Building a small set of chairs. These are based on my kitchen chair plans but everything shortened and no armrests. Kitchen chairs build: woodgears.ca/kitchen_chairs/
@@Kardall yup, it's crazy up here. That's why I've resorted to breaking down pallets. If you look for good ones you can get quite a bit of usable wood.
Such a nice chairs. My father used to work in a woodworking shop making furniture when he was a kid, the chairs that he made 50 years ago are still in use today
Building heirlooms. About sixty years ago my Dad made a step stool for each of the his nieces and nephews (about six). I recently visited my cousin, now 64 years old, and she was using her step stool while resting her bad knee.
Years ago in the dorms at Briercrest I saw the neatest wood desk semi-rocking chairs. The legs were joined front to back with a runner that had 3 flat sections. The main one between the legs was square to the chair for "normal" sitting. The back segment started just behind CG and extended past the back and was angled up (like a rocking chair) which allowed for a safe, comfortable tip back that all the kids like to do. But what was really neat, was the front segment that stuck just barely past the front was also angled up - this allowed one to sit forward on the "edge of the seat" with the chair slight tipped forward for comfort. Most amazing chairs - never seen them anywhere else.
I've seen them called "two-position chairs"--but the ones I'm familiar with only lean back (they don't tilt forward). What you're describing would be a "three-position chair"--must be a new and improved model.
This video helps swallow the 30-60 dollar cost of a kids chair. But then, where would the fun be in that? Lol! So fun to watch you do these things. Lots of steps to the final product. More to it than meets the eye. If only I had the patience required. Kudos my friend!!
Beautiful work. Most people wouldn't understand why a simple piece of handmade furniture should cost hundreds of dollars; this shows how tedious it is, even with some nifty jigs.
I love the mix of setting up jigs for many of the repetitive operations but then just bucking up and taking your time on many of the operations. Looks like you have a very efficient use of time! (though of course that could just be the editing :P)
I don't think it's the editing.. it's the three kids ;) With just one, I've had to really optimize my shop time. Three and you're either incapacitated or a master of efficiency.
Many thanks for showing us the way with using your home made tools and bought machines - your are and inspiration - skilled craftsmen have been making furniture for 1000s of years - I just try my best in wood (my background is blacksmithing and welding - but prefer woodwork).
Timely. I am currently making a custom chair for a friend and this helped. My design is similar but not as fancy. It did help for how to attach the seat and order of assembly.
Just finished a set of three prototype chairs this week, and I have to say there was a lot of work to get those done! Although I had seen this video, I opted for a design of my own that implied 24 mortise and tenon joints for each chair, which I completed using a table saw, drill press and lots of fiddling with chisels. Took way too long, so since I'm planning to make more, for the next batches I'm cooking up some jigs for the routers I have, to hopefully cut those ~10 minutes spent per joint as much as I can, and make it a more humane effort to earn some cash. A pentarouter would be nice, but I'll try to do without :D
Matthias, cardstock is nice to work with. I recently added two more cats to my family, bringing the number to 4. One of my cats plays fetch. On day one I balled up a cash register receipt to make a toy for him. He responded by bringing it back. The long and the short of it is that his toy lasted only a couple of days. I decided to upgrade it to cardstock from a TV dinner box. This worked better as the toy lasted about 2 weeks. Unfortunately, it did "wear" out. I made him a new one, but he wouldn't play with them as it was from a different brand TV dinner. I finally went back to the market and again bought the first brand his toy was made from. He's once again playing fetch. Who knew that the smell of cardstock was that important to him.
Very nice. Those chairs look great! I was just rewatching some of your "Chair fix" videos, so it's interesting to see you building brand new chairs. I like the blocks you used under your clamps. It's interesting to think about a $50 Festool clamp being helped by a piece of scrap wood. Thanks for all you do Matthias.
@@KipdoesStuff That's very much true and kind of what I was interested to know. His tools and expertise produce much shorter build times than us mere mortals.
Kids chairs and kids tables are sometimes so hard to find. When my kid was young, I could find some rare chairs but no tables. I make one. Sometimes you just cannot buy some things that are so worth the trouble. Sure, it was used only for a few years but think if you had a table too high for several years!
Very fast , nice cutting and joining wood seems to be exciting of your talent in furniture making.lovely tools you are having.What will be your plan for these tools after dropping this carpenter work .
I enjoy your “data” videos, but I don’t always watch them all the way through as it sometimes gets a bit dense with info. I remember clicking off one recently about 70% of the way through thinking, “man, that was informative but I miss the project videos”. And lookie here! A project vid with pantorouter! Love it!
it would be cool to make stackable versions, so when your kids grow up you could have a dual purpose for them, perhaps a make shift cabinet with the gaps in the middle, or a taller chair.
If wood wasn't so expensive these days I'd... still be too lazy to do that. Nice work, as always!
boden says you are welcome
Ya I bought 3 sheets of 3/4" MDF and 4 2x4's and it cost me $320 CAD ;s
I'm making a chair very much like these out of scrap. Glue can be your friend.
You had me in the first half
@@Kardall yup, it's crazy up here. That's why I've resorted to breaking down pallets. If you look for good ones you can get quite a bit of usable wood.
Matthias, I wish more UA-camrs made content in your style. Interesting content, narrated well without a lot of fluff and sped up where it needs to be
We are so lucky to have him . His da da definitely past down the greatness in spades!
Was sort of expecting a Mother's day announcement of sorts when you started the line "Why 4 chairs for 3 kids (LOL)" Nice chairs!
Plus, they make great step stools. We've had a prototype kid's chair in the shop for years now and it gets used a lot.
This feels like a 2013-ish Matthias Wandel video, which I also super appreciate! A little more laid-back and less commentary.
Such a nice chairs. My father used to work in a woodworking shop making furniture when he was a kid, the chairs that he made 50 years ago are still in use today
Those are great and I'm sure you had fun making those. I would suggest you stamp a date because someone would like to see those 250 years from now.
Beautiful work Matthias! 💕 that joinery is so strong. Varnish came out great too 👍
I enjoyed watching as always. People have to see this process to appreciate good furniture work!
Building heirlooms. About sixty years ago my Dad made a step stool for each of the his nieces and nephews (about six). I recently visited my cousin, now 64 years old, and she was using her step stool while resting her bad knee.
Years ago in the dorms at Briercrest I saw the neatest wood desk semi-rocking chairs. The legs were joined front to back with a runner that had 3 flat sections. The main one between the legs was square to the chair for "normal" sitting. The back segment started just behind CG and extended past the back and was angled up (like a rocking chair) which allowed for a safe, comfortable tip back that all the kids like to do. But what was really neat, was the front segment that stuck just barely past the front was also angled up - this allowed one to sit forward on the "edge of the seat" with the chair slight tipped forward for comfort. Most amazing chairs - never seen them anywhere else.
Had these all over the University of Toledo dorms too - seems to be college standard issue
I've seen them called "two-position chairs"--but the ones I'm familiar with only lean back (they don't tilt forward). What you're describing would be a "three-position chair"--must be a new and improved model.
I always love seeing jigs. I'm even more amused by how many of those jigs seemed to be composed of leftover bits from this very project.
This video helps swallow the 30-60 dollar cost of a kids chair. But then, where would the fun be in that? Lol! So fun to watch you do these things. Lots of steps to the final product. More to it than meets the eye. If only I had the patience required. Kudos my friend!!
Beautiful work. Most people wouldn't understand why a simple piece of handmade furniture should cost hundreds of dollars; this shows how tedious it is, even with some nifty jigs.
I love the mix of setting up jigs for many of the repetitive operations but then just bucking up and taking your time on many of the operations. Looks like you have a very efficient use of time! (though of course that could just be the editing :P)
I don't think it's the editing.. it's the three kids ;)
With just one, I've had to really optimize my shop time. Three and you're either incapacitated or a master of efficiency.
Beautiful execution of a timeless design. Thanks for this.
Wow, a buil video, I didn't think you did those any more... :)
Thank you for all your videos. Love them all.
I am making a couple kid size tables from recycled construction lumber and I will be using your method for securing the top to the aprons!
Many thanks for showing us the way with using your home made tools and bought machines - your are and inspiration - skilled craftsmen have been making furniture for 1000s of years - I just try my best in wood (my background is blacksmithing and welding - but prefer woodwork).
Nice little chairs! I would still dish the seats, though, for more comfort.
Timely. I am currently making a custom chair for a friend and this helped. My design is similar but not as fancy. It did help for how to attach the seat and order of assembly.
Ridiculously strong. Nice job, Matthias!
Those are fine looking chairs
like the bandsaw builds I am sure you already working on the plans for the 4th child ;-) I still figuring out how to make my first one ;-).
This gets an extra 'like' on the project's intended use & just how nice the chairs look! Very NICE !
I like this format, not saying much for what needs to be done sweet and simple, I like it
First festool product I have spotted in your vid’s
Just finished a set of three prototype chairs this week, and I have to say there was a lot of work to get those done! Although I had seen this video, I opted for a design of my own that implied 24 mortise and tenon joints for each chair, which I completed using a table saw, drill press and lots of fiddling with chisels. Took way too long, so since I'm planning to make more, for the next batches I'm cooking up some jigs for the routers I have, to hopefully cut those ~10 minutes spent per joint as much as I can, and make it a more humane effort to earn some cash. A pentarouter would be nice, but I'll try to do without :D
Nicely done. I like your casual commentary. Thanks
This man is one of my favourites. Genius.
The next step for me would be to spend the next three days trying to get them to stop bibbling. 😃 Nice work as usual, Matthias.
Chairs are the big challenge for me. Very cool to see you whip out 4.
Those look and came out great!! Thanks for the upload!
Matthias, cardstock is nice to work with. I recently added two more cats to my family, bringing the number to 4. One of my cats plays fetch. On day one I balled up a cash register receipt to make a toy for him. He responded by bringing it back. The long and the short of it is that his toy lasted only a couple of days. I decided to upgrade it to cardstock from a TV dinner box. This worked better as the toy lasted about 2 weeks. Unfortunately, it did "wear" out. I made him a new one, but he wouldn't play with them as it was from a different brand TV dinner. I finally went back to the market and again bought the first brand his toy was made from. He's once again playing fetch. Who knew that the smell of cardstock was that important to him.
They look great
Yes!!!!!! Matthias building things!
Nice work as always!
Really beautiful chairs, Matthias! 😃
Fantastic work!!!
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
Watched it the other day great one
Beautiful designs! Great as always
I love these chairs. Awesome content as always.
Awesome work; the pantorouter and slot mortiser are just beast machines for this kind of stuff. Love it!
Amazing, as always! Thank you so much for sharing with us!
Those look amazing!!!
Great video Matthias, your speed and accuracy of mass production is impressive and consistent. ☝️.
Such a nice, satisfying video. The master doing what he does so well
love youre building videos so much.learn a lot of them.thank you.greatings from belgium
Thanks for the great build video!
woah ur audio quality has improved dramatically!
Very nice. Those chairs look great! I was just rewatching some of your "Chair fix" videos, so it's interesting to see you building brand new chairs. I like the blocks you used under your clamps. It's interesting to think about a $50 Festool clamp being helped by a piece of scrap wood. Thanks for all you do Matthias.
A lot of work made look simple in the video :-) Great job, the chairs look great and sturdy, perfect for kids.
Great Job Mathias
Saludos
with the 4th you can actually sit down for the tea parties 😂👌
Amazing work skills!) good job Matthias!)
Very nice work! It is interesting to see how many auxiliary pieces you had to make for perfect clamping, gluing, sawing etc.
Great job! Nice project for resale.
Beautiful!
Nice work, great video...thank you !!
Love your vids
Nice work, Matthias
Magical, Matthias.
very good work and good luck 👍
Sehr schön
hoffe die kleinen haben sich gefreut
I wish i could make things of this quality. My big problem is always holding the material.
matthias gave us awesome videos. youtube gave us a damn animated like button
Great work
4 chairs in under 10 minutes. Easy!
Haha, Festool t-slot clamp!
You've changed, Matthias! :P
When he said "why 4 chairs for 3 kids" I thought we were getting another baby announcement😆
Beautiful
Фантастика, молодец!!!
Well done!
Nice. Very sturdy chairs as conserning the users. Kids will make sure cheap ikea stuff will be broken in an instant.
Your a good dad !
Excelente como sempre, parabéns! 🇧🇷
Awesome!
3:27 damn, this is first time that I see some Festool here 😂
Lucky kids!
You have lucky kids.
Masterful! 👏 I couldn't believe how easy you made it look to cut out those back rails.
JFYI, those chairs are comfortable. Thanks.
I’ve not built the kids chairs. I was referring to the full size chairs
I have started watching videos at 2x speeds. And let me tell you. Your belt sander sounds like it is saying nom nom nom.
The quality if these chairs will be used by MW's great grandchildren.
Matthias, any idea how long it took you to make the four chairs? Amazing work as always!
Time is irrelevant. He is good at what he does so 6 hours for him could be 36 hrs for someone else.
@@KipdoesStuff That's very much true and kind of what I was interested to know. His tools and expertise produce much shorter build times than us mere mortals.
Looks me like it took eight minutes and forty seconds to build four chairs. ;-)
Nice!
Kids chairs and kids tables are sometimes so hard to find. When my kid was young, I could find some rare chairs but no tables. I make one. Sometimes you just cannot buy some things that are so worth the trouble. Sure, it was used only for a few years but think if you had a table too high for several years!
Agreed, I built a kids picnic table for this very reason. Made it slightly taller than "kids" height so the adults can still fit fine too
Danke, Matthias!
What a nice video
I'm very disappointed that Mattias didn't jump on one of the chairs to show how strong they are!
*muy buen trabajo en serie*
😎😎😎
Buying! Thanks!
Very fast , nice cutting and joining wood seems to be exciting of your talent in furniture making.lovely tools you are having.What will be your plan for these tools after dropping this carpenter work .
I enjoy your “data” videos, but I don’t always watch them all the way through as it sometimes gets a bit dense with info. I remember clicking off one recently about 70% of the way through thinking, “man, that was informative but I miss the project videos”. And lookie here! A project vid with pantorouter! Love it!
Great job Matthias! Do you think it would much of a stretch to make it a rocking chair?
👏👏👏👏👏👍👍👍muito bom como sempre vc é o cara um abraço pra todos vcs aí.
it would be cool to make stackable versions, so when your kids grow up you could have a dual purpose for them, perhaps a make shift cabinet with the gaps in the middle, or a taller chair.
I wish I could work as fast as you do.
it's all in the editing!
Good dad 👍
Thinking about how thick the glue is, maybe testing different ratios of water and glue for strength differences might be an interesting video?
:D I made a kids chair very similar to this design in January .. had I had this video for reference i see a few things i could have made better :)