Awesome video! I never realized there were so many effective ways to create butt joints. The explanations and visuals make it super easy to understand, even for beginners like me. Definitely going to try a few of these methods on my next project. At the beginning of my woodworking journey, an ebook called Hovorka Easy Peasy Method helped me a lot! Thanks for sharing these tips!
I'm so glad I found you. You're making it simple for this stupid. I need to make a somewhat padded headboard from offcuts, using just basic tools, a jigsaw and a drill. Arriving here gave me hope. Thank you
Agreed. I hate it. Even with recipes you’ll look something up and get 1500 words on the history of the recipe and how much their family loved it. Just need the recipe. Thanks!
we used #10 on our coffee tables we made back in 68 but we had to measure the cut out and use a hand saw and a chisel. worked great. I have not seen that joint made since then. Thank You. #9 is my new favorite.
Great video. Each joint has their own application. Having said that, the #3 pocket hole can be done better by having the holes outside rather than inner side of the joint. The screws should be pointing towards towards the board to grab more material.
I've been putting a little shelf together with a combination of dowels, hidden dowels, and mitered splines. Only thing is, only two of my 15 joints are at 90 degrees! So it has been a real adventure, figuring all of this stuff out. This has been a helpful video, thank you.
I like a true dovetail, glued or without glue. Everyone has their own favorites. It's one of the things that make working with wood so interesting and beautiful. Oh, yeah, USEFUL too.
@@myaccount9745 Yes, the dang set up sometimes takes longer than the job. Reminds me: I visited a cabinet shop to have them trim down some window shutters (back around 1963). It had been in town for several decades. I was surprised at how they had set up some simple table saws to easily and quickly do specific jobs. I was also impressed at how the old man there carefully double checked all of his measurements and calculations.
@@nemo227 Oh yeah there's a lot of 'secret' tricks in the trade and combined with skill people can do the craziest things with "simple" tools a hobbyist might not even be able to get done with all the niche tools we have today. It's crazy what some people can do with a circular saw, a drill and some hand tools and guides. I still like having a router and a table saw... I don't mind long set up times if it's built to last. If I make dovetails, it's probably meant to last at least a few years. Else I might as well use nails...
@@myaccount9745 Nails . . . nails . . . oh, yeah, those long metal thingies that some people use. (I'm old but still a smartass). I had a musician friend that took up wood working in his early retirement. He would have been a master craftsman. Our kitchen has several things he made: cabinet doors, cabinets, free standing pantry. He died a couple of years ago but the things he built are still here and a daily memory of his craftsmanship. BTW, do you make your living building or is woodworking a personal activity?
I didn`t intend to make use of this woodworking book, *TopFineWoodworking. Com* but rather curious about it. I had been truly amazed right after trying it. It never disappointed me in my wish to acquire more information about the art of wood working. Many topics were covered, including everything from wood types to developing your workshop.?
I got here from 9gag by people talking about woodworking and mentions something like 'proper joint' but I love this video, it looks so fun! I'm not a woodworker and never ever do any woodworking in my life, but I subscribe to this channel because the contents are so good. Am I weird?
You whites peoples are perfect in every field of lives. That's why I respect you and love you. You are using so many machines here to do your woods works perfectly and hassle free.
A dowel joint would be the strongest for those who are wondering (other than a dovetail through or half-blind) and is much easier obtained with a jig like the dowelmax. On a miter with a 45deg attachment on the dowelmax, you can drill through and have exposed dowels, an attractive alternative.
David, I’ve been a subscriber of yours for some time now. I enjoy how you don’t spend a ton of time spewing B.S. and you just get down to the point (project). I find your videos informative and reliable. There’s a lot of woodworking channels here on UA-cam and unfortunately a lot of them aren’t the best source of information. I look forward to your upcoming videos. Thank You
Way easy to figure out. The strongest joint is the one that has the most gluing surface. The spline joint. I like the blind mitered spline joint, however as it's plenty strong, and is invisible.
@@lar10101 Not necessarily. The spline joint goes from edge to edge on the wood and so makes it easier to lever apart. A tenon (loose, domino, or full traditional) is fully housed and so may actually end up stronger. Same with dowels.
I like using corner clamps, then drilling a hole straight through both pieces at a 45" angle for a dowel, just glue it then just cut the dowel ends off, and sand smooth. I generally do this when I am using a lot of soft woods as even when I predrill holes, screws will split the wood near the ends if I look at if funny, haven't had an issue with dowels though.
I am new to woodworking and absolutely love it. I spend a lot of time learning all I can. I love this video and subscribed to you. I am trying to learn everything I can about joining wood. I want to make a chest for my grandpa. I have a question. I was interested in the pocket hole method and while looking at videos on it. I found someone who said to put the pocket holes on the outside for strength. I chose this joining way because in your video it was on the inside, so it would be hidden in the chest I want to make. Please clarify if I should use pocket holes on the inside or outside. Thank you so much and I can't wait to watch more videos.
My husband was a woodworker/cabinet maker. His shop is beautiful, he died of Cancer 5 years ago. so I am learning his god given talent! The Table saw joinery is very intimating to me! I am working on making some simple projects and this is very helpful to me. Thanks for sharing
When I was building my coffee table I used 60mm screw straight down the edge and I have filled up the holes with pine filler. After sanding and 2 layers of linseed oil everything looked like it was done with dowels. Everyone thought it was store bought as I have spent time with the finish. Later I have used the same technique on the dining table and the 4 seater bench.
They were done so roughly that he didn't want to show them off. Misaligned and pretty terrible quality for a professional, video could also be called how-not-to-use-glue. I know these joints aren't for a customer but jeez. If I did pay this man for a glue joint, I'd like it to be fully glued.
Hi, man...very nice this video... The last three plugins / examples, the ones I liked the most ... I will practice it and use them in future projects...thank you for sharing them 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 Wagner ( from Brazil )
If you are one of those people who enjoys building woodworking crafts/projects and some basic carpentry skills this website will interest you in the same way that it did me. >> *TopFineWoodworking. Com*
"Here are 10 ways to do a butt joint. These last two are my favorite. They aren't *technically* butt joints tho. I don't know, we're just having fun. Can't we just have fun?"
Awesome video! I never realized there were so many effective ways to create butt joints. The explanations and visuals make it super easy to understand, even for beginners like me. Definitely going to try a few of these methods on my next project. At the beginning of my woodworking journey, an ebook called Hovorka Easy Peasy Method helped me a lot! Thanks for sharing these tips!
I'm so glad I found you. You're making it simple for this stupid. I need to make a somewhat padded headboard from offcuts, using just basic tools, a jigsaw and a drill. Arriving here gave me hope. Thank you
I love the no nonsense approach to the video. He doesn't spend ten minutes talking about nothing, he just gets to it!
Agreed. I hate it. Even with recipes you’ll look something up and get 1500 words on the history of the recipe and how much their family loved it.
Just need the recipe. Thanks!
You must have missed the commercial from 5:09 - 6:39!
I agree! You know what, I don't even mind watching the advert because I feel like he deserves it.
bit like my love life ,, tiny fore play ,, then she starts the stop watch ,,
agreed!
As a total beginner, this is incredibly helpful. Answered a number of questions I have about joining two pieces of wood together.
Such a simple thing I never thought I would need help with
we used #10 on our coffee tables we made back in 68 but we had to measure the cut out and use a hand saw and a chisel. worked great. I have not seen that joint made since then. Thank You. #9 is my new favorite.
Nice, so not only was.music great back then... So was carpentry
Cool Joining tips. Quick and easy. Thanks
Thank you!
Great video. Each joint has their own application. Having said that, the #3 pocket hole can be done better by having the holes outside rather than inner side of the joint. The screws should be pointing towards towards the board to grab more material.
Yup, if you are going to do pocket holes at least do them correctly.
Absolutely, this is critical. And more leverage
Yes that joint he made is weak and will break easily. Outside is the way to go.
But what about when you want to hide the hole so you drill on the inside??
DIY Sliding Crosscut Table. The Holy Grail of Tablesaw Accessories
ua-cam.com/video/Svji38dVOcg/v-deo.html
Dude looks like he's gonna be late for a meeting but still nails it.
Heh, nails it.
Late because he’s working on a joint and nailing some butt? He’s not the first.
Overly complicating my joints always made me late, especially when I’m not a talented craftsman 🍃🥬😮💨
I agree, exactly as the below comment, - No B.S. - No vanity "look at me" self filming. Wish there were more like you. Thank you
I love that you just name them and go for it, no long explanations or strength comparisons, they all work.
good style of video, no talking crap for twenty minutes, double thumbs up!
I've been putting a little shelf together with a combination of dowels, hidden dowels, and mitered splines. Only thing is, only two of my 15 joints are at 90 degrees! So it has been a real adventure, figuring all of this stuff out. This has been a helpful video, thank you.
when did i ask
Best part of learning how to roll a joint? You get to smoke your mistakes
@@mustafamirzaee9508 🥶
Thanks!
Thank you!
Love the channel man, straight to the point in quick detail, no time to waste talking about the history of this and that.👍👍
I like a true dovetail, glued or without glue. Everyone has their own favorites. It's one of the things that make working with wood so interesting and beautiful. Oh, yeah, USEFUL too.
Also fairly easy and quick if you have a router table set up for it.
Not a fan of doing them by hand.
@@myaccount9745 Yes, the dang set up sometimes takes longer than the job. Reminds me: I visited a cabinet shop to have them trim down some window shutters (back around 1963). It had been in town for several decades. I was surprised at how they had set up some simple table saws to easily and quickly do specific jobs. I was also impressed at how the old man there carefully double checked all of his measurements and calculations.
@@nemo227 Oh yeah there's a lot of 'secret' tricks in the trade and combined with skill people can do the craziest things with "simple" tools a hobbyist might not even be able to get done with all the niche tools we have today. It's crazy what some people can do with a circular saw, a drill and some hand tools and guides. I still like having a router and a table saw...
I don't mind long set up times if it's built to last. If I make dovetails, it's probably meant to last at least a few years. Else I might as well use nails...
@@myaccount9745 Nails . . . nails . . . oh, yeah, those long metal thingies that some people use. (I'm old but still a smartass). I had a musician friend that took up wood working in his early retirement. He would have been a master craftsman. Our kitchen has several things he made: cabinet doors, cabinets, free standing pantry. He died a couple of years ago but the things he built are still here and a daily memory of his craftsmanship. BTW, do you make your living building or is woodworking a personal activity?
I didn`t intend to make use of this woodworking book, *TopFineWoodworking. Com* but rather curious about it. I had been truly amazed right after trying it. It never disappointed me in my wish to acquire more information about the art of wood working. Many topics were covered, including everything from wood types to developing your workshop.?
I got here from 9gag by people talking about woodworking and mentions something like 'proper joint' but I love this video, it looks so fun! I'm not a woodworker and never ever do any woodworking in my life, but I subscribe to this channel because the contents are so good. Am I weird?
Thank you!! So much information - very clearly shown, and explained directly and you get straight to the point! Very, very helpful
Straight and to the point, you assume the viewer knows the basics, which is refreshing. Thumbs up, and thanks!
Does my heart good seeing someone with tools by Sawstop and Festool doing plain old butt joints.
LOL Like riding a Ferrari downtown in the stop and go at rush hour.
Dwight Hapeman and what about pocket holes done on the weaker side?
Dwight Hapeman or using metal hammer instead of a mallet?
@hello Dwight how are you doing?
You whites peoples are perfect in every field of lives. That's why I respect you and love you. You are using so many machines here to do your woods works perfectly and hassle free.
@hello Roy how are you doing?
A dowel joint would be the strongest for those who are wondering (other than a dovetail through or half-blind) and is much easier obtained with a jig like the dowelmax. On a miter with a 45deg attachment on the dowelmax, you can drill through and have exposed dowels, an attractive alternative.
Im new to this type of work
And a dowel just seams so weak
Was surprised to read that its the strongest
I mean look at how thin the dowels are
Fats Domino....didn't think I was gonna see a jazz shoutout here so hell yea! And much thanks for the informative and well-organized video.
David, I’ve been a subscriber of yours for some time now. I enjoy how you don’t spend a ton of time spewing B.S. and you just get down to the point (project). I find your videos informative and reliable. There’s a lot of woodworking channels here on UA-cam and unfortunately a lot of them aren’t the best source of information. I look forward to your upcoming videos. Thank You
Dang I was kinda hoping you’d test them until failure and rank by strength at the end.
I would send them over to Matthias Wandel but he has probably fainted from the sight of these pocket holes...
Other folks have done those. You really need 3 of each to do a valid test.
And pocket holes are more than fine for many joints. :)
Way easy to figure out. The strongest joint is the one that has the most gluing surface. The spline joint.
I like the blind mitered spline joint, however as it's plenty strong, and is invisible.
@@lar10101 Not necessarily. The spline joint goes from edge to edge on the wood and so makes it easier to lever apart. A tenon (loose, domino, or full traditional) is fully housed and so may actually end up stronger. Same with dowels.
Yea that would have caught my attention and watch the entire vid
I literally had no need to watch this video but I loved the quick, snappy demonstration and now I know a bit more about wood joints. :)
I like using corner clamps, then drilling a hole straight through both pieces at a 45" angle for a dowel, just glue it then just cut the dowel ends off, and sand smooth. I generally do this when I am using a lot of soft woods as even when I predrill holes, screws will split the wood near the ends if I look at if funny, haven't had an issue with dowels though.
Awesome information. Raises a lot of questions in my mind for me to research. Thank you for displaying Ol' Glory correctly.
Love that all the joints you showcased were made out of maple and the last one had the red maple leaf for the fall.
Great demo.
@hello Larry how are you doing?
Wow love the hidden and visible mitered spline!
NICE. I made a new Playlist labeled "Woodworking" when I found this video ... 👍🏻
@hello Brian how are you doing?
Mitered Butt Spline is actually the name of my new album. 😂
Coincidentally, it's also the name of a medical condition I had taken care of last year!
@@JusBidniss 😂😂😂
they were big in the 60's.
You mean that's not the name of some anime series on Netflix?
As civilization continues to devolve...
Great little video! Love how quick you jumped in to it and started sharing your knowledge!
Would like to have seen a strength test for each type and then a suggestion on best use for each type
First question that came to mind.
Yeah me too. Want to know which one is the strongest of all.
What good does it do to show 10 types of joints without testing them for strength?
@@turboragtop Gotta agree with you...
Way better video than many who try demonstrate simple things but just talks too much, video clips cutted nicely 👌
Learned some new things also
I would love to see a comparison of their robustness :)
I am new to woodworking and absolutely love it. I spend a lot of time learning all I can. I love this video and subscribed to you. I am trying to learn everything I can about joining wood. I want to make a chest for my grandpa. I have a question. I was interested in the pocket hole method and while looking at videos on it. I found someone who said to put the pocket holes on the outside for strength. I chose this joining way because in your video it was on the inside, so it would be hidden in the chest I want to make.
Please clarify if I should use pocket holes on the inside or outside.
Thank you so much and I can't wait to watch more videos.
Nice! 10 ways in 10 minutes. No time wasted
I'd be really interested in seeing some stress testing on these joints... see which one performs best under a load.
Pockets are the best if your not dovetailing it.
Mathias Wendell already did the stress tests.
Colin @ woodworkweb did a bunch of tests
ua-cam.com/video/6cAUz_eCmbw/v-deo.html
I loved the mitered spline, that was my favorite ❤
10 min - 10 joints, PERFECT!
Excellent video David, thank you.
@hello Scott how are you doing?
Thanks, David. I never stopped to count the different types of joints and variations. Using Miller dowels is another great method.
You are a hero, and a master of video efficiency!
For the ultimate strength I do a mitered spline with a hidden spline with dowels, bisquits, pocket holes, screws and plugs.
And without a couple of nails it will just fall apart
Lol... is there any wood left?
@@luthfiatthariq8324 They needed some extra joint to handle that much butt
My husband was a woodworker/cabinet maker. His shop is beautiful, he died of Cancer 5 years ago. so I am learning his god given talent! The Table saw joinery is very intimating to me! I am working on making some simple projects and this is very helpful to me. Thanks for sharing
Hi Linda! Glad you’re learning it! Don’t get overwhelmed with all the joinery choices. One project at a time. Thank you!
Butt joints. My 2 favorite things...👍🏻
Haha!
I've seen before but a reminder of basics is great. Thanks
1:55 Gaffer tape - one of the most helpful tapes around!
You are the wood artist my friend. It is not about getting the job done but getting it done beautifully.
8:05 I thought you rewind it, second look I thought it's a magic trick!
I like the spline joints, it looks neat, clean and strong
That’s the cleanest workshop I even seen and looks like drive true spline plus 7 more,so fast I missed some of it,your amazing
When I was building my coffee table I used 60mm screw straight down the edge and I have filled up the holes with pine filler. After sanding and 2 layers of linseed oil everything looked like it was done with dowels. Everyone thought it was store bought as I have spent time with the finish. Later I have used the same technique on the dining table and the 4 seater bench.
Thanks Sr for this video 👌 beautiful work 🙏🙏🙏 from Glendale Arizona Mario 👍😊🤗 god bless you 👍🤗
0:53 you can't smoke this bro!
Thanks for not talking forever and telling us what you are about to do!
Lovely! Too quick for me though! Love to see the final ones in slow mo for the beginner!
They were done so roughly that he didn't want to show them off. Misaligned and pretty terrible quality for a professional, video could also be called how-not-to-use-glue. I know these joints aren't for a customer but jeez. If I did pay this man for a glue joint, I'd like it to be fully glued.
You know you can slow any UA-cam video down?
Great video! God bless you and your family family
Follow up video: strength testing to see which joint is strongest?
job for Matthias Wandel
Loved your video. Straight to te point. No fancy blahblah
Thank you so much for posting! Exactly what I needed and very easy to follow and to the point!
Very good, to the point video!! I learned a lot!!! Thank you for sharing!!!!
Tell camera man Dan a Domino is a loose/floating tenon. :)
Good point, you've earned a cold one.
@@cameradan7648 - HA! A viewer!
Stumpy Nubs you’re on it with all those computers at your new shop!
@@chaseowens1122 - And all of them are tuned to the Make Something channel :)
What about the hidden dowel? Is that a floating tenon?
Dude you have Pure Guava on the screen in the back! I’m a huge Ween fan! Awesome video man!
I’m a Ween fan up until Chocolate and Cheese!
My favorite: Mitered spline .. I like the way it looks when you see the spline ... very sexy joint !
sharon olsen , I have a friend who prefers this type of joint, too. He has trouble making good box joints, but mitered splines are easy for him.
Not saying its the strongest but i think the hidden mitered spline is my favorite for being so seamless and unnoticeable.
I like that you can see it. I think it adds character
Well done! I love the 'handsaw' guide for your table saw!
am I the only one that giggles at butt joints still?
You're certainly not alone!
Seems like I have a new set of skills to master! What a great video
I've been working on some wine boxes lately so those mitered splines are looking promising.
The best tecnique ever more works less talk
Thank you for all of your help. I truly appreciate you.
Hi, man...very nice this video...
The last three plugins / examples, the ones I liked the most ... I will practice it and use them in future projects...thank you for sharing them 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Wagner ( from Brazil )
ua-cam.com/video/DdDtpNqeKrw/v-deo.html
I like this wood joint ur showing and some of them I never knew them.thanks it helps me a lot when I'm going to join timber together.
Missed opportunity to test how strong each one is.
It's your job to make the video 🙏
Yes that is what I was thinking.
Awesome skilful Speechless.thanks for sharing your knowledge
GOSHDARNIT DAN! MAKE SOMETHING!
Thank you two for making me laugh randomly from your videos
ua-cam.com/video/DdDtpNqeKrw/v-deo.html
Liked these butt joins so much,the splines were very good ,they looked beautiful,thanks,Brian,uk,
would have liked to know the advantages and disadvantages of each.
Pocket Joinery: The best thing since the invention of the 45 degree angle :-)
For real! 🙌
@hello Jay how are you doing?
Very useful! Thanks for sharing!
Guys I am learning woodworking at *TopFineWoodworking. Com* I recommend this website all you guys who are beginner or advance in woodworking
LAURIE PETERS up
thanks a lot bro! a huge hug for you from buenos aires - argentina
I just made myself a plan to build some simple wooden boxes.
Well, if that isn't perfect timing for this video :)
Do you actually need planning!?
Just do it
If you are one of those people who enjoys building woodworking crafts/projects and some basic carpentry skills this website will interest you in the same way that it did me. >> *TopFineWoodworking. Com*
Nice saws and workshop buddy💯😎
"Here are 10 ways to do a butt joint. These last two are my favorite. They aren't *technically* butt joints tho. I don't know, we're just having fun. Can't we just have fun?"
right?!?! Thanks Raul!
yeah your right bcoz its fillet joint actually
Emegine saglik. Harika video olmus. Turkiye den selamlar. Basarilar. :)
And here I was thinking, "there's no way there are 10 ways". Color me surprised. And impressed!
Спасибо за видео. Есть полезные варианты.
There are more than double that.
well, face nail vs face screws and biscuits vs dominoes are basically the same thing. I call fowel :)
Alot of awesome tips here!
Should have put them in the vise after and smacked them with the hammer to see which one ended up being the strongest joint
Good plug for Squarespace.com. Nice intro to joints.
I came here expecting to find novel ways to smoke. However, I was not disappointed. 👍
If you can find the Porter Cable bench mount ... It's got several advantages over the Kreg plastic.
Real woodworkers are like magicians. Absolutely awesome to watch and learned. Subbed !!!
Sadly these machines cost lots of money that most of us don’t have
Uu
I'm a noob and I learned a lot. Thanks!
I was hoping to see finger joints and dovetail joints as well
thanks, new to woodworking. can't wait to use these methods
I like big butts and I can not lie
Oh we know Jonathan! Us other woodworkers can't deny.
This is where Jonathan takes off his glasses and says “stop it!” 🤣
Miter joints are my favourite ones... Splined miter joints which you showed are one level up... Great stuff dude... Superlike 👍🏻
8:05 - Welcome to Make Something with me, David the Magician Picciuto
It's a good example of kickback.
Love to learn about wood working.thanks
Parabéns meu Amigo, adorei ver seu trabalho e suas habilidades!
Abraço aqui do Brasil 🇧🇷
Best video I've seen on jointing. Helped me a lot. Thank you.