Personally I wouldn't mind the discolorations. It gives some life to the plain grain. Having a top as one piece would sell it to me instantly. It turned out beautiful nonetheless. I really like the idea of those slotted boards with the open front to get the heat out and still keep the piece looking kinda classic. I hope it survives shipping! Regards, Etna.
Thank goodness you're back! Was so worried about you and your family. Incredible piece of furniture! Also enjoyed watching you pack it up for shipping.
Wonderful Joey, I am glad to see your buisness is doing well, stacked up due to no room. When Covid hit, I was sad to see your video explaining you didnt see how you were going to survive. God Bless you and yours.
Wow! You do beautiful work. I love watching you create these magnificent pieces. Reminds me of watching my uncle Jack in his workshop when I was a littley
I liked the idea of a one piece top but I didn't like the staining. The piece you added looked pretty stained too so I think I would have left it alone. Very nice build and enjoyable video. Thanks for posting.
Glad to see you are able to get back to the shop and to your woodworking very nice looking piece. I love the rich honey color it turned out after finishing. I too would not have minded the discolored area on the top. It is the client's choice though. No matter either way, it is s beautiful piece.
Great to see you back on youtube. Instagram is ok but its better to see the actual process. Lovely piece as ever. Hope lockdown hasn't impacted too much and commissions increase. Cheers from the UK
Gorgeous piece! I'd be well pleased if I were the client. Harsh to lock you out of the rest of the country because someone in Counties (or even people on the Shore) got sick...
Great job...! I watched without looking up and hardly breathing. :) I haven't seen you on RU-vid for so long and here you show such beauty ... Thank you very much for that. Please tell me, what did you do the finishing, what kind of oil, or oil with wax? In the country where I live, neither oils nor waxes exist for sale, and I have to search for all materials on the Internet. Your information would really help me ... Thanks in advance for your answer. Take care of yourself, good luck, I'm waiting for new videos. With best regards.
@@KingPostTimberWorks Thank you very much for answering my question, it is very important for me ... I used oil from the Borma company, but now there is no way to deliver it to the country where I live - there are some difficulties with customs laws. Now I'm looking for something to work with. After finishing with oil, I covered everything with clear wax. And how to work with OSMO oil, do you need to wax it after applying it, or has wax already been added to this oil? I would be very grateful to you if you could tell me ...? Thank you very much again. Take care of yourself there. Best regards, Daniel.
@@thewoodlesworkshop.157 osmo oil is a hard wax oil so 3 coats and its all done. Even with danish oil wax is not needed afterwards you can do it by choice.
Cheers guy, I do have a set up but getting vac bags is not easy here so I only have a few really darn big ones which puts me off using it on medium sized work. I have a couple of veneered doors to do soon so will dust it off then 😄
Beautiful piece!! Why don't you apply a finish coat to at least the floating panel edges before installation into the frame so that any if there is any "reveal" due to movement or shrinkage it is finished?