Whisky Stave Trug
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- Опубліковано 16 жов 2024
- Hello and welcome to Badger Workshop. I make a trug or tote out of some old whisky barrel staves.
Garden Trug
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Your vintage bandsaw is a alfred peace bandsaw i believe
I am always looking for new projects that use barrel staves. Your trugs are spot on!
A great use for those staves and a brilliant product.
Matt, I use a garden trug most days to collect veg and soft fruit from the garden. A Sussex trug is made from 2mm thick wood bent to shape and then nailed, making it quite light when empty. At first I thought you were going to resaw the staves on the bandsaw to achieve desired thickness but I quickly realized that you were making an altogether different type of trug! I do like the finished product and with some oak wood shavings and a bottle of Highland Park on top they would make fantastic gifts!
Lovely project 😊
Thank you
these Easter baskets are just in time for the Halloween
Their lovely Matt .
Just happened upon your channel. Great work, great ideas and great videos Well Done!!!!!
Nice build !
Thank you
They’re are beautiful! Great work!
Thank you very much
They look fantastic the joints are brilliant
Thank you very much
Matt they look fantastic! I haven't seen barrels used as well as that before. Really nice to see the patina and curve maintained. Would look great with a fancy whiskey glass in with it too. Maybe with a badger decal on it?
Great project with barrel staves!!
Thank you
Brilliant I've had a few staves was going to use to make a stool changed my mind now ❤️
A stool is a good idea. I might try that
Beautiful!
Thank you
Thank you
They are great Matt. Really like the look and the mortice and tenon joints just add a nice rustic look, well done
Thank you very much Mick
Those look great!
Thank you very much
Love these, they look great and the mortises look fine from here!
Thank you Matthew
Great gift idea. Love the simplicity of your ideas. Keep up the good work Matt.
Thank you very much
Hi Matt, that was a truly a great idea for the 'old' timber, my wifes uses old wi e barrels as planters, take care and keep covid safe and free , best regards from Australia.
Thank you Les
Pretty beautiful work, Matt! They turned out fantastic! 😃
Maybe some wedges can solve the issues you mentioned, but they look fantastic either way!
Anyway, stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
Thank you very much
nice job
Thank you
Great job!
Thank you
Fun build with barrel staves. Use the small cut of stave pieces in your BBQ when you next slow cook some ribs or roasts.
That would smell great
As a whiskey lover....I can just imagine how good that must have smelled. :-) A "WELL DONE" shouted from across the pond!
Thank you. Yes they smelt amazing
These look great Matt, nicely done
Thank you Tim
I work with these a lot Matt. Use a good old fashioned wire brush (going with the grain) to remove most of the charring. I seal mine with Briwax. Because of the compound curves in the stave, trying to get a decent joint is always a challenge. They turned out great though.
If you need more staves in the future, give me a shout. I live in the middle of Scotland and I'm surrounded by literally millions of the things! I've got around 200 drying out in the workshop right now.
Anyway, take care and we'll see you in the next one.
Cheers
Thank you. I will try a brush next time. Sounds great where you live.
great project Matt. Looking forward to the video where you make the Lagavulin to go in them!
Haha that would be great
Hi Matt, Great idea for a great project. Passionate like you by Scottish whisky, in particular Speyside and Isley (Aberlour, Knockando, Scapa, Lagavulin or Talisker ... Mmmm ...) I would like to have the chance to smell this cask, too bad that videos do not transmit odors. Anyway I'll have a little glass of Aberlour to your health, Good day Matt.
Cheers. They did smell amazing
Belle réalisation bravo,très original à bientôt salut Jeannot 😉🛠
Never heard of a trug. Great looking finished trug to say your working with no datum face or point just pencil scribed lines, all those irregular curves and angles. Tony
Thank you
Don't beat yuorself up over those mortise and tenon joints, Matt! The handles are curved so your tenons were under an angle, which makes cutting perfect mortises to fit them very difficult!
Thank you. Yes it was probably not the best project to start with
Maybe wedge them next time to fill out any gaps?
@@jasonmonk7336 Who mentioned gaps........ lol
Great little project Matt.
My daughter and her family live in Scotland right on the whisky trail and she works for a whisky distillery in the owners little whisky shop. Low and behold I've had some nice whisky over the years but I never seem to get the expensive ones!!! Hmmm doesn't seem right somehow 🤔.
P.s you said you were going to give two of the garden staves away but you didn't tell us how your going to give them away!
Must be great going to visit her. I’m going then away to family
Those look really nice. Was the curvature of the staves similar enough, or did you have bespoke fit every base? Should have put wedges into the tenons, they'd have opened up and filled the mortices.
All were slightly different
@@Badgerworkshop 11/10 for perceverance!
Where do you get your hardwood ? eg that rough sawn oak
My local saw mill
👍👍👍
Did those scraps go into the stove ?
No I have other ideas for them
PS - you need a set of mortice chisels……..
I was a bit worried as at first i'd thought you'd drunk a barrel of whisky just to get the staves…...
I am not that committed