Pie Cupboard
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- Опубліковано 7 тра 2021
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00:01 - Part 1 - • Craftsman Pie Cupboard...
02:05 - Part 2 - • Craftsman Pie Cupboard...
06:40 - Part 3 - • Craftsman Pie Cupboard...
08:06 - Part 4 - • Craftsman Pie Cupboard...
09:51 - Part 5 - • Craftsman Pie Cupboard...
Part 6 - • Craftsman Pie Cupboard...
Part 7 - • Craftsman Pie Cupboard...
12:32 - Part 8 - • Craftsman Pie Cupboard...
18:10 - Part 9 - • Craftsman Pie Cupboard...
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#woodworking #finewoodworking #traditionalwoodworking
Just perfect...!
Great work!
Thanks!
Beautiful build. Just wanted to add that your narrations during your videos are well spoken.
Thanks, I've been doing alot of work on my speaking skills so I'm glad it's noticeable!
Why is it that the best craftsman who are the most inspired have the fewest subs!?
Beautiful!!!!
UA-cam likes to keep us hidden, gives people a bit of a scavenger hunt!
Hopefully the sub numbers will start going up soon, until then I've still got plenty of awesome projects to put together!
Simplicidade e elegância! Belíssimo móvel!
A bit of gold gilding on that glass around it would take this to the next level.
A little to classy for my wallet but maybe someday I can give it a try!
@@morganhurst_redridge They have bronze and brass as well. When I said gold I myself was actually picturing brass coloired gilding. Me and my friends loosly call all of that "gold".
Wow beautiful . Thank you for sharing .
Thanks for visiting
Such a gorgeous outcome. This is truly ‘fine woodworking’ if I’ve ever seen it. The walnut doors just pop. From California: Great job dude!!!
Thanks Nick I really appreciate that!
Great looking project. And I happen to agree. Walnut and white oak look spectacular together.
Probably the best combination, although Walnut & Maple is a close second!
Beautiful build! And a great video. Really enjoyed watching.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Another great piece. And still in love with walnut and oak together.
This is another video of yours that I’ve seen before. Interestingly enough… I always seem to learn a little more with each video. Even the ones I’ve already seen. I watched the bedroom set earlier. I will never make a bedroom set. LOL. But I learned a lot of things from watching. Now on to the next!
You've been making impressive progress through the videos!
I know how you feel, every once in a while I'll go back and watch one of my videos, and there'll be some random tip I've forgotten and its like a eureka moment! Don't fully put off doing a bedroom set, just don't do it like I did! Eventually when I build a set for myself, I'm going to approach it one piece at a time so it's not so overwhelming!
Good to see you using hand planes and a scraper instead of sandpaper. I very seldom use sandpaper. I bought a pack of 120 grit 2 years ago and still have most of it left. No way sandpaper can compete with a smoothing plane. Keep up the good work.
I try to mostly use hand tools for my finishing then use 180 grit sanding to clean up any small marks left behind. The only time I find I have to break out the orbital is when sanding a breadboard end top, there's just to much grain changing for my skill level with handplanes!
Nice! I really like the white oak / walnut combo.
It's by far my favorite wood combination!
Nice work. Thank you for the video. I too really like white oak. I have never built something with white oak and walnut before but it does look good.
Thanks, these two woods are probably my favourite combination because they blend so well and have the perfect about of contrast.
Stunning!
Thanks!
very nice piece, thank you for sharing!
Thank you for watching, I'm glad you enjoyed it!
Quite the artist you are sir. Going to try a similar project for my daughter's craftsman home. However long this has taken you I will plan on 10 times more ...
It really was much less complex than you might think, when you just focus on one step at a time things go together pretty quick. If I remember correctly I spent about a month on this project in-between work and editing the videos for it.
Hellava Job !!! Very nice on using the walnut on your door panels. Have been looking for a pie safe to build and would love to use your design if you don't mind.
Go ahead! I based my design off of a pie safe I saw in a book, so I can't take to much credit for the design!
Beautiful!
Thank you!
Great looking cabinet. Might I suggest turning your own knobs? Those brass ones look store bought and don’t do your work justice. Love the curly birch!
I actually just got a lathe this past week and plan on try to turn knobs in the future!
wow, love this! Very inspiring!
Thanks so much!
Que de détails ! Il est magnifique. Merci à vous
Merci d'avoir regardé!
you have such good attention to detail
Thanks, that's one of my favourite parts about fine woodworking. All the little intricate details that have to come together really give the brain a good work out!
Awesome craftsmanship. I am still new to woodworking and was wondering why you rubbed your plane shavings on the drawer @15:39? A google search claimed burnishing the wood, but I didn't find a reason why. Thanks!
Think of it like a really fine sanding, the shavings have just enough texture to them that they can abrade the surface of the wood slightly. So after using the handplane on a surface, you can rub the shaving on that surface to help even out the finish because sometimes there will be slight differences between handplane passes. I don't use this technique anymore because 180 grit sandpaper works alot better, but it is one of those traditional techniques that's fun use.
Love from india
17:46 Hope you have changed the the way you do rabbits on the tablesaw.. The blade should be closer to the fence... ie you should be rabbiting the other edge closer to the fence rather then the far edge from the fence... There are two good reasons for this. 1. if the work piece moves away from the fence, the blade is in the waste area, not in what you want to keep. 2. The work piece is captured between the fence and the blade and any movement away from the fence can increase the chance of a kickback (even greater with a dado stack).. add a sacrificial fence (like MDF) to the fence and partially bury the blade or dado stack...
It's a really nice form, and your technical skills are awesome - I saw a few techniques here which I'll defo have a go with.
But 'Fine Woodwork' as used in the title means 'absolutely perfect' in my eyes. If you were receptive to constructive criticism, the thing that sticks out a bit to me is that the different component parts jar a little - the differing grain patterns, differing grain directions, and colour differences between the same timber species maybe make it come across as many pieces, rather than a whole cohesive thing?!? Not sure if that makes sense?
As an example, the two outer pieces, that also form the legs, with the grain running in opposite directions - the same with the other horizontal parts. They draw your eyes in lots of different directions, rather than all pulling together. Those details kind of break up the cohesiveness somehow?
It's a fantastic piece of work though, and your skills are way superior to mine for sure. So feel free to bin these comments off if you want, they aren't meant in a bad way anyway :-)
I do agree with you about those component, if you watch the last video in the detailed build series I talked about how I regretted some of my choices in lumber selection. The big problem on this project is I basically had no budget and very little choice in lumber, so I had to work with what I had.
As for your definition of Fine Woodworking, I don't personally agree with you. The purpose of Fine Woodworking is not to create absolute perfection, if that was case there wouldn't be a single fine woodworking piece of furniture in existence. Every woodworker is going to make small mistakes and if you browse through fine woodworking magazine you'll easily find pieces that look more like a DIY level of woodworking. What makes this a piece of fine furniture is the thought and design that when into the planning, the use of reliable & tradition joinery methods and finally think about the long term durability of the piece . Fine woodworking is all about focusing on the details, yes part of that is lumber selection and paying attention to the grain but that is just a part of creating a piece of fine furniture. You have to consider all the other aspect that go into creating a quality piece of furniture or as it's commonly referred to, fine furniture.
I do appreciate your comment, one of the reasons I like posting these video is because it lets more people see my projects and point out areas where I need to improve. Since this project, I've worked really hard to create that sense of connection between components because I do agree that it gets my projects one step closer to being perfect.
Big fan sir
Is there anyway to purchase the plans? Would love to make this for a college project
thank you Morgan. do you keep pies in it ?
Not in this one, but I do enjoy baking occasionally so someday I might build a new one that will actually work for cooling pies. Let's just say I've been trying to figure out how to do kumiko just for this reason!
nice
Thanks
👍👍👍
How do you like that dado blade set? Haven't been able to find a lot on them...
Really like your work keep the videos coming!
I absolutely love it and highly recommend it! Compared to every other brand I've thought about buying this Oshlun set is the best bang for your buck, especially if you want to use it for cutting across the grain.
Beautiful piece! Have you ever tried a 90 deg bevel on the Low Angle Jack plane for finishing? I know that Jonathan Katz-Moses has done a video about it.
I know you can buy blades for some handplane so they will act more like a card scraper which would be better for finishing but on my vertias low angle jack the most I can do is 67° (12° bed angle, 55° bevel). I have as 50° blade that I use once in a while for really chaotic grain but it's very difficult to push through the wood.
@@morganhurst_redridge Interesting. I believe that you could take a standard LAJ blade and grind a 90 degree bevel on them. Maybe it is more work than it is worth. Not trying to nit pick; just trying to help :). Do you know why this design is called a Pie Cupboard?
@@zachwithrow4121 I'll have to try grinding a blade once I get a grinder, that's a really interesting idea.
It's called a pie cupboard because traditionally they would have had vents where I put glass and you could leave fresh baking locked inside so that it could cool down. Weird fact, pie cupboard is the Canadian term while Jelly cabinet is the American term.
@@morganhurst_redridge That is interesting! Thanks for the facts and quick responses. I can't wait to see more of your work.
I know Rob Cosman is derided as a shill or whatever. I kinda believe that too sometimes. But his Kerf X-10 half blind tool is a game changer for half blind dovetails.
I've been think about getting that tool, it definitely would make the job just slightly easier!
@@morganhurst_redridge If you do them with any kind of regularity and don't have another method of clearing the waste, it is a worthwhile investment.
You make great pieces, I just don't know how you work with such poor lighting, someone get this man some daisy chain led fixtures for christmas!
I know right! At some point I'll work on upgrading the lighting, it's just not as much fun buying lights as it is buying machinery!
That’s hand cut joinery? Nah
Well it depends on what part you're watching. The parts where I'm using the table saw are not hand cut joinery. The parts where I'm cutting dovetails by hand, that would be called hand cut joinery.
The joins were hand cut, ergo that's hand cut joinery. The giveaway's in the name huh :-)
@@jtaylor8606 look, I don’t care, I was just saying. I suggest you go to 2:28 and notice the big twirly thingy cutting mortises. They call that thingy a router. That is a machine cutting joinery. It works just fine, just not really “hand cut joinery”. No shame intended, just a factual matter. The guy is a master in any case, I was just looking for hand cut joinery.