Hi Great video! was wondering my wife and I recently picked up a large white pine the butt was around 38 inches presently it has no cracks I plan to do what you did I painted the ends to try to minimize cracking in your opinion do you think maybe I should apply the epoxy now and leave the bottom end open to dry as it was cut this winter. I was going to put it in a closed box with air flow for a couple years what is your thoughts on it?
There is another slab from the tree trunk i an going back and get another 4 inches of it which will bring it to the ground. My wife thinks we could get some money for it!
Let it dry till the humidity is 7%. They sell moisture meters on Amazon. If you bring it indoors it should be dry in 12 months. When dry, flatten with router sled if you can. Then sand. Before you put the epoxy apply one coat of sanding sealer. The sanding sealer should be dry in less than one hour. IMMEDIATELY after its dry, flip the slab and apply sanding sealer on the other side. If you wait 8 hours, your slab will have warp significantly even if the wood is dry to 7%. Then flip the slab back and forth until you have 4 coats of sanding sealer on EACH side. The next day you can flood it with epoxy on your favourite side. You may have to apply 2 coats of epoxy. If you don't apply sanding sealer before the epoxy, the epoxy will keep getting air bubbles till it hardens. I'm talking from experience. I had to redo my table .. reflaten on router table etc. The sanding sealer is necessary BEFORE epoxy only because it is end grain. Good luck.
This table arrived well packaged and on time. ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxn94T8Mu1iMnsLCMNOI9srXSsLkI4JXKW Like another reviewer advised, I pulled everything out and made sure everything was included (everything was!). I built it alone and it took me about an hour. The color is great and for the price the lift part works well. As others have mentioned, it’s not the smoothest opening/closing, but it works. The screws do show, but I plan to order white sticker covers if that bothers us too much. Really happy with this table! UPDATE: it’s been over a year since we got this coffee table and we still love it! It gets HEAVY use as our dining table, foot rest, and school desk. Over time, the opening and closing mechanism has gotten smoother. I added a new photo with the white screw cover stickers. They blend in perfectly and make it look a little cleaner. 100% recommend!!!
I like the way you did the legs, and the epoxy job after it was all done. I did something similar with a big slab of pine, so I know how challenging it can be to get a good finish on that kind of grain. Great job!
Turned out great! I love how you went through the highs and lows of trying to make it work. I'm doing the same over here in California. Trial and error. You gave me a rally good heads up with a Cypress Pine stump that I don"t know what to do with. I'm considering staining first,...a natural stain ,...then the shiny plastic hard stuff.
Gilbert, You have another heirloom piece of furniture there. Some ideas work and some fail, but in the end, I think the final coat of epoxy was the icing on the cake. Congratulations to you and High Five.
Stunning. Absolutely beautiful. I was sad when the film was over... I could watch you work for hours! A real, modern day artisan. Thank you for taking the time to share your work with the world.
I made a cedar bench last year as i dabbled in my first piece of outdoor furniture while also using epoxy. I found out real quick how porous wood can be. I rushed to seal cracks that i didnt know existed. That epoxy can be a nightmare but at the same time it produces beautiful results. Im currently drying a white oak burl i had slabbed out. I hope it produces a beautiful product like your table. It looks really good.
i was mesmerized by this whole video, such skill you have to know how to do all that! and the beauty of the wood! i loved it both ways, natural oiled and with the epoxy. buy first hand i'm sure you made wisest decision with the epoxy in the end. How lovely to have something in your home that you have worked so hard on. Well done . From Australia.
I like how you documented the errors, my wife has a nice Cottonwood slab that is similar in size that she will be trying to duplicate your methods with, Thanks for the video.
WOW! That is just beautiful! In love with this table! Can't wait until my shop is done so I can give this a go! Inspiring, for sure! God Bless my talented friend!
Beautiful work. That's a lot of work to be summed up in a few minutes. For small end grain projects I started scraping them with a wood scraper after each thin coat of epoxy until all micro grooves were filled. Top off with a couple coats of poly. Scraping is very tedious, but somehow brings out incredible detail.
If he used deep black epoxy to fill the gap and then clear epoxy for the finish work would have brought all the wood grain much more exposed and would have been a very special one. Having said that, this is also beautiful.
Stunning. I love the way you did the legs as they seem to follow the angle of the table. Thanks for posting, I have a couple of pieces that I want to use for the same type of table and I’ve been wondering about what to do for the legs. Your idea is much better than what I’ve been considering. Thanks again
If you ever start to dislike the epoxy look, can always use a 000 steel wool pad to make the finish more satin. Doesn't loose the great thick look of epoxy either. Anyway, amazing piece, wonderful work.
I absolutely love it. Nice job. You fussed with it a bit but you got what you wanted. There are cheaper cost epoxies that will do the same job. $150 sounds s bit expensive.
4:03 hahaha part of the beat, nice project. I am going to save up for some cheap beginning tools and give the slabs a try. Would love to get good and make some live edge boards for on the wall and a nice table. Awesome for explaining the whole process👌
I didn`t intend to utilize this woodworking website, *TopFineWoodworking. Com* but rather curious about it. I was truly impressed after trying it. I was looking to find out more about the art of woodworking, and was not dissatisfied. I found several topics such as wood types and designing your workshop.
As a helpful tip, I’ve done a lot of experimenting with polyurethane, and I’ve found that doing a top flood coat of poly looks just as good as a $50 flood coat of epoxy, for a fraction of the price. It also helps if you thin it out a bit.
get them glasses of that lovely piece of art!!!!!!! (lol) - okay so you spent a bit of extra money on it when it did not need it, but hey the finished product - WOW - PERFECT!!!! - i enjoyed everything about this video and was gobsmacked at the finish of the table.
Yea thats one thing im finding out about woodworking and other stuff, even experts have to do things over again. It's more about your ability to resolve problems and fix things than getting it all right perfectly the first time you do it
Came out nicely. I plan to do two similar tops today. I still haven't figured out my legs. I have several Cedar rounds, and a pile of Cedar limbs. Would like to use cedar I'm going to give it a try. Thanks for your time
Many years ago at school I was making a table from a slice of tree trunk without power tools. It had a nice naturally coloured pattern in the centre and at the time I was very proud of it until one day I went into the craft room to find it had exploded into three large pieces as it had not been weathered properly. The teacher who lived in the flat above the craftroom had heard it explode during the night and must have been shocked! Anyway this one is excellent and inspiring. Thank you sir. Blessings and peace
George Alderson i have one slab like the one in this video but a little smaller. Im thinking of letting it dry inside for two months and then sand it and apply vernish to make an end table. Im wondering if thats enough or if it will break like yours
@@sarahv.990Well I am no expert on the subject Sarah but I think that they probably have to dry out for years rather than for months, depending on things like size and where it came from and so on! How did you acquire it as, if it came from a timber yard, it may have already been seasoned as they call it? I am not sure where my slab came from but it was quite thick and heavy and it was in the classroom for perhaps 6 weeks or more, while I was working on it, before the night it exploded! I read that they need to be dried for one year for every inch of thickness of the wood! Anyway I am going to do a bit of research and see if there are any videos about it.
Good looking table I’m working on my outdoor one right now I like the legs you put on and definitely the epoxy much better look ok 👌🏼🔥🤠🔥Camping Russ out
Hi Great video! was wondering my wife and I recently picked up a large white pine the butt was around 38 inches presently it has no cracks I plan to do what you did I painted the ends to try to minimize cracking in your opinion do you think maybe I should apply the epoxy now and leave the bottom end open to dry as it was cut this winter. I was going to put it in a closed box with air flow for a couple years what is your thoughts on it?
There is another slab from the tree trunk i an going back and get another 4 inches of it which will bring it to the ground. My wife thinks we could get some money for it!
Let it dry till the humidity is 7%. They sell moisture meters on Amazon. If you bring it indoors it should be dry in 12 months. When dry, flatten with router sled if you can. Then sand. Before you put the epoxy apply one coat of sanding sealer. The sanding sealer should be dry in less than one hour. IMMEDIATELY after its dry, flip the slab and apply sanding sealer on the other side. If you wait 8 hours, your slab will have warp significantly even if the wood is dry to 7%. Then flip the slab back and forth until you have 4 coats of sanding sealer on EACH side. The next day you can flood it with epoxy on your favourite side. You may have to apply 2 coats of epoxy. If you don't apply sanding sealer before the epoxy, the epoxy will keep getting air bubbles till it hardens. I'm talking from experience. I had to redo my table .. reflaten on router table etc. The sanding sealer is necessary BEFORE epoxy only because it is end grain. Good luck.
Thanks for the info! I was raised up in the Ottawa Valley little town called Chapeau Que where are you located! Just curious?
Noelville, Ontario
Marimba jacaltenango
This table arrived well packaged and on time. ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxn94T8Mu1iMnsLCMNOI9srXSsLkI4JXKW Like another reviewer advised, I pulled everything out and made sure everything was included (everything was!). I built it alone and it took me about an hour. The color is great and for the price the lift part works well. As others have mentioned, it’s not the smoothest opening/closing, but it works. The screws do show, but I plan to order white sticker covers if that bothers us too much. Really happy with this table! UPDATE: it’s been over a year since we got this coffee table and we still love it! It gets HEAVY use as our dining table, foot rest, and school desk. Over time, the opening and closing mechanism has gotten smoother. I added a new photo with the white screw cover stickers. They blend in perfectly and make it look a little cleaner. 100% recommend!!!
I like the way you did the legs, and the epoxy job after it was all done. I did something similar with a big slab of pine, so I know how challenging it can be to get a good finish on that kind of grain. Great job!
Turned out great! I love how you went through the highs and lows of trying to make it work. I'm doing the same over here in California. Trial and error.
You gave me a rally good heads up with a Cypress Pine stump that I don"t know what to do with. I'm considering staining first,...a natural stain ,...then the shiny plastic hard stuff.
All I can say is WOW! Great job and your attitude of never giving up is awesome. Thanks!
Gilbert, You have another heirloom piece of furniture there. Some ideas work and some fail, but in the end, I think the final coat of epoxy was the icing on the cake. Congratulations to you and High Five.
Love to see the end result of projects like this. Beautiful!
Gorgeous table. I'm in awe of such masterful craftsmanship - what I'd give for a fraction of your amazing talent. BRAVO!!!
Thank you!
Beautiful rays, beautiful piece, thank you for sharing. Such a marvelous table.
Rubio Monocoat makes an excellent final...superb craftsmanship, gorgeous meticulous results! Love the joinery tips.
great video and an amazing table! Finally someone was able to show the final product and let us enjoy this view!!! Thanks!
Stunning. Absolutely beautiful. I was sad when the film was over... I could watch you work for hours! A real, modern day artisan. Thank you for taking the time to share your work with the world.
Very nice work. You know if you're not learning from the projects you are not pushing the craft. Thanks for sharing
I made a cedar bench last year as i dabbled in my first piece of outdoor furniture while also using epoxy. I found out real quick how porous wood can be. I rushed to seal cracks that i didnt know existed. That epoxy can be a nightmare but at the same time it produces beautiful results. Im currently drying a white oak burl i had slabbed out. I hope it produces a beautiful product like your table. It looks really good.
Very well done! Way to stick with it to the end regardless of the setbacks (and additional cost). Beautiful piece.
i was mesmerized by this whole video, such skill you have to know how to do all that! and the beauty of the wood! i loved it both ways, natural oiled and with the epoxy. buy first hand i'm sure you made wisest decision with the epoxy in the end. How lovely to have something in your home that you have worked so hard on. Well done .
From
Australia.
I like how you documented the errors, my wife has a nice Cottonwood slab that is similar in size that she will be trying to duplicate your methods with, Thanks for the video.
WOW! That is just beautiful! In love with this table! Can't wait until my shop is done so I can give this a go! Inspiring, for sure! God Bless my talented friend!
Always a pleasure watching perfection as it starts with a pulse and end with a heartbeat.
that's beautiful, inspiring me to have a go myself. Great job!
That’s what I call art….beautiful! I’m putting it on my to do make list.
With respect from Saint Petersburg , Russia.
Good job!
What a work of art! Amazing job!!! Thank you for sharing.
That`s another one Gilbert.....this table just looks so beautiful....a masterpeice....no bull....thanks for showing us how it`s done ....CHEERS
WOW what a stunning piece of work,absolutely beautiful..You must be so proud, amazing
Wow! An amazing job! Absolutely beautiful!
What a peace of work!! Amazing!!
Beautiful! Well done. Thanks for sharing.
Really impressive. Looks awesome
Beautiful work. That's a lot of work to be summed up in a few minutes. For small end grain projects I started scraping them with a wood scraper after each thin coat of epoxy until all micro grooves were filled. Top off with a couple coats of poly. Scraping is very tedious, but somehow brings out incredible detail.
Beautiful job! I now have another song I enjoy listening too often.
Thank you, this was such a nice video to watch. The music and videography were awesome.
Absolutely beautiful table! Good job Sir 😊
Despite those few hiccups the end product still came out amazing! Wow 👏👏👏
absolutley beautiful table you did there - well done
If he used deep black epoxy to fill the gap and then clear epoxy for the finish work would have brought all the wood grain much more exposed and would have been a very special one. Having said that, this is also beautiful.
NAILED IT !!!!! ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL !!! EXCELLENT JOB !!!
Fantastic, beautiful piece of furniture.
Absolutely beautiful piece of work.
Stunning piece of craftsmanship!!!!
Stunning. I love the way you did the legs as they seem to follow the angle of the table. Thanks for posting, I have a couple of pieces that I want to use for the same type of table and I’ve been wondering about what to do for the legs. Your idea is much better than what I’ve been considering. Thanks again
Papa Steve thanks for the compliment. Very rewarding once it's done. Ya those legs design is very strong!
That grain looks amazing you did a really good job with this.
Cheers
Tim from wood 4 nothing
Thank you! I'l check out your channel!
@@frenchriversprings .
Hhyh
G0b
Ht
Looks absolutely beautiful!!! I love your work.
This table looks amazing.
The result was amazing! and it seems like you learned a lot along the way. Thanks for sharing
Thank you and yes I learned a lot for shure.
Great job ,absolutely beautiful. Lots of work and $, but well worth it.
Great project and finish- thanks!!
If you ever start to dislike the epoxy look, can always use a 000 steel wool pad to make the finish more satin. Doesn't loose the great thick look of epoxy either. Anyway, amazing piece, wonderful work.
That’s a gorgeous piece. Nice work man.
gotta love that saw dust in snow haha.. great scenery!
This is such a beautiful table and the work that was put into forming it was amazing to see the transformation.
Thank You. It was a lot of work but rewarding.
Superb job, well worth the effort, last a few lifetimes.
WOW, Amazing job with the epoxy!
I actually thought that it was hollow when I saw the thumbnail :D
Great video!
Awesome vid and even greater work of wood working perfection. Great job and craftsmanship two thumps up from me.
That turned out amazing
I absolutely love it. Nice job. You fussed with it a bit but you got what you wanted. There are cheaper cost epoxies that will do the same job. $150 sounds s bit expensive.
4:03 hahaha part of the beat, nice project. I am going to save up for some cheap beginning tools and give the slabs a try. Would love to get good and make some live edge boards for on the wall and a nice table. Awesome for explaining the whole process👌
Very nice table. Good job!!
@William I found this website online that will give you a ton of woodworking plans: WoodFix.xyz
Let me know what you think of it.
I didn`t intend to utilize this woodworking website, *TopFineWoodworking. Com* but rather curious about it. I was truly impressed after trying it. I was looking to find out more about the art of woodworking, and was not dissatisfied. I found several topics such as wood types and designing your workshop.
you're a craftsman bro, great taste in music too G
As a helpful tip, I’ve done a lot of experimenting with polyurethane, and I’ve found that doing a top flood coat of poly looks just as good as a $50 flood coat of epoxy, for a fraction of the price. It also helps if you thin it out a bit.
I now really like conversion varnish for table top. Also know as post cat laquer.
Interesting! Many thanks for sharing your immense talent.
Beautiful work done! I dont work with wood myself. I work with metal designs, but just love your work!
Thank You. I used to be a metal worker. Cheers!
beautiful piece of wood, super design and great finish. I'm sure you'll love having this in your home. Thanks for sharing. Best wishes.
Thanks. Yep it's in my house. Some people would like to buy it but I won't sell it. Cheers !
get them glasses of that lovely piece of art!!!!!!! (lol) - okay so you spent a bit of extra money on it when it did not need it, but hey the finished product - WOW - PERFECT!!!! - i enjoyed everything about this video and was gobsmacked at the finish of the table.
Yea thats one thing im finding out about woodworking and other stuff, even experts have to do things over again.
It's more about your ability to resolve problems and fix things than getting it all right perfectly the first time you do it
I love this....am starting my own landscaping company n am crazy about this too. U did amazing
For all the trouble you had it turned out really well in the end. Cheers & thanks, David.
mmmm
really nice work
you have the right hands from the right places
i'd like to become your student
I'm breathless this is such superb job. I never seen such beautiful job before. Congratulations you are genius
Thanks Peter!
Turned out beautiful
well done
That looks so amazing
WOW!! Very well done.
ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL!
Cool build, that music is straight out of Miami Vice.
Very beautiful table!!! Very nice craft work as well.
looks beautiful ,well done. Mark.
cracking table pal, what a mirror finish youve given it
Wow. What a great job you made of this table. I’m very jealous. Great video. Paul 🇬🇧 UK
Beautiful work!
nice table mate
love the natural look.
Great work, love it!
Came out nicely. I plan to do two similar tops today. I still haven't figured out my legs. I have several Cedar rounds, and a pile of Cedar limbs. Would like to use cedar I'm going to give it a try. Thanks for your time
Absolutely stunning.
Beautiful work mate fair play to ya greetings from 🇬🇧🤘
Beautiful, keep making my friend
Incredible work!! 👏👏
Very nice work sir. Gorgeous final result. Helpful and useful video.
Great work on the Table The finish looks great
Many years ago at school I was making a table from a slice of tree trunk without power tools. It had a nice naturally coloured pattern in the centre and at the time I was very proud of it until one day I went into the craft room to find it had exploded into three large pieces as it had not been weathered properly. The teacher who lived in the flat above the craftroom had heard it explode during the night and must have been shocked! Anyway this one is excellent and inspiring. Thank you sir. Blessings and peace
George Alderson i have one slab like the one in this video but a little smaller. Im thinking of letting it dry inside for two months and then sand it and apply vernish to make an end table. Im wondering if thats enough or if it will break like yours
@@sarahv.990Well I am no expert on the subject Sarah but I think that they probably have to dry out for years rather than for months, depending on things like size and where it came from and so on! How did you acquire it as, if it came from a timber yard, it may have already been seasoned as they call it? I am not sure where my slab came from but it was quite thick and heavy and it was in the classroom for perhaps 6 weeks or more, while I was working on it, before the night it exploded! I read that they need to be dried for one year for every inch of thickness of the wood! Anyway I am going to do a bit of research and see if there are any videos about it.
Очень красиво, сложно и грандизно технично. Вы Столяр от Бога. Спасибо за науку, очень познавательный и полезный контэнт.
beautiful work - thanks for sharing
Very nice piece. Thanks for sharing
Very nice, well done!
That's awesome, I want to do one of these. If I do I'll use your video for reference thanks for sharing. Job well done.
Again, I appreciate you watching my videos!
beautiful work!
Good looking table I’m working on my outdoor one right now I like the legs you put on and definitely the epoxy much better look ok 👌🏼🔥🤠🔥Camping Russ out
Beautiful job ! I've been storing 2 huge oak slabs for a few years now would love to do what you did .
Same here. I cut a huge 40+ inch oak slab and am now ready to start on it.
Excelente trabalho! Parabéns 👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿
Nice work. Congratulations (Bom trabalho. Parabéns)
What a piece! Great build.
Thank You so much 😊
Beautiful table. Worth the effort.