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The Mindset of Doing High Quality Work 

Essential Craftsman
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Everyone should realize that high quality work starts in your own head! Start thinking about these
things and your work will become the work that you admire in others. Watch here for a discussion on allowable tolerances in framing: • Allowable Tolerances I...
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26 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 648   
@wingspizza6364
@wingspizza6364 9 месяцев назад
A man who works with his hands is a laborer; a man who works with his hands and his brain is a craftsman; but a man who works with his hands and his brain and his heart is an artist. Louis Nizer
@sevendeadlychins
@sevendeadlychins 9 месяцев назад
Love this
@kylesillon1836
@kylesillon1836 9 месяцев назад
St Francis of Assisi originally I believe.
@Leick42
@Leick42 9 месяцев назад
@landonlandon5533
@landonlandon5533 9 месяцев назад
I'm not buying a new shirt, the essential artist
@chrismacleod9326
@chrismacleod9326 8 месяцев назад
Wow thanks for regurgitating this….again
@Fishburgh
@Fishburgh 9 месяцев назад
After 56 years I've found a construction company that truly cares about quality. I've never felt better about my work. Unlearning bad habits was easier than I thought with the right systems in place. Had my first job with no problems start to finish. No replacement for good systems and quality work. Only took me 56 years.
@PabloEskimofo
@PabloEskimofo 9 месяцев назад
It’s hard finding the drive to work for somebody who wants production and not quality. So this sounds hopeful for someone like me looking into joining the carpenters union at age 30.
@m4anow
@m4anow 9 месяцев назад
Shout out the company name . I love hearing about quality companies
@dariuszkarnaszewski3276
@dariuszkarnaszewski3276 9 месяцев назад
@paulhaworth1824
@paulhaworth1824 9 месяцев назад
Keep going
@Fishburgh
@Fishburgh 9 месяцев назад
Benjamin Marcus Holmes. Highest quality builder I've ever worked for. A truly custom home on every level.
@mattbono2815
@mattbono2815 9 месяцев назад
My dad has always said, "strive for perfection; settle for excellence." You two would be good friends!
@andyprairiedog
@andyprairiedog 9 месяцев назад
Excellent saying.
@angryman3317
@angryman3317 7 месяцев назад
My father frequintly said the same thing to me growing up. He also strongly argued that if you weren't 10 minutes early you were late.
@mattbono2815
@mattbono2815 7 месяцев назад
My dad says the exact same thing!
@jerbear7952
@jerbear7952 5 месяцев назад
My Dad was just impressed anything I made worked at all. He always told me I was strong as an Ox and Twice as smart.
@judasboogie3244
@judasboogie3244 5 месяцев назад
Early is on time On time is late and late is unacceptable
@JamesSmith-mz9ec
@JamesSmith-mz9ec 9 месяцев назад
The best advertising you can have for your business, especially as a contractor is word of mouth, I'm retired now at 67, my old worn out body will not let me do the things I could 20- 30 years ago, but building things that will stand the test of time is your legacy, and to stand that test you must do quality work, I still remember my Dad as a young kid telling me " Damn it if your going to do it.. do it right the first time, or don't do it at all!" Thanks Dad!
@jakes.5591
@jakes.5591 9 месяцев назад
I'm an electrician for 20 years. I have this conversation with every new apprentice.
@jarradrice5455
@jarradrice5455 9 месяцев назад
I had an employer in Hibbing, MN that taught and stressed perfection. If you missed a nail, pull it. Hank’s Woodworks taught me a lot. Always do your best.
@landmarkcreations1183
@landmarkcreations1183 9 месяцев назад
I love these kinds of videos. I’m 41 with my own construction company and still love sitting under the learning tree
@narlycharley
@narlycharley 8 месяцев назад
You will die not knowing everything. It’s important to be mindful of that.
@andrewgarratt5191
@andrewgarratt5191 8 месяцев назад
@@narlycharleythat’s the appeal of carpentry imo.
@John5ive
@John5ive 9 месяцев назад
I had a boss tell me my work has my name on it. He then asked, what do you want people to think when they look at your work. That was literally all it took.
@The_Red_Off_Road
@The_Red_Off_Road 8 дней назад
Had a boss tell me almost the same thing. “Be proud of your work, or nobody else will.” I learned early on that excitement is contagious. If a client is excited about a certain project, it gets me excited. I’ve found my self excited to build a certain kitchen and it made the client comfortable and eventually excited. Emotions are contagious. I tell guys that if you aren’t willing to sign your signature to the back of that cabinet, I don’t want you to build it. It becomes spiritual after you do it long enough. Hope all is well in your world.
@randyt3558
@randyt3558 9 месяцев назад
Went into landscaping at 45. Worked for a company paying a bit better than minimum wage for three years. Stepped out on my own because i knew that my attention to detail was not valued in production, but with (ahem) art. High quality work is not only of much higher value, it is sought out. Within three years business became referral only.
@patrickc2849
@patrickc2849 9 месяцев назад
I’m a 36 your old red seal carpenter in canada, I appreciate what this man says so much. We need more guys like this. I love what I do and it drives me nuts to see guys doing sub-standard work for people paying good money.
@Dreadlock1227
@Dreadlock1227 5 месяцев назад
I’m in Canada too, I feel like that’s an epidemic here. Im in Ottawa and there’s just no culture of craftsmanship here. Everyone just wants their shit done cheaply and quickly and it results in some really shameful “professional” builds. Its like people here live such fast lives and are so busy that they don’t have time to appreciate craftsmanship. On the other hand my wife’s from Seattle and we lived down there for a few years and they really take pride in their work there on a level that I just hadn’t seen in Canada. We would really get to know and connect with clients, take our time to think and plan out a job, and clients appreciated us doing our job well and correctly. Quality and safety definitely took priority over speed and profits. I miss that work culture and I wish we had more of that in Canada
@jordan.anderson
@jordan.anderson 4 месяца назад
Hi Patrick, I'm a 28 year old in Ontario Canada looking to become a Journeyman Carpenter that can do work to the standard that this man talks about in the video. If you are in southern Ontario and have the time to take on an apprentice (or know of someone who can), please reply to this comment.
@iammichaeldavis
@iammichaeldavis 8 месяцев назад
“It’s always the things we want that drive the things we do” Powerful, powerful wisdom just in the first two minutes! Thank you for this video 🕊️➕❤️
@ForgedTony
@ForgedTony 9 месяцев назад
My father is just like this. At first i didnt like how he used to be such a perfectionist. Its not like his boss cared enough to pay him extra for going the extra mile. But now i find myself doing similar work to him and always taking down what does not feel right. Thanks dad!
@jwbeck21
@jwbeck21 9 месяцев назад
Taking my 14 year old son out to a rental property we’re fixing up. We’re building a privacy fence all weekend. Can’t wait to instill these ideals into my son’s line of thinking. Can’t wait to spend the weekend working with him and building something great together. Thanks for all the words of encouragement EC!!
@buk6708
@buk6708 9 месяцев назад
Legendary status. Viking beard activated.
@alecdavison1501
@alecdavison1501 8 месяцев назад
You got this! I’m 22, bought a rental property a few months ago and am super grateful to have had my dad there by my side teaching me. He’s a structural engineer by trade but fairly handy and I watched/helped him renovate his places. I used to hate how he’d drag me out to help him but I’ve developed a love for it thanks to him
@dareonallen9574
@dareonallen9574 8 месяцев назад
Let him choose his own dreams
@Scuffed_Garage
@Scuffed_Garage 7 месяцев назад
@thegunsngloryshowmoving out at 18 and not being a mooch is how you end up renting for a few years. 😉
@workingcountry1776
@workingcountry1776 9 месяцев назад
Fantastic insight. My father has 45 years or so in trades. I really should record some of his wisdom before i can't. He told me not to work in the trades but at 38 i wish i did. I'm a handyman now and love my job for first time in my life. I can't imagine the satisfying feeling as i progress my skills and do bigger projects. God bless you brother
@fromulus
@fromulus 9 месяцев назад
My dad worked on the flight line in the Air Force in the mid 1960's. He learned all about generators, and the electrical automotive trade in general, and he ran a local auto shop for about 35 years, rebuilding alternators, starters, mostly, but he could fix anything on either, rewind stators and armatures, you name it. He knew the how, and he knew the why of all the ins and outs in that field. I always regret not taking him up on his offer to teach me all that he knew, granted I did absorb some of it over the years, but not nearly as much as I should have, and it was mostly my attitude, I didn't want to be him, I wanted to be me(it's a long story that represented most of our relationship). He passed in 2017, all that knowledge I had access to is gone. I should've listened to him.
@paulhaworth1824
@paulhaworth1824 9 месяцев назад
As a farther with a 20 year old son my big regret in life is not having my son alongside me so I could pass on what I know.
@henryfuller7627
@henryfuller7627 8 месяцев назад
Pretty much the same position. My dad is a skilled builder and told me to get a regular job. I always wish I had followed his lead
@boejiden1065
@boejiden1065 8 месяцев назад
I wonder why your fathers didn’t want you in the trades?
@Potatoes730
@Potatoes730 8 месяцев назад
“I really should record some of his wisdom before I can’t.” That line really hit me. I have such a similar experience. I just entered the trades now at 33, after my father working as a carpenter since his teens to make sure my brothers and I wouldn’t have to break our backs to make a living. I’m more fulfilled now than ever. Thanks for sharing your perspective, brother.
@marxuser
@marxuser 9 месяцев назад
After many years in the construction business, I've always been impressed with young help that asks questions and frustrated with those that "know everything".
@BrianNavalinsky
@BrianNavalinsky 9 месяцев назад
I was lucky enough to work in three different markets where I could hold foundation tolerances to 1/2"/100', rough wall framing to ultra-fine trim, and finish carpentry to, "It should look like it grew together." It was good, clean fun.
@Andrea-bw8xm
@Andrea-bw8xm 9 месяцев назад
This is where you shine the brightest! Imparting the wisdom of your years emphasizing quality workmanship above all else! Thank you and as you know...keep up the good work!😁
@jazibbabar
@jazibbabar 8 месяцев назад
I'm a Software Engineer with a woodworking hobby, which likely led me to this video. Your insights here mirror the principles of building software and websites perfectly, including the concept of 'staging material'. After 10 years in the field, I still found valuable takeaways. Thanks for sharing!
@bren.r
@bren.r 8 месяцев назад
Also a software engineer. Wish more people took pride in their work - everything is so buggy and half-baked nowadays.
@GaM3RaDaR
@GaM3RaDaR 7 месяцев назад
@@bren.r This advice is basically for every human being which is great. Many problems can stem from "oh my coworker hardly does stuff, so I'm not gonna work as hard". When I decided to stop complaining so much I noticed I moved around more, got some more work done and could think & plan things better since I took control of myself, instead of lazing around, judging others, and my end result would be to reflect the way they work onto me. Glad I ain't the only one waking up to better oneself for a fulfilling lifestyle.
@daltonfleck
@daltonfleck 7 месяцев назад
I’m so so so so blessed, right out of high school. I got a job from a home builder who only has two employees including me. he is an absolute craftsman, the man is an absolute lost art of skills in his trade. I couldn’t believe either how good this man paid me compared to other companies, it was insane, when I realized how much I was making out of high school. I also realized working around job sites, how bad the quality of craftsmanship is and sloppy crazy work. Thank god for inspections.
@gpaw999
@gpaw999 9 месяцев назад
You have hit the nail on the head! Stay curious! I don't comment often but you have produced a lot of great content. Thank you!
@RareEarthSeries
@RareEarthSeries 8 месяцев назад
I make RU-vid videos and every word you said applies equally to my work. Thank you for taking the time to say it.
@MrJagbolet
@MrJagbolet 8 месяцев назад
Love your work man!
@Quixote3
@Quixote3 7 месяцев назад
RareEarth? here? :o
@maynard4599
@maynard4599 9 месяцев назад
These types of videos are your forte. Thank you for mentoring us.
@laurants
@laurants 9 месяцев назад
Electrical Apprentice here. This is my first video of the new year. Thanks for this. St. Joseph, the Worker, pray for us.
@lowkiisaucin4754
@lowkiisaucin4754 8 месяцев назад
I’m 26 and have started my residential remodeling company at the end of last year and my main goal is to be able to provide the best product and customer experience possible. I truly am so glad that I found this video, I needed to hear this. I just want to learn & then teach how to become a master of the craft.
@valentineshanley2959
@valentineshanley2959 9 месяцев назад
Hello Scott, greetings from Baldock England. Having spent about 54 years in construction.In June 1969, I started my carpentry apprenticeship in Mullingar Ireland with a brilliant company called John Sisk&Sons. One of my early experiences with Sisk was their ability to recognise talent in young people, investing in apprentice training, in not just carpentry but other trades. I very much share your values on all aspects of your video, myself at 70 years, I am still serving my apprenticeship. Scott, keep making these very inspirational videos. As a carpenter in the first instance, my very big interest right now is the rebuilding of Notre Dame de Paris cathedral, after that very damaging fire in 2019. I very much like the mix of modern technology applications and the artisan skills of medieval carpentry. These videos are easily found on RU-vid. Wishing you a very happy new year and best wishes for 2024 Best Regards Valentine Shanley PS, I want to remember all those brilliant trades people who took their time to impart their skills to me. Basically, they laid the foundation stone for me and a wonderful career to follow in construction, firstly carpentry, and then project management.
@olliefoxx7165
@olliefoxx7165 8 месяцев назад
Are you doing work on Notre Dame?
@valentineshanley2959
@valentineshanley2959 8 месяцев назад
@olliefoxx7165 Thanks, Ollie, for your question. Sadly not. However, having studied many videos since the fire and in particular, carpenters using skills and methods from the Middle Ages, really got me interested. I went to Paris last August to get some idea of progress. This project is on a grand scale and very difficult to get a handle on what is going on behind the hoardings. However, these hoardings that surround the site are loaded with up to date bulletin boards, which are very impressive and informative. It would not surprise me that the final project bill will hit the one billion euro, mark As I said in my piece, there is so much information out there on the Web, especially RU-vid. Finally, it's a great testament to the French army general,(retired) who is the project director, who reports to the French president, his teams of consultants and the hundreds of artisans who work on the site and externally in various locations across France. Best Regards Valentine Shanley
@olliefoxx7165
@olliefoxx7165 8 месяцев назад
@valentineshanley2959 Thank you for your post. I've heard the effort in repairing Notre Dame was significant and impressive but I haven't seen the videos myself. When I heard of the damage done to Notre Dame I was very...upset. I'm glad they are repairing it properly. Cathedrals like Notre Dame are examples of the finest craftsmanship of our ancestors. Not only are they religious symbols of faith they are testaments to the pinnacles of European craftsmanship. Only the best were allowed to work on such projects. The work is meant to last indefinitely so it must be done to the absolute highest degree possible. You have visited it yourself and seem to be satisfied its being done correct. I'll have to check out the videos detailing it. Thanks again for your time. 👍✌️
@vipo91
@vipo91 8 месяцев назад
Automotive painter, attention to details is a must I always tell myself I’m as good as my last paint job. I try to incorporate the same mindset on to others.
@vrillionaire88
@vrillionaire88 9 месяцев назад
If you’re constantly doing something that no one else has done before, mistakes and their fixes become part of your process
@Michael-hs5ih
@Michael-hs5ih 9 месяцев назад
I just got my job as an apprentice carpenter beginning next year. The essential craftsman deserves credit in this small achievement of mine. I will endeavour to do good work and create something beautiful in this world. Many good wishes for the new years and God bless
@WadeBrumett
@WadeBrumett 9 месяцев назад
Godspeed young man. Be proud of the calluses blisters and rough hands you're about to EARN. ITS a wonderful life. Truly.
@sevendeadlychins
@sevendeadlychins 9 месяцев назад
Smart smart move
@mikewatson4644
@mikewatson4644 9 месяцев назад
Good luck with your new position. Do your best. Try to learn every day.
@jaybeeson2118
@jaybeeson2118 9 месяцев назад
This "excellence" mindset applies directly to all industries! I sent this video to my guys(in the automotive world) who certainly need it. Thank you Essential Craftsman for passing on your wisdom! You are a gifted craftsman but an equally(and more importantly) gifted teacher. I wish there was a way to package your content and include it into school curriculums. Very inspiring!
@michaelakers7257
@michaelakers7257 9 месяцев назад
I 100% present agree with you. I was thinking of forwarding this to my team as well.
@braedon.builds
@braedon.builds 9 месяцев назад
The mental strength you need to keep pursuing craftsmanship in a trades world full off others who complain, show up to work unprepared, hungover, and unwilling to put in the extra work for their own personal benefit and achievement is understated. It doesn’t take long for those around you to bring you down and to harass you for being better than you were the day before, better than they are now. They try to stop you from looking better than they ever will be. For some it’s a pivotal moment in your trades career. You can push past the ones who never went anywhere or you can become one of them. I see a lot of young men ruin who they could be because of those around them. Sometimes you have no choice but to deal with those around you. You will need to make steps in your career to surround yourself with others of the same mindset but a true test is being forced to continue your mindset around those who despise it.
@squarerigapprentice
@squarerigapprentice 4 месяца назад
Truer words were never spoken. It’s amazing how many people will try to bring you down. I went from working in a small private company where we were nonstop hustling to get everything done, we didn’t stop for breaks unless we came to a finishing point of a particular project, and I had to learn aspects of many different types of maintenance, woodworking, electrical, painting and varnishing, boat handling etc.. To a job also in the maritime sector but for government, where it seemed like my can-do attitude and eagerness to tackle any job are derided at every turn. I can’t tell you the amount of times in the first 6 months I was told to slow down, and make sure I take my full allotted breaks at the appointed times. There were a couple guys who clearly resented me and my attitude. In the absence of leadership I will always make a prioritized list of work on my own and keep busy. This drove this one guy nuts, because he would rather just sit around and get paid. He would come out and complain to me that I was going to finish all the tasks too quickly and the officers would just make more work for us to do. He would stand over me while I was scrubbing a big section of the ship and watch me work and complain about me and my gung-Ho attitude. Listening to that every day for a month of straight working and living with this guy really took the wind out of me. I did go from running my own small commercial vessel to working in the lowest position on the deck of larger government ships, and I’m feeling that the expectations of people in these bottom end positions are pretty sad. The officers seem to barely trust deckhands to do basic mechanical tasks that I have been well versed in for a long time. It’s been a good exercise in remembering to be a student and swallowing my pride as people don’t know me or what I’ve done in the past. For many simple tasks the higher ups will explain things to me like how to prep for painting as if im as green as grass, as if I’m just going to slap paint over top of rust. sometimes it takes all I’ve got not to explain my resume to them. Better to just swallow it and let your work speak for itself, it’s a long process but will create less resentment in the long run.
@semajbest2324
@semajbest2324 9 месяцев назад
Among other things about your videos, i derive so much emotional satisfaction from your sharing. Thank you sir
@bigjohnl57
@bigjohnl57 9 месяцев назад
Hi scott. What a great job you did explaining this concept to, hopefully, the younger generation about to take up the trade crafts. I began my career as a union electrician at age 44, having lost my job as a maintenance mechanic as a result of 9/11. Being in classes with a lot of younger folks, some as young as 18, I tried to impart my sense of craftsmanship and pride in my work, to these future tradesmen. I told them don’t let anyone force to go faster than you are ready to be, but instead learn the correct way of doing everything. Speed should come as a result of repetition. I also warned them that if they didn’t get faster at tasks through repetition, the they should find something else to do, as they were not suited for this type of work. I warned them that if every day was a struggle, they would come to hate their job, regardless of wages. Many let it go in one ear and out the other, but hopefully it helped at least one of them. I had a personal instance of working on your own time to correct what I thought was my inadequacy. We were installing a new type of lighting controller no one had seen before. The foreman trusted me to figure out all the little nuances as these devices were an afterthought brought to the job by the engineer. Spent a lot of time making sure I was getting everything right in the first area we did. When the power was turned on, the lights didn’t work as planned, in fact they were doing all kinds of weird things. This happened at the end of the day. It bothered me me all evening, wondering what I could have done wrong. I got up at 2;30 am to be in work by 5, an hour earlier than usual, to try to figure what the problem was. Foreman was impressed by my effort. After all the investigation we found that a whip between lighting was installed between an emergency fixture and a regular fixture where it didn’t belong. Once this was removed, all lights worked as designed, proving out that the work I did was correct. It feels really good to be vindicated. Foreman wanted to let me leave an hour early. Said no thanks, that I was happy I figured out the problem and my experience was pay enough. Old school pride in your work as I had been shown by the people I admired.
@sungear
@sungear 9 месяцев назад
There are other EC videos I have archived for use in my church youth group. Thanks for another great lesson.
@ramdizzle9133
@ramdizzle9133 9 месяцев назад
I've been framing houses for 12 years now, and i learned quickly that you're only as good as your last job. Have pride be respectful, pay attention, and work hard. Shout out to Norm abram if we're talking quality work he is America's carpenter!
@dianasweetpea2561
@dianasweetpea2561 9 месяцев назад
I love watching old movies and looking at the houses, furniture, clothes with hats and shoes that are amazing! Today it's all about the caulking!
@mana20
@mana20 8 месяцев назад
I'm in software and most of your lessons still apply, thanks for sharing your experience.
@drewwestenbarger535
@drewwestenbarger535 9 месяцев назад
I love these videos from you, and the older I get the more value I see in listening to "the old guy" that's been there and done that! Thank you so much, I look forward to all your videos!
@TheRealGOTdurrrred
@TheRealGOTdurrrred 9 месяцев назад
As a finish carpenter and tile contractor I loved this video. My work being near perfect is important. Perfect doesn't exist because I'm always getting better
@boejiden1065
@boejiden1065 8 месяцев назад
100% this is what keeps me going on the hard days. No better feeling than knowing that you did your best, it looks amazing, and yet you can still do it better next time. It’s almost an addiction in my mind.
@TheAefril
@TheAefril 9 месяцев назад
I cannot praise this channel enough! ... .. So many gems of wisdom to unpack here.
@ruidadgmailcanada8508
@ruidadgmailcanada8508 8 месяцев назад
Craftsmanship slapped me in the face when I did building maintenance for a lab in an old 5 story building just a few years ago. The original Otis elevators installed in the 50’s needed daily inspections, for my training when I walked into the machine room above the elevators where only service workers would ever see my jaw dropped. I can only describe it as a Steampunk Utopia, fine brass and copper tubing everywhere, rows and rows (like the massive ethernet runs of today) with connections and concentric hand bends around obstacles that could only be done by the Michelangelo of machining. They took the time to hand polish and oil seal everything. Metal shining everywhere. Like art. Fancy dials and gauges made me feel like I had stepped back in time or on a movie set. Incredible craftsmanship where no-one really would see it. And I’m a wood guy.
@moobcars6490
@moobcars6490 9 месяцев назад
Lots of great points! Especially the one about watching other people’s work. As an engineer this is very important to me. It allows me to solve problems in faster/more elegant/lighter ways.
@mikeyadrick5154
@mikeyadrick5154 9 месяцев назад
I've never worked in construction, but I spent over 40yrs in Industrial repair. I had a man that I worked with and eventually I worked For him as he became the Plant Manager--He was crazy about good customer service--i learned from that and I look closely how i am treated by even the most mundane of service providers. Proper customer sevice and Good Quality work go hand in hand. I really do enjoy all your presentations. I hope that young folks can learn from you as I have. I hope you will continus to produce these films, Thank you----Mikey, Belfair, Wa
@adumsey1164
@adumsey1164 9 месяцев назад
It’s not just applicable in construction. That wonderful advice could cover many professions or workplaces
@benaxley2533
@benaxley2533 9 месяцев назад
I’ve been fortunate enough to work for myself almost my entire life, I’m 36 now. I always pushed myself to build everything as close to perfection as possible, within limits of course. I love to hear you stories and knowledge that you give out to others
@kurtdietrich5421
@kurtdietrich5421 9 месяцев назад
34, 35, 55, 65; goes fast, doesn't it? My habit has always been " close your mouth and open your eyes and ears". Basically, look, ask, listen, and learn.
@eldongriffiths2770
@eldongriffiths2770 9 месяцев назад
There's a reason we were given two eyes, two ears, two hands, and two feet. And one mouth.
@jonathanmesa9790
@jonathanmesa9790 9 месяцев назад
Thanks Sir, I always appreciate your videos. This one in particular contains alot of very quality advise, that is practically applicable in every jobs. A great take home message for any starter..."People will give time to teach someone who is genuinely curious rather than a know-it-all".
@almaxie342
@almaxie342 9 месяцев назад
I was a commercial roofing foreman at the same company for thirty three years. They always moaned and complained I took too long to complete a job. However when it was an extra difficult job ,when it was extra dangerous or when the job had close personal ties to the company I WAS THE CHOSEN ONE. I did it right, I did it safe and when we were finished we moved on.
@Carpenterjoh65
@Carpenterjoh65 9 месяцев назад
Ditto that for my 16 years at Overhead Door of Southeastern Connecticut. (Gary Wolinski is a tyrant). I was the residential installer who got the difficult or expensive jobs.
@pygar909
@pygar909 9 месяцев назад
I'm currently a construction inspector. The company I currently work for is normally employed by the owner to ensure that the project is built to plans and specifications. The one phrase that makes me look harder at a contractor is "I can't see it from my house". This tells me that the contractor doesn't care about quality, and I suddenly become very picky about very little things, that require very big things to be adjusted at great effort and expense in time and money to the contractor, because I have and will write a discrepancy about the little thing and let the engineer of record force the contractor to remediate at contractor expense. One lesson that took me far too long to learn is: To go faster, you must slow down. What does that mean? When you go fast, you make mistakes that you then have to go back and fix. If you slow down, you tend to make fewer mistakes resulting in more production of correct work.
@dom11949
@dom11949 9 месяцев назад
if you have time to do it twice, you have time to do it right the first time
@TheAefril
@TheAefril 9 месяцев назад
That is some sage advice,, thank you!
@darkma1ice
@darkma1ice 8 месяцев назад
“So whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God”
@manchuratt8900
@manchuratt8900 8 месяцев назад
It can be applied to any field. It's such a simple and powerful thing--that quality work begins with the mindset and the rest will follow. If there is no motivation, then anything else doesn't matter.
@diverdave4056
@diverdave4056 9 месяцев назад
#1 eat healthy - #2 get enough sleep - #3 show up to work at least 15 minutes early - #4 keep your work area cleaned up - #5 watch how the old timers are working and ask them how they do it ... and #6 these days there are loads of good videos you can watch and learn from
@tomalealso
@tomalealso 9 месяцев назад
Well said, It has been my pleasure to get to work for some of the best contractors and sub contractors you can imagine, and a few that I could not wait until the job was done. I worked with a framing contractor that set a hip with 4 string lines, you would never imagine that it would make that much of a difference but it really did, all of the jacks fit perfectly, they all carried the same amount of weight, nothing is forced so everything stays in place, it creates a synergy. I have gotten so many jobs just because of the way that I take care of my tools, for example, I don't let just anyone use my tools and my electrical cords are wound up always the same way. I back wind my cords so that when I go to use it, it does not get tangled up, I can plug it in, plug in the saw and walk towards the job without having to untangle it. (one of the systems you talked about) I never had to look for work, it always came to me. Even after 10 years of retirement I was still getting calls for work, I learned along time ago, "if its hard I am doing it wrong" I was doing something wrong, maybe I really didn't understand what needed to be done, or I was using the wrong materials or maybe I was just using the wrong tool. If it was hard I stopped and critique the job and try to figure how to do it better. It use to drive my wife crazy because I was always checking out the work of others, always learning and growing. If you are willing you can even learn from a 4 years old. I learned about faith that way.
@TheAefril
@TheAefril 9 месяцев назад
Well said, enjoy the ride of learning, it is not always just the destination that matters.
@russellhowie195
@russellhowie195 4 месяца назад
This should be a subject in high school. Always enjoy your enthusiasm and wisdom sir. Thank you for sharing.
@Snozcumber
@Snozcumber 8 месяцев назад
Believe it or not this is perfect advice for my line of work as a software engineer. Great stuff
@janderson8401
@janderson8401 9 месяцев назад
I was very fortunate that my mentors in the building trades taught by example, and had earned reputations such that they could name their price without worrying about being underbid. One of the old carpenters, a WWII navy veteran who had worked for several other contractors before finishing his career with my uncle, told me how he finally asked one of those previous employers “How come we never have time to do the job right but we always have time to come back and fix it?”
@chadpilled7913
@chadpilled7913 8 месяцев назад
That last line is cold haha. I will try to keep that in mind
@gtbkts
@gtbkts 9 месяцев назад
I work for some cabin owners who will have me re-work almost everything I build/remodel. Usually I have to re do stuff 3 or 4 times before they're satisfied with the results. Before I was they're handyman, they couldn't keep a guy around for more than 6 months. I don't mind the extra experience in re building something a couple times. Heck, usually I make it better, more efficiently the 3 rd time I install something. 😅
@TheAefril
@TheAefril 9 месяцев назад
You have a very good attitude. Keep it up. Virtue is its own reward.
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter 9 месяцев назад
I always say 'the difference between a good carpenter and a great carpenter is 2-3 cuts'. Just being willing to take the couple extra trips back to the saw to micro-adjust your miters or cut a whole new piece is all it takes to set yourself apart from anyone operating on "good enough".
@zchettaz
@zchettaz 8 месяцев назад
If you're going back to the saw 2 or 3 times, you must not be measuring properly. Measure twice, cut once.
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter 8 месяцев назад
@@zchettaz Custom fine finish work will always require micro-adjustments, and it's generally marked, not measured.
@J-BiRTH
@J-BiRTH 7 месяцев назад
@@zchettaz Or just measure and cut as many times as it takes to do it right.
@zchettaz
@zchettaz 7 месяцев назад
@@J-BiRTH Measure, cut, measure, cut, measure, cut, whoops, mistake, new peice, start again..measure, cut, measure, cut, measure, cut, whoops, mistake, new peice, start again.. rinse and repeat. There's gotta be a limit to how much material and how many hours you're willing to let an apprentice waste watching him try figure it out himself, right? 😂
@zchettaz
@zchettaz 7 месяцев назад
@@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter If a cut requires such precision that it has a zero tolerance requirement, use a scrap bit as a cheat peice to fine tune the adjustments first before cutting the actual peice. While i agree that we should all be aiming to do quality work, but depending on the scenario, sometimes it's not always possible, especially when its something that relies on other trades that dont care about quality. As the saying goes: 'no matter how much sugar you add, you can't make strawberry jam out of pig shit' (or something like that😂)
@kennyellis5535
@kennyellis5535 8 месяцев назад
Sir you are the best at what you do. From start to finish . Your such a great teacher, instructor and insper me at 60 to strive to get better. It's obvious you are fulfilling your God given purpose. Sure appreciate your videos and take something away from each one . God Bless and I am praying for a better year
@BrittCHelmsSr
@BrittCHelmsSr 8 месяцев назад
These principles are true in so many areas of life, not just construction. Thanks for another great, insightful video.
@shawmutt
@shawmutt 9 месяцев назад
I make it a habit to seek out different methods, no matter how good I think I am at a thing. More often than not, I find a better and/or easier way of doing things.
@fotter9567
@fotter9567 Месяц назад
What an amazing talk. This does not only apply to construction work, but to any field where people are building and creating things. I’ve thought about this exact problem for a long long time but have never been able to come up with such a concise and wise answer. Thank you 🙏
@royd8866
@royd8866 9 месяцев назад
Great information as always. Love your videos and look forward to watching the next. You nailed it 😊. God Bless you
@hughgalbraith8370
@hughgalbraith8370 9 месяцев назад
level, plumb and true yes
@imnothere220
@imnothere220 9 месяцев назад
Really getting across critical points for all walks of life here. I have a lot of projects going on, but I'm a lawyer and generally look homeless and drive rubbish cars because, well that's me. The amount of lads who have thought they can take advantage of me is incredible or just assume I'm some bum the "boss" (me!) sends around is equally crazy, and those are the ones who get taken off jobs and I never see again. On the other hand the carpenter I found tearing out (exactly as you say) a unit in a house back in 2003 because he wasn't happy has worked for me on about 40 jobs since then and probably made 50-65k a year off me alone. All because he had standards and wasn't just out to try and rob a rich guy etc.
@j_rockss8235
@j_rockss8235 9 месяцев назад
Amen brotherrr!! 🦅
@joeadrian5060
@joeadrian5060 8 месяцев назад
Thank you sir for this video. I am a high school teacher that coaches high school students and we focus on life success. I will be using your video as an excellent example of this quality work mindset. This video itself is a prime example of you practicing what your preach.
@daveperala4965
@daveperala4965 9 месяцев назад
I have a similar mindset to this. 15 years doing carpentry and almost 10 years as an engineer now.
@Jminenna
@Jminenna 9 месяцев назад
I cant thank you enough for all the quality information and advise that you have given throughout the years. Every time I watch one of your videos, I literally get my notebook out and take notes, weather its how to do something or some words of wisdom that I can pass on myself, it is all great appreciated.
@kellenwiersma
@kellenwiersma 9 месяцев назад
Such wisdom...but not easy to do...we had to tear out some finish work on our last big job...it hurt but we knew it was the right thing to do. In the end clients trust us and have been telling others how much they loved working with us. Thanks for encouraging integrity and craftsmanship!
@jonaspeterson5040
@jonaspeterson5040 8 месяцев назад
Amen. I remember an internal interview for a supervisory job position with the company i had been with for years as a foreman. My outlook was that we could be more profitable by developing a culture of craftmanship and taking more time in front of the job, as opposed to behind the job in the form of deficiencies. I didnt get the promotion, and i feel like they wanted a supervisor who was willing to grind up employees as necessary because there were always more grunts waiting to work. Since left and started my own company, and we produce high level quality with work-life balance. Its a joy to cash the cheques and pay the employees properly, sometimes with a bonus. You are a true professional with much wisdom to share and I'm grateful for your content. Heck, i learned how to wrap extensions cords from you last year!
@TrueCarpenter
@TrueCarpenter 8 месяцев назад
Great video. I started as an apprentice carpenter building custom homes, the builder was extremely picky and made us tear things out if it wasn’t quite right… I ended up quitting due to a move, and getting into a maintenance role, nobody cared about quality and it made me sick to my stomach.. so I quit and found a builder that cared, now I can actually sleep at night knowing I put my best foot forward.. cheers
@JimParks-m3b
@JimParks-m3b 9 месяцев назад
A friend who I worked with once told me it was not the price of the house he was working on that mattered because to that person it was important to them so he gave his best on both he was a true craftsman
@ke0kie
@ke0kie 7 месяцев назад
You have no idea how encouraging it is seeing/hearing about you tearing out work you've done in order to redo it correctly / better. Really gives us hacks a lot of hope
@chrisjehnichen8146
@chrisjehnichen8146 9 месяцев назад
Scott, thank you so much for sharing these nuggets… I’m learning every week, at 56, and what you’re saying resonates with me. So important for the next generation to be hearing them as well… Thank you!
@ericmiller1265
@ericmiller1265 8 месяцев назад
I had to watch this twice because it rings that really hard to reach bell. Scott, thank you for always speaking truth. It must be really awesome to be related to you.
@kadijaish
@kadijaish 8 месяцев назад
I have the utmost respect for people like this gentleman. Smart and skilled. Master of his craft who honed his skills for his whole life and he remained open minded and curious.
@jamarone5902
@jamarone5902 8 месяцев назад
I’ve been watching your channel since I’ve begun. That was in 2019. Thank you.
@scorpionbuilds
@scorpionbuilds 9 месяцев назад
That was very well put… I strongly agree with everything you said. It’s often times hard to want to keep doing the highest quality work, when so many people don’t want to pay for it, but now after years of doing the best I can, watching and learning from others, I have clients willing to over a year for me to do the work, this it not ment to be a brag, but to let everyone know with hard work and the right mindset. There are people out there willing to pay for quality work
@25Peerless72
@25Peerless72 9 месяцев назад
One of the best videos you have ever done. Thank you. You are such an inspiration
@LightSpinAngler
@LightSpinAngler 8 месяцев назад
This advice is greater than work. It can be applied to life and it’s hard to unlearn a lot of the bad habits you’ve developed from childhood, relationships, schooling, etc. I hope every person aims to be as good of a person as they are a craftsman because it’s the same honest labor.
@MichaelDavis-k4j
@MichaelDavis-k4j 8 месяцев назад
When i was a young fella, i worked in a machine shop that had a sign over the time clock that said, if you haven't got time to do it right the first time when are you going to have time to do it over. i remember staring at that sign one day and thinking that is absolutely right.. It set my mind to try to always do the best that i can
@ThePeachyCarpenter
@ThePeachyCarpenter 9 месяцев назад
Great monologue Scott. If there is one thing I can inject to new guys, is to also not be afraid to try new ways, within reason. The internet has been a great place to learn for myself. But ‘hand knowledge’ is different than ‘book knowledge’. There are levels of comfort that come with experience. I wouldn’t tell a grunt to handle the ‘one and done’ cut, but there are things out there that can be implemented that you may not see on a current crew, that you might stumble upon here on the internet, that might be worth trying. But you have to try it. Example for me is batch cutting. I’ve been in three crews. Non of them batched cut. I now run as cut man for a crew on the rough stage. After years of watching people online and picking the process apart, I just went for it one day. The foreman was impressed. Where I could keep a good steady pace in front of the installers, I was now dropping the entire package when the guys have a 1/4 installed. Come to find out, the reason no one did it, was because. They were scared of ruining an entire package, and were afraid to try. Don’t get me wrong, I was read to swallow that pill if I screwed up a stack. But it paid off to dive in.
@olliefoxx7165
@olliefoxx7165 8 месяцев назад
THIS is an extremely important message. We have to plant the seeds of this message amongst everything we touch. You never know where the seed will take root and bare the fruit of tomorrow's craftsman. Such good advice.
@scottaddison8071
@scottaddison8071 7 месяцев назад
Amen Amen Amen - you just hit the nail on the head. I’ve always been a student and will remain curious until my dying day. My motto is “there are NO Experts, just those that are still learning versus those that are hard headed”.
@jaype9353
@jaype9353 2 месяца назад
Absolutely brilliant spokesmanship
@fernandonichols7168
@fernandonichols7168 8 месяцев назад
Never truer words were spoken. This is exactly my path by my own experience. I never had anyone teach me this, I just learned it along the way.
@TheFunnyCarpenter
@TheFunnyCarpenter 8 месяцев назад
Excellent video on an interesting topic! I've always approached it from a formula of finding the right balance of Quality and Speed, only never sacrifice quality. As a finishing carpenter if you can learn to do top quality work equally quick as the slash and burn types, you'll never be without work.
@upchuckchops
@upchuckchops 8 месяцев назад
Good advice. I was told when I was a younger carpenter, "The difference between a good carpenter and a bad on is the ability to fix your mistakes."
@EricCampbellUAV
@EricCampbellUAV Месяц назад
i don’t make mistakes but if i did of course i’d fix it
@fourbirdstos
@fourbirdstos 8 месяцев назад
Thank you for making this video sir. My dad was a contractor and hearing you in this video reminded me of the things he used to tell me. I did not become a builder like he was. My path led me to university and other work, but I love building things for my house and fixing things because I do them as perfectly as I can, and it is thanks to my dad that I am able to do it. God bless you for taking the time to share your insights.
@Timebandit1
@Timebandit1 8 месяцев назад
Wise words applicable to anyone in any industry that values craft. Brilliant.
@g-dawg1723
@g-dawg1723 8 месяцев назад
This is wisdom for every area of life. Thanks. Truly appreciate it.
@derekbryant6137
@derekbryant6137 8 месяцев назад
From day one I've always looked up to the things you say in this video really made me think about how I work and how I'm going to approach it from now on I'm going to show this video to my sons because they are wanting to be construction workers
@williamolsen8517
@williamolsen8517 8 месяцев назад
I have changed my focus from profitability to quality and it has made a huge difference in my satisfaction level. Not that profit isn’t important, but doing everything at a high level the first time actually saves money.
@CasperEngineering
@CasperEngineering 9 месяцев назад
Every time I watch your videos, I take away something to think about. Thank you.
@jasonpeckford95
@jasonpeckford95 8 месяцев назад
Early in my career I was working with my foreman trimming out a wall with some inset paneling and wainscoting. I stepped back once completed and said "i think that is good enough"...…. he took a breath, then took out his hammer and put it through what we just done! He told me it is either exactly how we wanted it or it is done wrong. He then made me stay on my own and do it again "properly". Easy to say I have never utter those words in the 20 something years since. Set a standard of quality work you are proud of and do that every time without compromise. Great videos and lessons please do not stop making and sharing!
@DanielJoseMP
@DanielJoseMP 8 месяцев назад
This applies to my job as well. I’ve been improving my mindset greatly these months. I’ve been producing better quality work in less time.
@easyclean21
@easyclean21 8 месяцев назад
I appreciate you sir do these videos as long as you can!!!!!
@paulkelly1702
@paulkelly1702 9 месяцев назад
Truer words were never spoken. Sage advice to those willing to listen.
@soupofpossibilities8537
@soupofpossibilities8537 9 месяцев назад
Scott, all you've said here applies to any profession. Especially the attitude of excellence. I would add that any technique in use came about as an improvement on whatever came before through thoughtful experimentation. And sometimes accident.
@thebrainongames8337
@thebrainongames8337 7 месяцев назад
Thank you for the wise words. I believe these concepts applicable to anything in life, and that you framed it very well. I am close to becoming a medical physicist, and I hope to remember these words and take pride in my work, and I hope that others do as well. Again, thank you
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