You are incredibly talented, and I appreciate you showing HOW you made these. However, I believe that you made it look about 20 times easier than it actually is (the mark of a real craftsman). Thank you!
I'm getting back into woodworking, and I've been building small cabinets and keepsake boxes to tune my run down skills. These videos give me inspiration and ideas for future projects and hopefully I can find a market for.
Adrian Preda quick question. I was on your Etsy page to look how much you sell these for and couldn't believe how much these sell for! Do you work off a day rate? Or do you just try to recoup material costs. Each box must take a couple of hours work. Do you make anything from your work?
Hi, thanks for the comment. That's the price you pay for hand works, and unique items, I can say briefly. There are CNC made boxes on laser or whatever on etsy which sells like 10-15 usd but, you buy what you pay. Even for mines, the actual work price for these boxes should be more, but I have to adapt to how much an item like these is sold by others, by the market. It's not my plan, at least now, to sell these as a permanent thing, I just wanted to make a box like this, but decided to batch them more, in order to save some time and put the rest on sell, when they sell, will sell, I don't care. Probably if I was doing more machine work I would have saved some time, but not too much, the half of the time of the build is finishing, and you can only do this by hand.
Yes. I made some kissing fish as a valentine's gift for my wife and uploaded an image to FB. Somebody asked me to make them one also. Ok but it's gonna cost you £80. There was 6 hrs invested into that project and they wanted it for £15!! Batching out ten would still be £25 a piece and you can probably buy them on Etsy for £10. Handsanding the piece alone took 4 hrs. One offs gonna cost. Batching you can sell for cheaper but then that's not really why I'm into making project. It's a fine line between enjoyment of making a project and breaking even on commissions.
Also materials, if you look solely on the final object, are meaningless in terms of cost, what's behind them is the real deal, buying wood, transport, time, dimension, waste, work, documentation, consumables etc. Also, you must start from the premise that this is a very small market, not for mass people. Most are amazed seeing pics or appreciating them just by looking, but there is a long way buying it. You asked me if I have rates predefined; not having this as a business and a full shop where I can be aware of my flow, I try to make a price by comparing to the market and try to come out closely in the ratio work spent/real cost, even if I'm below in most cases. But, that's something I assume, the main thing is I wanna build things cause I enjoy it, if some will sell, that's additional, and it's welcomed :)
the small plane is cute.the main thing is that it works well.nice boxes,plain but elegant.a good example for craftsmanship and that less is sometimes more.
Hi Adrian, thank's a lot for your videos. After thinking years about some wood working, I'm more into metal working, your work made me buy my first plane, making a shooting board and planing for the 45° shooting board to make my first boxes.
Thanks Dirk, happy to hear that! I was too into other stuffs before ww, I bought a CNC to help me in my electronics's mechanical stuffs, then saw people woodworking on the cnc, then saw people handtool-ing on the wood, then I got into too :)
That box from that book was the first I made. Took several goes before I got a finished box! Takes me back. Your lid designs and seeing them there make me want to revisit that design.
Premium wood essences, judicious use of marking gauge followed by careful planing & finally oiled & wax for that showroom finish. A labour of love & a passion for Japanese woodwork seems to exert some influence in your design. All well finished; it's a real relaxing pleasure to watch a Maestro at his art. The music is very soothing; all the perfect ingredient to achieve a magnificent little box that the ladies would fall over for. Great stuff & very well executed. Kind regards. N.B: The Slovenian Woodworker another Maestro too.
Dear Sir, Thank you very much for your courteous reply. Great work should be appreciated greatly; you & your Slovenian accomplice make some absolutely marvellous stuff that is both a delight to see but more importantly watching two Maestros making it is equally entertaining. Kind regards & long may you live Sir.
A perfect example of ultra high quality workmanship using only hand tools with the exception of cutting the recess for the splines. Do that by hand and you sir, would be even more talented. Excellent video!
Thank you! This is supposed to be a simple box design, actually I'm trying to go through several boxes from the book I've mentioned in description where I was inspired, from the simplest to more. It is a good and rewarding work this box making :)
Man, I was sure I had replied to you yesterday just after you comment, but probably didn't hit reply or whatever :) Wife warned me now, when browsing through comments, hey why you left this Joe with no reply, then I was wtf, I did, but no :)) very sorry! Thank you very much for your appreciation! There will be more boxes projects, I'm kinda in a boxmaking life crisis momentum now :))
Superb! Was wondering why you didn't use the 45 degrees shooting board for the bottom edge chamfer and how about making a 30 / 60 degrees shooting board side?
Thanks! The 45 shooting board was too small to chamfer the box there, I think it passed the blade's length or almost to the end. But anyway it's just need to be a small chamfer, 2mm, to create like a floating effect of the box when sitting on a flat clean shelf. 30/60 board worth building when you have more stuff to plane and precise, I can deal for now adding a raised block to the straight one :)
Very nice, do you have any more information on the mitred shooting board design? I'm looking at making something myself! I'm also trying to think of a way to cut recesses for splines in a bow without a table saw, maybe using a hand saw with a wide enough kerf but could be messy Thanks!
The shooting board design is from a Fine Woodworking magazine issue, issue 261, may-june 2017. I also wanna try by hands these days to make some spline. I've made smaller pen boxes and wanna make just a cut, kerf's width of the dozuki and add inside some veneer, made with a plane or see what else. Hope to manage and not to ruin the boxes :)
Congrats for the video and the boxes! they look awesome! Imi place foarte mult stilul tau de lucru, simplu, curat si eficient. Ma inspiri sa fac ceva asemanator :D
Beautiful work! Very fine craftsmanship! One question: have you considered using hide glue in your construction? It’s used in making musical instruments and fine furniture...👍🏻
Yes! Some very nice, well made boxes Adrian and I like the cutting gauge you use if you don’t mind me asking where could I buy one preferably from someone who would post to Poland.
Wonderful workflow, designs and video! All the lids are attractive, I’m drawn to the one with the inlay. I may have to attempt a lid like that. Have you considered texturing the lids or boxes with a gouge?
1st outstanding work. Question for you. Have you considered using scrapers instead of sandpaper? I find when I scrape instead on sand the wood looks cleaner
Thanks Antonio! Yes, I have some scrapers, but use them very rarely. I have to put in order their sharpening techniques and start to use them more often.
Love the channel, even modeled my workbench off yours a year back, almost identical. Anyways I’m finally commenting becausing I’m curious about that marking gauge iron you got there. Where did ya get it or make it? Perhaps a vid on that?
Thanks Jason! Glad to know you liked the workbench! That marking gauge is not made by me, a lot of peps asked the same :) It's a japanese kebiki marking gauge, or in this video it's a dual knife one. I've put a link in the description, there are plenty of them on amazon, me I bought it from fine tools germany. Note that they come slightly untuned, some rough spots of the wood and also the blade. Specially those with wedges, you need to fine tune it to make the wedge work, also sharpen the knifes. Mines had a lot of burr on it. This is how jp wooden tools usually come, mostly the economical range. But once you do these things, and it's not a big deal, you can know the tool better this way :) they are a great tools. My marking gauge(s) is prob the most used tool in my projects.
Thanks! To save 1-2" of making grooves. Kidding, or almost :) No, now that I try to remember, maybe I did it just to know I've ended up with the saw, at least for some time, in my work flow. You can do it even after too. In fact, the box in the video is made from leftovers from the others. At those I had a continuous piece which I've groove it all at once, then cut it into 4 pieces, having 3 corners matching grain. The reason I rough cut at 45 is to save some time and effort on the shooting board when making the perfect 45s.
Hi Adrian, new fan to your channel here! (I had just written a nice comment and I lost it, so here I go again). A few questions for you if you don't mind! Is there a trick to the shooting board and plane combo? The blade on the plane seems to be shallow enough to not eat away at the shooting board itself, but have enough edge to take away material on the subject. Do you use the same method to sharpen and hone your chisels as you did the blade in your japanese plane video? If not, that would be a great video to see as well! Also I remember seeing a low grit stone presented, while only seeing you use the 1000 and 5000 grit waterstones. And finally, is there an alternative to power tool drilling? I see some videos of a 'drilling' hand tool to prepare joints for dowels. This technique would be interesting to see more of, as well. I've wanted to start woodworking for a while, and your videos displaying your great work has inspired me to finally take action. I have just bought some different tools to get me started; a Ryoba and Dozuki included. I enjoy the fact that you do 98% of the work without power tools, the japanese style is very fitting to my personality and principles - and discovering some of the japanese style via your work has been eye opening.
Hi, thank you very much! 1. Because the blade width is less than the plane sole width, the plane will eventually rest against the shooting board with that 5-6 mm bellow the blade. 2. I use the same method, sometimes with honing guides, see the types I use in the links in the description or the full tool list on my blog. Now I have also a #8000 and #320 stone, for super fine work, respective rectifying dull blades, but the most used are the 1 and 5k ones. The lower grit you saw is a #400 diamond one that I use to flatten the water stones. 3. Look for brace drill, bit brace etc those are the manual drilling stuff :)
Hi, thanks! No extra words, I do recommend it! I should have bought it from the first time, and not a bunch of craps :)) Actually mine is LA smoothing, not jack, from Veritas. It's a bit shorter, 10.5" vs 15".
Great design. I was wondering why you went to your friend's shop to cut the miter key slots? I have only seen people do this on a table saw with a jig, and was thinking it would be easy with hand tools, maybe a saw and chisel.
Thanks! I've tried once, aimed 1/8" wide slot, in the end I got 8 mm...The box is too small and too risky to ruin it, maybe on a bigger one I could have done it with a straight guide block of wood, but note that you cut along the grain, it can steal you anytime. And, I aim in the end to make a good clean final project, no mater how, love of hand tools comes always second :)
Wow! Attention to detail at its best. You have se the bar very high. Thanks for your post.
Thanks David!
You are using techniques that I last saw in the 60's - WAY TO GO!!!
You are incredibly talented, and I appreciate you showing HOW you made these. However, I believe that you made it look about 20 times easier than it actually is (the mark of a real craftsman).
Thank you!
Thank you!
I'm getting back into woodworking, and I've been building small cabinets and keepsake boxes to tune my run down skills. These videos give me inspiration and ideas for future projects and hopefully I can find a market for.
Stunning! This was one of the most soothing videos I’ve ever watched. Everything flowed together so beautifully. I can watch these all day.
Thank you very much! Yes, this is the video I'm the most proud of so far :)
Delightful. You nailed these boxes. Your work is something I aspire to.
Thank you! I'm glad you like it! It was actually the quickest edited video so far, only 2 days :))
Adrian Preda quick question. I was on your Etsy page to look how much you sell these for and couldn't believe how much these sell for! Do you work off a day rate? Or do you just try to recoup material costs. Each box must take a couple of hours work. Do you make anything from your work?
Hi, thanks for the comment. That's the price you pay for hand works, and unique items, I can say briefly. There are CNC made boxes on laser or whatever on etsy which sells like 10-15 usd but, you buy what you pay. Even for mines, the actual work price for these boxes should be more, but I have to adapt to how much an item like these is sold by others, by the market. It's not my plan, at least now, to sell these as a permanent thing, I just wanted to make a box like this, but decided to batch them more, in order to save some time and put the rest on sell, when they sell, will sell, I don't care. Probably if I was doing more machine work I would have saved some time, but not too much, the half of the time of the build is finishing, and you can only do this by hand.
Yes. I made some kissing fish as a valentine's gift for my wife and uploaded an image to FB. Somebody asked me to make them one also. Ok but it's gonna cost you £80. There was 6 hrs invested into that project and they wanted it for £15!! Batching out ten would still be £25 a piece and you can probably buy them on Etsy for £10. Handsanding the piece alone took 4 hrs. One offs gonna cost. Batching you can sell for cheaper but then that's not really why I'm into making project. It's a fine line between enjoyment of making a project and breaking even on commissions.
Also materials, if you look solely on the final object, are meaningless in terms of cost, what's behind them is the real deal, buying wood, transport, time, dimension, waste, work, documentation, consumables etc. Also, you must start from the premise that this is a very small market, not for mass people. Most are amazed seeing pics or appreciating them just by looking, but there is a long way buying it. You asked me if I have rates predefined; not having this as a business and a full shop where I can be aware of my flow, I try to make a price by comparing to the market and try to come out closely in the ratio work spent/real cost, even if I'm below in most cases. But, that's something I assume, the main thing is I wanna build things cause I enjoy it, if some will sell, that's additional, and it's welcomed :)
the small plane is cute.the main thing is that it works well.nice boxes,plain but elegant.a good example for craftsmanship and that less is sometimes more.
Hi Adrian, thank's a lot for your videos. After thinking years about some wood working, I'm more into metal working, your work made me buy my first plane, making a shooting board and planing for the 45° shooting board to make my first boxes.
Thanks Dirk, happy to hear that! I was too into other stuffs before ww, I bought a CNC to help me in my electronics's mechanical stuffs, then saw people woodworking on the cnc, then saw people handtool-ing on the wood, then I got into too :)
You do amazing work and i must have that mini planer and those brass clamps. Making beautiful things with tiny too cool tools, winning
Very nice box! Will last a lifetime! Thank you.
Thank you Robert!
That box from that book was the first I made. Took several goes before I got a finished box! Takes me back. Your lid designs and seeing them there make me want to revisit that design.
Premium wood essences, judicious use of marking gauge followed by careful planing & finally oiled & wax for that showroom finish. A labour of love & a passion for Japanese woodwork seems to exert some influence in your design. All well finished; it's a real relaxing pleasure to watch a Maestro at his art. The music is very soothing; all the perfect ingredient to achieve a magnificent little box that the ladies would fall over for. Great stuff & very well executed. Kind regards. N.B: The Slovenian Woodworker another Maestro too.
Thank you Sir for your kind comment and appreciations! I'm really grateful for your feedback! Adrian
Dear Sir,
Thank you very much for your courteous reply. Great work should be appreciated greatly; you & your Slovenian accomplice make some absolutely marvellous stuff that is both a delight to see but more importantly watching two Maestros making it is equally entertaining. Kind regards & long may you live Sir.
Dear Sir, the pleasure 's all mine. All the very best. Kind regards.
ToolsConsumables l
You are really good at this. Such precision! Well done.
This is outstanding workmanship. It was a pleasure to watch and learn. Thanks for sharing your ideas and obvious skills. Best wishes.
@2:15 those perfect miters. You make that look so easy.
A perfect example of ultra high quality workmanship using only hand tools with the exception of cutting the recess for the splines. Do that by hand and you sir, would be even more talented. Excellent video!
craftsmanship by a real artisan , very clear and informative, great demonstration of hand tool use and quality products , just clicked subscribe
Thank you very much!
One of the most relaxing woodworking videos I've ever seen, and I'm saying that having watched all of ISHITANI FURNITURE's videos!
Thank you very much! If you mention Ishitani then I'm blushed :D
Just getting into woodworking. Fantastic video and box. I love your setup for the plane. Very clever. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you also for watching! Wish you all the best into the craft! :)
Such a beautiful and creative way to make a keepsake box!
I love your precision and how cleanly you work, great outcomes.
+Mike Shipman Thanks Mike!
lovely peaceful music and a joy to watch handtool skills.
Glad you like it! Thanks!
A pleasure watch, chap. Another thing to try making at furniture school!
Thank you! This is supposed to be a simple box design, actually I'm trying to go through several boxes from the book I've mentioned in description where I was inspired, from the simplest to more. It is a good and rewarding work this box making :)
You make that look so easy, what a wonderful talent.
Incredible craftsmanship!
I enjoyed the video...you are amazing. Love the use of the hand tools. The boxes are beautiful.
Thank you Mark!
Just found your channel, amazing wood work and craftsmanship . Beautiful pieces that anyone would be proud to own. Carl
Thank you Carl!
LOVE the hand tool work!!
Very nice indeed. Simple and attractive
Thanks John!
Those are just wonderful! I enjoy watching your expert use of hand tools . Great job!
Thank you! Appreciate it!
excellent work and great to see hand tools used
Thank you very much!
this is great work! I'm inspired. I dont have a shop or machine equipment, but I want to make boxes with handtools
Those are some beautiful boxes! Very nice craftsmanship! Love boxes like that🍻
Man, I was sure I had replied to you yesterday just after you comment, but probably didn't hit reply or whatever :) Wife warned me now, when browsing through comments, hey why you left this Joe with no reply, then I was wtf, I did, but no :)) very sorry! Thank you very much for your appreciation! There will be more boxes projects, I'm kinda in a boxmaking life crisis momentum now :))
Great designs and execution
Beautiful attention to detail.
Amazing Work! very well done, both wood working and videos.
Great video. It shows a whole next level Skill set. I can actually feel the work.
Unreal how you get everything perfect, I’ve tried this many times and it’s never close to being this good, it’s so frustrating, thanks for the video
Just breathtakingly beautiful!
I love your style man. Great videos
Hi, thanks! I'm really glad you like them!
que trabajo tan bonito y desestresante ver el vídeo con esa música tan agradable. felicitaciones
Thanks!
The only thing I can say is "EXCELLENT". You are the MASTER.
some of the best boxes on the net.
Fantastic work, Adrian!
Thank you Nigel!
Very nice box! Thank again.
Very nice work and an enjoyable video presentation too
Thank you!
beautiful little box.
Your work is beautiful!
very nice box great job
Thank you and thanks for watching!
Very nice boxes and the craftsmanship is exquisite.
Billy
Thank you very much Billy!
Simply a masterpiece!
Thank you Franco!
nice job sir - congratulation from Brazil
Obrigado!
Хорошее творчество, «прямые руки»😉👍
The boxes look great. Good luck with your shop! I had no idea that you are established in Slovenia.
Thank you! Doar m-am miscat la vreo juma de ora de unde stateam in Italia :)
nicely made and filmed
Thanks, and thank you for the feedback!
O do i like your video so relaxing nice music only thing missing is a glass of wine. many thanks for shareing.
Thanks Paul! Almost, many beers were drink during the build process. After work, of course :)
oooow of cource.
i see that somebody like to shop at lee valley. love the miniature router plane
Superb! Was wondering why you didn't use the 45 degrees shooting board for the bottom edge chamfer and how about making a 30 / 60 degrees shooting board side?
Thanks! The 45 shooting board was too small to chamfer the box there, I think it passed the blade's length or almost to the end. But anyway it's just need to be a small chamfer, 2mm, to create like a floating effect of the box when sitting on a flat clean shelf. 30/60 board worth building when you have more stuff to plane and precise, I can deal for now adding a raised block to the straight one :)
Nice little boxes, Adrian. Do you plan a separate video for the kumiko work? I hope so.
Ciao Marco! Yes, I do plan, just to set up more well my jigs in order to make it more flawless.
Es un placer tan grande verte trabajar siempre y además con unos resultados tan magníficos, fino y delicado final. Fantástico!!!!
Beautiful, dude. Just... Beautiful!
Inspiration project good look and awesome 🛠👍
greetings 😊
Thank you!
You can't see it but I am clapping Bravo bravo
Thank you :)
Craftsmanship! Beautiful
Thank you!
Boxes look amazing . Nice stylish/elegant desgin. I'm glad that my saw didn't eate them :-)
Thanks man! And for the help too! Yes, it's a hungry big beast, glad the boxes survived :))
@@AdrianPreda Will this same thing work with a tiny router bit with a jig that allows me to pass it in a 45 deg like you did?
I don't have a saw :(
I love this design. Can you give me some rough sizes/dimensions as I'd like to make something similar for my granddaughter.
Very nice, do you have any more information on the mitred shooting board design? I'm looking at making something myself! I'm also trying to think of a way to cut recesses for splines in a bow without a table saw, maybe using a hand saw with a wide enough kerf but could be messy
Thanks!
The shooting board design is from a Fine Woodworking magazine issue, issue 261, may-june 2017. I also wanna try by hands these days to make some spline. I've made smaller pen boxes and wanna make just a cut, kerf's width of the dozuki and add inside some veneer, made with a plane or see what else. Hope to manage and not to ruin the boxes :)
Nice video, I enjoy the music. Good well with this very nice build. Thanks for sharing
Thanks! Yeah, first time I use this genre, browse it quickly today before uploading, I started to like it too :)
Congrats for the video and the boxes! they look awesome! Imi place foarte mult stilul tau de lucru, simplu, curat si eficient. Ma inspiri sa fac ceva asemanator :D
Thank you! Multumesc pentru aprecieri, si succes si tie!
Great build! What kind of squeeze clamps you using?
Beautiful work! Very fine craftsmanship!
One question: have you considered using hide glue in your construction? It’s used in making musical instruments and fine furniture...👍🏻
Thank you! I heard of it but don't know many details. PVA glue that I use works sufficient enough for my type of projects
Thank you! I heard of it but don't know many details. PVA glue that I use works sufficient enough for my type of projects
wow awesome diy ...what kind of wood u use pls? thank u
Yes! Some very nice, well made boxes Adrian and I like the cutting gauge you use if you don’t mind me asking where could I buy one preferably from someone who would post to Poland.
Very nice Adrian :) Thank you :)
Thanks!
Now we know who's been buying all the mini-tools from Veritas :-) I always wondered what those were for. Great work.
I just have 2 out of 7 minuatures from Veritas :) Chisels and router plane. Yes, they work too :)
Lovely relaxing video and beautiful boxes! Cheers
Thanks Andrea!
ძალიან ლამაზი დიზიაინია !! yor work is amazing !! very ellegant, very beautiful. Adrian, can i use your designe to make such designed box ?
Thanks! Sure, they are not my own design
Wonderful workflow, designs and video! All the lids are attractive, I’m drawn to the one with the inlay. I may have to attempt a lid like that. Have you considered texturing the lids or boxes with a gouge?
This is rediculusly fine tuned. I love finish carpentry, but damn I could never work like you do. Major kudos man. It's incredible!
Thank you!
OK, that does it! I’m subscribing, Great stuff. Thanks for sharing.
:) Thank you! Glad you like it! Thanks for subscribing!
Awesome work love your work and videos.
Thank you, I'm glad you enjoy it!
frumos...mi-a placut...n-am nici cea mai vaga idee de unde ai facut rost de lemnul de esenta tare....
Mersi! S-au adunat, de pe la unu', de pe la altul :)
1st outstanding work.
Question for you. Have you considered using scrapers instead of sandpaper? I find when I scrape instead on sand the wood looks cleaner
Thanks Antonio! Yes, I have some scrapers, but use them very rarely. I have to put in order their sharpening techniques and start to use them more often.
Nice work. I would have to really learn to sharpen a blade before I could ever use planes that much.
Stupendo lavoro!
Grazie!
Que lindo.
Parabéns!
😍
Thanks!
Love the channel, even modeled my workbench off yours a year back, almost identical. Anyways I’m finally commenting becausing I’m curious about that marking gauge iron you got there. Where did ya get it or make it? Perhaps a vid on that?
Thanks Jason! Glad to know you liked the workbench! That marking gauge is not made by me, a lot of peps asked the same :) It's a japanese kebiki marking gauge, or in this video it's a dual knife one. I've put a link in the description, there are plenty of them on amazon, me I bought it from fine tools germany. Note that they come slightly untuned, some rough spots of the wood and also the blade. Specially those with wedges, you need to fine tune it to make the wedge work, also sharpen the knifes. Mines had a lot of burr on it. This is how jp wooden tools usually come, mostly the economical range. But once you do these things, and it's not a big deal, you can know the tool better this way :) they are a great tools. My marking gauge(s) is prob the most used tool in my projects.
Nice work. I don't understand why you cut the 'rough' 45 degree miters before cutting the rabbets and dadoes in the box sides.
Thanks! To save 1-2" of making grooves. Kidding, or almost :) No, now that I try to remember, maybe I did it just to know I've ended up with the saw, at least for some time, in my work flow. You can do it even after too. In fact, the box in the video is made from leftovers from the others. At those I had a continuous piece which I've groove it all at once, then cut it into 4 pieces, having 3 corners matching grain. The reason I rough cut at 45 is to save some time and effort on the shooting board when making the perfect 45s.
Hey Good Job , very Nice !!! Can You Show your Jig in Detail to use your slicer ? Greets
Thanks! You mean the miter shooting board? I don't have any video of it, but you can google that name and there are many ways of building it
Is that the veritas miniature router plane with a 3/32” bit? Is that what size bottom you’re using?
Okay.. now I'm inspired!
where did you purchase these tools which help to create these boxes ?? could you kindly inform??? thanks
Hi Adrian, new fan to your channel here! (I had just written a nice comment and I lost it, so here I go again). A few questions for you if you don't mind!
Is there a trick to the shooting board and plane combo? The blade on the plane seems to be shallow enough to not eat away at the shooting board itself, but have enough edge to take away material on the subject.
Do you use the same method to sharpen and hone your chisels as you did the blade in your japanese plane video? If not, that would be a great video to see as well! Also I remember seeing a low grit stone presented, while only seeing you use the 1000 and 5000 grit waterstones.
And finally, is there an alternative to power tool drilling? I see some videos of a 'drilling' hand tool to prepare joints for dowels. This technique would be interesting to see more of, as well.
I've wanted to start woodworking for a while, and your videos displaying your great work has inspired me to finally take action. I have just bought some different tools to get me started; a Ryoba and Dozuki included. I enjoy the fact that you do 98% of the work without power tools, the japanese style is very fitting to my personality and principles - and discovering some of the japanese style via your work has been eye opening.
Hi, thank you very much!
1. Because the blade width is less than the plane sole width, the plane will eventually rest against the shooting board with that 5-6 mm bellow the blade.
2. I use the same method, sometimes with honing guides, see the types I use in the links in the description or the full tool list on my blog. Now I have also a #8000 and #320 stone, for super fine work, respective rectifying dull blades, but the most used are the 1 and 5k ones. The lower grit you saw is a #400 diamond one that I use to flatten the water stones.
3. Look for brace drill, bit brace etc those are the manual drilling stuff :)
Hi Adrian, love your work, it's very inspiring. I see you use a low angle jack plane. I've been thinking of getting one, would you recommend them?
Hi, thanks! No extra words, I do recommend it! I should have bought it from the first time, and not a bunch of craps :)) Actually mine is LA smoothing, not jack, from Veritas. It's a bit shorter, 10.5" vs 15".
Thanks Adrian, I guess we should always go for the best tools we can afford. Thanks for your advice and keep up the great work!
+chrissilverhand1 Or, I'm too poor to buy cheap tools😁 Thanks, same to you!
Good afternoon, congratulations on your work. The pieces were beautiful! What is the mark of this planer? And what kind of her?
Thanks! Which plane?
@@AdrianPreda A big one that you use in this project?
Thats a Veritas low angle smooting plane
such beautiful boxes I need 2 build a 45 degree shooting board 2 help me with my miters
Simplesmente maguinífico.
Great design. I was wondering why you went to your friend's shop to cut the miter key slots? I have only seen people do this on a table saw with a jig, and was thinking it would be easy with hand tools, maybe a saw and chisel.
Thanks! I've tried once, aimed 1/8" wide slot, in the end I got 8 mm...The box is too small and too risky to ruin it, maybe on a bigger one I could have done it with a straight guide block of wood, but note that you cut along the grain, it can steal you anytime. And, I aim in the end to make a good clean final project, no mater how, love of hand tools comes always second :)
I'd like to see how you make the block plane miterer
The shooting board? Prob one day when this will wear I will do a video too