A joy to watch your videos. Your workshop makes a great backdrop in the videos as well. Always inspiring and I admire your imagination to keep coming up with great ideas and designs. Well done. One Handed Maker - Australia
That was an impressively large panel at the start. Looks like you've got those table saw jigs dialled in, those tolerances are nice and tight. Nice work!
The panels look awesome man! I really like hexagonal kumiko. I plan to spend a bit more time with square patterns while learning, but I am looking forward to progressing to hexagonal and diamond patterns. Anyway, cool video!
Thanks Chris! Square panels are a great place to get your feet wet for sure. The infill for hex is no more difficult, just the grid itself takes a bit more time and effort.
I’ll put it on the list! You can see a little more about them over on my Instagram page too where I post a bunch of the smaller details from some of these videos.
Thanks for the sub! There are two blades I use. Flat tooth grind is typically my go to for making the notches in kumiko strips especially on square grids where I can cut the notches before ripping them into strips. With the hex pattern, since you have to notch each strip individually I actually use an 80 tooth crosscut blade to eliminate tear out. There are links to both on my website if you want to see the exact blades. www.mayer-woodworks.com/tools
I use a variety of blades depending on the purpose. The red ones you see in some of these videos are Freud. I use a heavy duty rip with flat tooth grind for the grid notches and a glue line rip for ripping strips.
It depends on the pattern and the use case. Many traditional patterns rely only on a friction fit but I added glue to some of these patterns because the client requested the added security.
A joy to watch your videos.
Your workshop makes a great backdrop in the videos as well.
Always inspiring and I admire your imagination to keep coming up with great ideas and designs.
Well done.
One Handed Maker - Australia
Thank you very much!
Looks awesome. LOL at the Harney Tea container at 20:30 (and throughout). I use 'em all the time.
Ahh yes my shop is littered with them!
Amazing build! You definitely need great patience to do such a detailed project!
I am sure a lot of work to figure out how to cut, thank you for sharing great ideas Nice job!
That was an impressively large panel at the start. Looks like you've got those table saw jigs dialled in, those tolerances are nice and tight. Nice work!
Haha yeah takes a lot of adjusting but once you have them set you can bang out as many as needed.
Stinks that I‘ll be traveling at the time of the live feed!
Beautiful. Question. How do you attach the panel to the frame?
truly lovely. are your strips the same thickness as your saw blade?
Great work, thanks for sharing.
The panels look awesome man! I really like hexagonal kumiko. I plan to spend a bit more time with square patterns while learning, but I am looking forward to progressing to hexagonal and diamond patterns. Anyway, cool video!
Thanks Chris! Square panels are a great place to get your feet wet for sure. The infill for hex is no more difficult, just the grid itself takes a bit more time and effort.
Amazing!
Great jobs
Does the big wood cut 45 degrees?
Verry verry nice kumiko.how many degrees did you cut the inlays with?
Thanks! These patterns are made with 30 & 60 degree jigs.
Please do a tutorial on that sled with the angle contraption ….I would appreciate that so much👊✌️👍😎😷🇨🇦
There a few videos out there for this kind of sled. This one is good. ua-cam.com/video/Gkedzw4L2cc/v-deo.html
@@shanesmith5405 I was talking about the upright angle jig not the flat angled one …I’ve made that one but thanks anyway👊✌️👍😎😷🇨🇦
@@rocktruckrob 👍Yeah he certainly has those jigs dialled in.
I’ll put it on the list! You can see a little more about them over on my Instagram page too where I post a bunch of the smaller details from some of these videos.
@@MayerWoodworks right on bud I’ll check it out… thanks have a great day👊✌️👍🇨🇦
Wow that is a big panel, i just found you on youtube liked and subscribed is that a flat tooth blade your using in the table saw?
Thanks for the sub! There are two blades I use. Flat tooth grind is typically my go to for making the notches in kumiko strips especially on square grids where I can cut the notches before ripping them into strips. With the hex pattern, since you have to notch each strip individually I actually use an 80 tooth crosscut blade to eliminate tear out. There are links to both on my website if you want to see the exact blades. www.mayer-woodworks.com/tools
@@MayerWoodworks Thanks for taking the time to reply, im looking forward to future content and i will take a look at your website
can I know the thickness of the strips?
Здравствуйте, какой диск для пилы используется?
You would want to use a flat top blade
@@wayneschenet5340 да
I use a variety of blades depending on the purpose. The red ones you see in some of these videos are Freud. I use a heavy duty rip with flat tooth grind for the grid notches and a glue line rip for ripping strips.
What kind of glue are you using?
This is titebond 3
do you glue every piece?
It depends on the pattern and the use case. Many traditional patterns rely only on a friction fit but I added glue to some of these patterns because the client requested the added security.
How do you cut your strips
I almost severely injured a finger using a ig like that.
Ouch!
Beautiful but they are by no means flat
In this case they were going to be sandwiched between glass so I wasn’t super worried about flatness. I opted for a snugger fit to avoid any gaps.
Is there a reason why your table saw sled is so long? You could make it half that length and it would still work
Not really I guess that was just the size of the scrap mdf I had.