9:56 No Beej! Don't wear gloves when working with any hand tool that rotates. Circular saws, drills, dremels, ect. They can catch gloves and pull in your hand.
The more I watched of this, the more I wish I could have loaned you my compound miter saw. It cuts so much cleaner and faster than a circular saw for boards like that
9:50 It's been awhile since I've brushed up on my power tool safety but I'm pretty sure you don't want to wear gloves while using circular saws as if the glove gets caught in the blade it can drag your hand into the blade, or at least I know that is definitely the case for drills
It's really fun to see non construction oriented people be creative. Stuff that I take for granted in making when it's not easily found and watching people create something cool from it.
"Has your office or studio been ruined by a home improvement show?" :-) Beej: That was an awful lot of driving around to various hardware stores. I presume inquiring over the phone was insufficient? Was having bare, unfinished wood always the plan? (How many splinters have people gotten off the wall so far?) Seriously, thanks for the behind-the-scenes on this one. You guys made it look easy.
New set looks super nice, and thanks for giving the brand of those wall lights, been super interested in them since seeing them in Checkpoint. Also, Editor's (Ben?) text additions were really funny and on point.
Oh man. As a cabinet/furniture builder who is only about 20 miles from you guys I wanted so badly while watching this to drive over and help you out. I would have loaned you my chop saw and I even happen to have a bunch of left over black melamine in my shop right now that I would have given you. And watch out for those edges. Melamine will slice up your fingers real quick if you're not careful.
@@LRRJames Not even kidding. Please do. I would very happily spend a weekend or two in the shop to make stuff for LRR. That would be so much fun for me.
Man now I am really regreting not telling you guys about my works product, we have Barnwood panels that you could have installed in like an hour. Not that this doesnt look wonderful. but it would have saved you so much time.
I'm 50/50 on that outlet. On one hand, having it in like that works to keep anything plugged in from getting bent too much. But on the other, they do make spacer boxes that move the mount point of the outlet out enough that they could have flush-mounted the outlet and cover to the wood, then used a wood-colored/accent-colored outlet and cover combination. I want to lean towards the spacing out more than leaving it like they did.
StapleCactus If that outlet had any chance of ending up on camera during a podcast I’d have done a better job than the simple cutout job I did. But because you’ll never see it again, and everything you described sounds like more work :P I think our solution is fine :)
@@LRRJames Yeah, I understand that. You'd need to remove the old outlet (live if you trust your skill/dead if you know the circuit and don't need the other outlets working). After screwing on the extension to the box, you'd have to cut the boards flush with it. Then it's just putting the outlet back in wired correctly and a plate. Not too difficult since you're already cutting boards to fit around it anyway, but electrical work can be scary to some and I'm not entirely sure if Canada forces permits for that (or if you'd ignore a need for a permit anyway). I'm with you on the "not necessary since not visible" thing, though. Another half-hour for someone who's done it before and you were on a time crunch as it was with Tap Tap coming up.
They unfucked their house, lol! But seriuosly, good work on Studio B guys and it looks great, and you did a great job. Can't wait to see these changes on Checkpoint!
www.amazon.com/Nanoleaf-Rhythm-Smarter-Kit-Pack/dp/B079HD9JWH Nano Leaf Lights, this is the first shopping link on google. And holy shoot, they are expensive.
It's a promotional thing for Tim Hortons. There's a chance to win a prize, and you check to see if you won by rolling up the rim of your to go cup. I believe.
A couple times a year, the restaurant chain Tim Hortons has a promo where they have prizes under the rims of their coffee cups, and you need to roll it up all the way to see if you won something. It's similar to McDonald's Monopoly.