It’s sad these days, when all the comments made anymore, are always so negative about anything anyone does. Personally, I think it’s great. But anyone who feels otherwise, that’s your choice. I just feel there’s too much negativity in the world today. Keep up the good work.
Top will crack because of gluing in a cross grain situation stopping the top from expanding and contracting with humidity. Also bottom of table top is unfinished so it will absorb more moisture than the top. This piece is subject to failure.
My late fiancé used to do woodworking as a hobby. Tiered corner shelves, flat shelves, working fish clocks, swan planters, shadow boxes . I used to help. I still have all his sand papers we used to do by hand. No machine. I have all his work he didn’t want to sell but keep for himself. My animal art pieces I do look good in Mike’s shadow boxes. I sanded he stained and put together. I helped him make our bed but sadly he didn’t live long enough to finish the drawers underneath. He would’ve loved to be able to cut wood with your thingy. My Michael had this hand held one. When I wasn’t working and Mike was, my job was to hand sand the pieces he cut for his tiered shelves. Love the feel of wood. I would come with Mike when he bought his wood. He was picky. He sold some of his stuff at flea markets. Mike used to sign and date his things and so do I. Watching wood workers brings back good memories of my Michael and his woodworking.
Won't last. Very poor wood choice using the pith. That will warp and crack badly over time. But I doubt that will be a problem because there is a lot of cross grain construction with glued joints. Those will fail badly. After a single season it will be held together by the screws and I imagine they won't hold very long after that. There was no accounting for wood movement.
Beautiful work. Nit picking,,,,,,,, I would have spread the glue on both sides, (minor), filled the space around the circles with the sawdust and plugged the screw holes. But that doesn't mean I don't believe he did a beautiful job. He did. Attentio to the minor details can make a big difference.
Ldone really so greeeet work and greeeet video sharing 🌹🌹i always watching your video full watched thanks friend for sharing and stay connect friend 🌹🙏🙏🙏🙏
Gotta say, I haven't used a band saw in decades, but I know for sure there shouldn't have been so much blade above the workpiece, it should've almost been touching the wood
I'd like to see if it is in one piece in 3yrs. Putting the pith in almost every part of the table is, for most woodworkers, the kiss of death. It just cracks so often. If you have ever seen a construction post with cracks/checks, it's because most of them are straight from the pith of the tree. It is literally the most unstable, crack prone part of the wood. I really hope people don't follow that part of this. The single biggest mistake a new woodworker could take away from this is that you should use the pith, the center of the tree. Either this guy is making them for a third party who handles refunds/warranty, or they are just straight up sold without any refund or warranty, because these are a ticking time bomb.
Почему же? Нормально сделали, или для вас нормально это там где мужик у себя в нереально чистом гараже с нереальными инструментами из идеальных материалов изготавливает мебель?) Здесь вполне себе народные инструменты)@@vodoley25
I am from India.I admire the work and the craftsmanship.it is a stupendous effort and I want to know whether you can work on any kind of wood or from particular type of wood.please suggests me for good outcome of a product or furniture
With that much experience you’d think he’d care more about safety. That bandsaw work was just dangerous. End product looks great though, just wish he worked a little more safely.😊