! Классика.
@@PierreLucSex it is not common. If they want to fill up holes like that they usually use some black 2k compound. You would only use that technique with wood dust on wood floors to fill in gaps and stuff like that.
@@dangerous8333 this isn’t wood filler. It’s glue and wood shavings. When the glue dries it shrinks which will break it loose from the board because it isn’t properly adhered to it.
Original knots are good looking. They add lots of character for a more natural aesthetician. He made it look like this piece of real wood is actually partical board. Bad for a stain finish. If he paints it though it's not too bad, still a waste of a good piece of wood
This is how we learned to fix small cracks in woodworking class, except we use super fine saw dust mixed with the wood glue it looks alot better that way
In Japan, carpenters often use "tonoko" (a type of fine powder) to seal the pores of wood. "Tonoko" is essentially a finely ground powder made from stones, often derived from the residue of sharpening stones or from baked clay (known as yellow soil). For woodworking, this powder is either used as-is or mixed with a bit of water to form a paste, which is then applied using a spatula.
Never scrape it to the end position, always give it some extra "meat" to sand down later, to ensure, you get a perfekt even surface. The clue shrinks a little bit, if you cut it down to far, it shrinks below the actual surface, and then you have to fix it again!
i worked at Gibson guitars for 11 yrs and when we had tours come through id grab a half inch dowel stock that was about 5 ft long and my buddy would tap on the raw les paul body with his fingers while i held the dowel with one end to my ear and the other end up to the pickup cavity with a look of intent concentration on my face...omg! wed be crying laughing as people watched in amazement at the new technique for grading tonewoods!
I think you missed a point, it is not to fix a log, but if you have a piece that gets rotten over time like in an old almirah or an old table, you can use it instead of replacing it whole
The point wasn't fixing the pattern on the wood, the point was to show how to fill a damaged gash on a piece of wood so that you can paint over it. No stain, just paint. I literally do this at work
@@adventuress904 the gash is that antique look, with or without paint. People pay ridiculous amount to have ppl beat their stuff with chains. If I needed to fill a gash then there's better ways than this that will hold both stain and paint better. I guess it's a decent trick for something that's not going to really be seen.
Y'know, I recall watching a guitar repairing channel, twoodford, do this kinda trick, to repair small cracks in the fretboard or fill fret holes and whatnot. He always stays humble, admitting his fixes are not comparable to an unbroken thing. They would look LEAGUES above this at worst.
Okay I hate to break it to y'all but this one's kinda legit, you can make an easy diy wood filler by mixing glue sawdust (I'd use stuff finer than what's shown here though). It's not gonna work in tense or load-bearing areas, and the structural integrity shouldn't be trusted, but it's what I was taught to do to fill small cosmetic gaps.
You can use sawdust to better effect. Either use an abrasive tool and sacrificial piece of wood and if you want to get extra fancy use a rock tumbler as a ball mill, fill with ball bearings and saw dust from a rasp, it's much much faster to get course saw dust then reduce it to powder in the mill. Makes a great filler that can be color matched with some effort with a heated piece of wire.
Да, блин, не ужели трудно щепку подогнать по цвету и на клей посадить. После шлифовки будет трудно отличить где был брак. Кстати это называется смоляной кормашик.
Mixing in the dark brown dust from the knot was a mistake, at least use dust the same colour as the wood. It will still look bad, but won't draw the eye as much.
It would look 10x better if you used woodfiller, or mix wood glue with actual sawdust to make your own wood filler (instead of mixing it with oregano), or fill it with epoxy!
Sawdust with vinavil is fine for a small hole. For a defect like that, you can work harder and incorporate a slightly larger wood flake, of the same color and then once the glue dries you pass the plane and then finish with sandpaper and flatting.