Your videos have actually been a part in the inspiration I've had to go into Carpentry as a career. I love being able to make things. Later in June I will have my first onboarding session with a carpentry apprenticeship and get to see what it's all about.
That red shaper blade thing looks daunting. This was a great video! I love to see the various joinery techniques. As a novice woodworker, I’d love to see a “why this one and not that one” vid.
Mesmerising! I love watching your wonderful creations being cut out and fitted together like perfection. Love that you don't have any music. I had a little giggle when your high speed film makes hammering sound like a woodpecker. Your channel is my happiest channel to watch. Wish I could do the same fun joints. I might try some of them on a smaller scale when I've learnt how to use my dremel. Thank you so very much! ❤
I hate how people who go to Japan. One time are always talking about how amazing it is yet. They never want to live there forever. We had some Japanese friends that came to America last summer for three months and they said that America is the most amazing place they’ve ever been and wish they could move here. It seems to me like it’s a grasses greener scenario. I am proud of what we have in the US and if it comes to a point that I’m not then I will leave.
@dreambuild2022 You should ask instead of assuming things. I was not a tourist. I went to Japan for a job and lived there twice for a total of seven years. Also, Japanese carpenters are not poor. They are in the general range of what might be considered "middle income". And Japanese carpenters are well-respected craftsmen who care about what they are doing - although you apparently don't believe that. Next time try to be thoughtful and reasonable in your writing - because what you posted here was ridiculous.
I couldn’t give two sh!ts about how much the tools cost or who paid for them. Your talent speaks for itself. Simply awesome, and I thoroughly enjoy every one of them. Much continued success!
Do I get tool envy every time he posts one of these? Yeah. I guess. I’m way more impressed with the man’s skills. Expensive tools do not trump craftsmanship.
The ironic thing is, every person who thinks they’re dropping a bombshell about his equipment, are actually putting more money in his pocket by commenting to slag him off 😂😂😂
I agree! It’s Dusty’s skills and knowledge that’s doing the work. The tools are just that, tools. If I had his shop I couldn’t do all of the things he does, the most powerful tool he has is his brain!
what toy shop but the skill you have blisteringly good absolutely love the radial flip saw what a toy that is , you cant have enough tools brother ever ⚒
I like the way you have brought traditional Japanese style jointery into the 21st century by integrating modern tools into the craft. It is also nice to see a woodworker who appreciates the incredible flexibility of a radial arm saw. Don't know why it isn't a mainstay in more woodworking shops. BTW, you bear an uncanny resemblence to that "Took me 40 years to figure this out? Ain't no way" guy. Are you one in the same?
😁🙏 When I started I was in a pretty bad position due to the economy at the time and just had to switch to something new and make it work. Just put my head down and worked like a dog for 2 years and only took a few days off. I had a few crappy tools and a used $200 table saw and I had a wife and 4 kids and had no choice but to work and work and work. Eventually things started gaining momentum and the quality of my work got better and I kept learning and reinvesting in better tools. Then I started to learn how to do social media and taught my self how to shoot videos and edit and all about the different platforms. Anyway I guess what I’m saying is it is scary to take a leap and do something new but I’m a firm believer in hard work and constant learning and it pays off.
As a novice, I dream of having a shop with all those "wonderful toys" to practice... I know, i know... Woth time and effort you can all of them by hand... But I've got so many ideas that i want to complete something to move on to a new project... Cheers and love to watch your videos...
I always enjoy watching your work. Very creative joinery. I just wish I could slow things down instead of watching them several times to learn how you made them. True craftsmanship!
Mr Dusty, Your knowledge and craftsmanship are perfect! The Joinery pieces are beautiful! Are you going to include these types of Joinery in the New Shop Framing? Will it be a Timber-frame build? Thank You for sharing Your Skill!👏🏻🏆
I hope you realise what a gifted craftsman you are. I can can only live in hope that in my twilight years I achieve a tiny amount of your wonderful talent. Your expensive, quality machinery speeds up the process, but cannot takeaway your awesome skill. It’s so enjoyable just watching you produce masterpieces in wood. Kind regards Kevin
Merci pour vos vidéos et le superbe travail que vous effectué, votre outillage King ne peut être acheté en France mais celui-ci fait envie! Bonne continuation dans vos activités et continué à nous régaler avec vos vidéos 👍
Awesome! Thanks for putting this all together in a video. I am for sure saving it for future reference. One thing I wish was that you had some way of telling us the names of the joints. Maybe they don’t all have one or they’re your own creation?
I remember watching Norm Abram make dadoes with a radial arm saw. I have wanted one ever since. Good ones just don’t come available lately now I have the time and space….
Please can you make some videos in which you explain your "work tricks"? 😉 For example how to perfect use RAS for these kind of works, how to be sure to not move the piece too close in horizontal cuts, why make ripetitive deeper cuts instead of only One, and so on? 😍
Have you by chance seen any of the original videos of when Matthias Wandel first created the pantorouter? Just from the quality of your work, I’d think you’d love that type of craftsmanship, if you haven’t already seen it.
C'mon. Do ya just not look at some of what he proposes to cut and think to yourself "Aww, hell, no!" ...and that lil' sh!t-eatin' grin at the end when he demos the joint is him sayin' "Aww hell yeah!" But we still watch in wonder and awe. The dude is a straight up master at the craft.
I am a new subscriber but have been watching for a while. Great techniques for sure. Do you build entire projects? I would enjoy watching a project from design to completion.
thanks! Over the years as I see something somewhere I will jot it down or take a pic, some I've come up with myself or combined a few others I've done. Some come from joinery books I have as well 👍
So question...Why not just use your datto to do all the cuts? why use your mitter saw as well? were you just showing different ways to do it? Or is there a reason you use miter saw and chisels?
For each cut, I always think the dude has like 4 different machines and tools to make the cut and he chooses differently just to entertain us....or himself.