9 years after this was made, it is exactly what I need. I just couldn't understand how and why it would split. I just assumed I wasn't good enough. This gives me a good understanding. In summary - know how to read the grain.
Yeah, I enjoy doing these. Non pretentious, open for everyone, dead simple. I have cut at least 120,000 dovetails and mortise and tenons in my lifetime working wood by hand. Imagine that. You get pretty quick after a while. Only reason these took me so long is I was talking too much.
Every time I watch a Paul Sellers video, I get so inspired I have to go out to my shop and work some wood. Paul is one of the premier woodworkers of this generation. Awesome video once again Paul!
Well done all of you who took the bull by the horns and wrestled this one down. It really works and the investment of time trying things out is often worth it.
Literally the best explanation of controlling the chisel I’ve ever seen. It’s based on the wood grain, I’ve never had an instructor teach me that based on watching the wood concept.
It takes a paradigm shift to think in these realms but that's really possible and all the more when we start to examine what we buy from Walmart and other such wasters in these days of austerity. Good can come out of depressed conditions and I am not so certain we won't see that in this era.
Thank you for the compliments. This video was produced in conjunction with some upcoming premium online broadcast videos. Stay tuned and we will post more info on UA-cam soon.
Published 2012, could have been 1912. I am grateful that you have chosen to share your craft Paul. A pleasure to watch and listen to. Both my grandfathers (passed now) were wood workers with hand tools, A skill that should be passed on, not lost in time to convenience and cost. Thank you.
Paul: I was watching this in a darkened room and my iPad was rather close to my face. During the Sapele paring section, I was so engaged that I actually blew at the screen to clear a small remaining shaving. I don’t think you could ask for more of a viewer’s attention. Excellent instruction; between your skills and your down-to-earth way of explaining each step of the process makes these tasks approachable for everyone. I am in the process of starting my own channel, which will be dedicated to applying craftsmanship and wood-on-wood joinery to everything we build, regardless of the technique (e.g., hand tools, machine or hybrid approach) and plan to follow your humble approach to information sharing. By the way, I just bought your hand tools book and DVD set; masterfully done: very approachable language and beautifully photographed.
Yeah, again. Don't you just wish we could get off the conveyor belt and make tenons by hand. Most of my life I have done them this way. Can't imagine the boredom of using machines all day everyday. Love your woodworking and reclaim what's yours.
Level 2 Furniture student here who cannot cut nor pare tenons for toffee. I'm very excited to give this a try. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge, Paul. You're the only woodworking channel I bother with. A term at my college is, "well, what does Paul Sellers do?"
Not just quick and easy, but elegant! A lesson in reading the grain and paying attention. I use a mix of hand/power tools, but hand tools are more pleasing.
I used this during my college woodworking class and my tutor told me that if he saw me using this technique again he would shove the chisel up my arse...it worked brilliantly though, so thank you for the demonstration with such detail that i understand almost instantly. i will use it in my own time aha
@@lewis5738 that's why my craft teacher made my life hell, hated that I could do the things and he actually had to do teaching. He banned my cambox because it had a soldier as part of the scene. And when asked to invent something to help the elderly, I came up with a stick with a dimple on the end strapped to a wall and able to slide up and down an inch. Problem: my Nan had issues bending down to turn off the sockets. Solution: raise the switch mechanism up to an easy level. I got told that was useless and he failed me for not doing the work😂 Turns out he was a friend of my father's dodgy foreman, the guy who wanted his hands on my father's business. Started to knock me down early. Thank God we have teachers like this guy in the world. He's awesome.
This is by far my favorite video. Great instruction, good camera angles, and good sound. Over all the best wood working channel I've come across as of yet. Now I just need to finish gathering tools and prep them. Then I can finally start my own projects. Thank you Mr. Sellers and production crew.
I have been stumbling around trying to establish a direction in learning woodwork in my Air Force retirement and now I have. Your comments about the acquisition of true skill as the way to derive joy from woodworking hit me between the eyes. All your videos are a safari to me. Thanks awfully. I sure would like to see you conjure the genie of the wood in person one day after I have gained the fundamentals.
I have been sawing my tennons, and then paring to refine. It takes ages. This looks so much simpler, so much quicker, and so much neater. I am now going to go away and learn this today.
Just did my first ever tenons today using this technique (following your workbench series). Found it cleaner and faster than my unsteady sawing skills. Thank you!
hey Paul. I am a 63 yr old retired machinist that is now in love with woodworking and I can not tell you how much your videos have helped me. I am working on my granddaughter's desk now and able to apply so much of what I have learned from your videos. lots of mortise and tenons and a great pair of Stanley Sweetheart chisels and I'm on my way. thanks for taking the time to doing what you're doing to help people like me.
Its so cool to see all of your decades of experience. You remind me of my mentor in my trade. I think there are few things cooler than someone spending a lifetime perfecting their trade. Thank you so much for sharing your expertise, you are a true artist!
thanks for the vid. It's nice to see someone who shows how to do woodwork without a scary array of daunting expensive machinery, which can make you wonder whether woodworking as a hobby is going to completely empty the bank.
This is great. I am currently building a Sellers workbench out of "select" construction grade two-by-fours and, when using the chisel method, am finding that the grain often splits with deep furrows because the growth rings are so huge. I don't own a suitable handsaw so I ordered a tenon saw. But I am looking forward to using this technique when I start using more suitable wood for woodworking projects. Thanks for all the great videos, Paul.
Its a joy seeing you work the wood and you really seem to nail all the important things beginners need to hear. Your an excellent teacher and a great human for passing on your skills and experience.
Excellent video. Just got my first antique Stanley 750 1/2" chisel, and yes, I'm new to using chisels for fine wood working, but this video gives me a great direction to shoot for. Thanks Paul. I'm finally subscribing.
Perhaps I should have made this clearer. When I am not talking or demonstrating this technique is very quick. Much quicker than sawing. However, it is not always possible to split because of difficult grain. In those circumstances it is best to saw.
Paul...if you dont mind me callin you by your sunday name,im glued to your vids,absolutly great and informative,even got the chisels out of Aldis..great stuff
Yes, there is. I am using a 1" wide chisel. Wider chisels are less common and take much more effort to sharpen the wider they go. I use a 1" chisel for most of this type of work. It's the right weight to strength ratio and it is most likely that none of those watching the video will own a wider chisel. I want people to be able to put into practice what they see without going out to buy. I don't think that many craftsmen used chisels much wider than 1" for general work. Thanks for the question.
Thank you for all your demonstration videos. I have learned a lot from you and in fact you have made it so I understand how the wood works in conjunction with my tools and how I should use them. I do really appreciate all you are doing.
Yeah, I see it now. When the grain is running parallel, all it takes is a couple of whacks and a bit of paring. Sawing could never be so quick. I will give this technique a try. Thanks Paul.
Hi Paul. Thanks to your teachings tonight i cut my first mortise. Once i got the technique right it was fairly easy but it could have been easier if i could get my chisel sharper. I'll work more on that tomorrow. Thanks again.
That technique is brilliant , I'm anxious to try this . Can you imagine the time and wear and tear on the elbow by not having to use the saw ? Thank you for the tutorial Paul . God bless .
Great video, Paul! Two things that are not reflected in the video: 1) when you make your test cuts you put the chisel not in parallel to the gauging line, right? 2) do you intentionally select not the widest chisels for such relatively broad tenons?
awesome video - I am planning on getting a set of chisle's and have been watching how to sharpen video's including Paul's. I really like his down to earth style.
This method of cutting tenons looks so satisfying. I think I shy away normally because it feels difficult to get a good quality square edge. I am definitely going to give this a go now. Superb video Paul. @Rag'n'BoneBrown you might find this interesting too.
It all works so well ... if your chisels are as sharp as his are. I see your nod to sharp chisels and your chisel sharpening video in comments below. If the saw cuts were made with a table saw, why not cut the tenon by continuing to use that table saw? No problems with grain, quicker, no chance of cutting too deeply...? Thanks for the demonstration.
Wow you let it look so easy man. practice make perfect right??. I am going to use this at the shop, and I know my chisels have to be crazy sharp. I am so happy with the machinery in the shop.
Thanks Paul! Do you need a tenon saw to make the initial stop cuts, though? Why not just use the saw if you're already making a cut? Is it just preference or can you make better cuts just using a chisel?
for someone wanting to get into wood working, as shown by you, what assortments of chisels and mallets would you recommend? besides your standard saw, ruler, and pencil, and drill, what other things would you recommend having?
Truly a splendid lesson SIr! Great close-ups and good examples of "reading the grain." It took me a long time to comprehend this method when my father taught me so long ago, but he was not as patient a teacher as you. Question: Is this an excerpt from your DVD teaching series? It certainly is well-produced with good lighting and camera work. If it is part of your DVD series, I believe I will get a copy.
Mr. Sellers, I noticed your pieces of wood are roughly 3.5"-4" wide. Is there a specific reason why you don't use a wider chisel and split the tendon in 2 passes instead of 3 with a smaller chisel?
My tenon ended up a little bit hourglass shaped when I tried this technique. Is this common among beginners? Is it just practice at keeping the chisel parallel, or did I miss some part of the technique?
I had the impression that this technique is mainly used in framing. Nice illustration. But, why do it this way? Is sawing the tenons any harder or slower?
Wood whisperer 👍 All my problems seem to be due to rushing cuts and not conversing with the grain like that. (my father was a master carpenter but didn't pass on much info 😂)
Hey Paul! I love your videos, they have inspired me to take up more traditional woodworking. I did my first practice hand chop mortise and hand paired tenon using oak but as i was pairing from the side, i got splitting? Could this be from not reading the wood grain correctly or from not having my chisels sharp enough? That being said, would you say its better to saw the tenons vs splitting and paring? Also id be real interested to see you do some work on other woods to see how they differ in hardness, like working on Maple, Hickory, Walnut, etc. Thanks again for all you do!
I think it’s a question of trying both but if in doubt saw. There is not doubt, once you mastered the splitting technique it is very fast. But you do have to develop the technique and this only comes by practice.
9 years after this was made, it is exactly what I need. I just couldn't understand how and why it would split. I just assumed I wasn't good enough. This gives me a good understanding. In summary - know how to read the grain.
Yeah, I enjoy doing these. Non pretentious, open for everyone, dead simple. I have cut at least 120,000 dovetails and mortise and tenons in my lifetime working wood by hand. Imagine that. You get pretty quick after a while. Only reason these took me so long is I was talking too much.
Your method of instruction is absolutely fantastic. Thank you for your time and skill Paul.
The talking is good
Haha you are a legend
Every time I watch a Paul Sellers video, I get so inspired I have to go out to my shop and work some wood. Paul is one of the premier woodworkers of this generation. Awesome video once again Paul!
It is both faster and easier, but more than that, it's pleasing to a fault. I know no other method that brings me great enjoyment. Love it!
Well done all of you who took the bull by the horns and wrestled this one down. It really works and the investment of time trying things out is often worth it.
I love this tutorial, how the woods split and make the tenon more efficient.
Thank you Mr. Sellers
Literally the best explanation of controlling the chisel I’ve ever seen. It’s based on the wood grain, I’ve never had an instructor teach me that based on watching the wood concept.
It takes a paradigm shift to think in these realms but that's really possible and all the more when we start to examine what we buy from Walmart and other such wasters in these days of austerity. Good can come out of depressed conditions and I am not so certain we won't see that in this era.
Thank you for the compliments. This video was produced in conjunction with some upcoming premium online broadcast videos. Stay tuned and we will post more info on UA-cam soon.
Published 2012, could have been 1912. I am grateful that you have chosen to share your craft Paul. A pleasure to watch and listen to. Both my grandfathers (passed now) were wood workers with hand tools, A skill that should be passed on, not lost in time to convenience and cost. Thank you.
That was one of the most satisfying things I think I've ever seen.
Paul: I was watching this in a darkened room and my iPad was rather close to my face. During the Sapele paring section, I was so engaged that I actually blew at the screen to clear a small remaining shaving. I don’t think you could ask for more of a viewer’s attention. Excellent instruction; between your skills and your down-to-earth way of explaining each step of the process makes these tasks approachable for everyone. I am in the process of starting my own channel, which will be dedicated to applying craftsmanship and wood-on-wood joinery to everything we build, regardless of the technique (e.g., hand tools, machine or hybrid approach) and plan to follow your humble approach to information sharing. By the way, I just bought your hand tools book and DVD set; masterfully done: very approachable language and beautifully photographed.
Glad to hear from you. We are all learning as we work through this together.
Thanks for your encouragement.
Beautiful technique. Published 11 years ago, still doing the rounds!
Yeah, again. Don't you just wish we could get off the conveyor belt and make tenons by hand. Most of my life I have done them this way. Can't imagine the boredom of using machines all day everyday. Love your woodworking and reclaim what's yours.
Level 2 Furniture student here who cannot cut nor pare tenons for toffee. I'm very excited to give this a try. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge, Paul. You're the only woodworking channel I bother with. A term at my college is, "well, what does Paul Sellers do?"
Not just quick and easy, but elegant! A lesson in reading the grain and paying attention. I use a mix of hand/power tools, but hand tools are more pleasing.
The important thing is to keep your marking gauge lines all the way to the end. it takes practice but you can do it.
OMG! Just discovered this video and tried the method. More accurate tenons in a fraction of the time . Thank you!
Sharpness is everything and I would spend some time on that too. Have you seen my other video on sharpening chisels?
Best regards,
Paul
2021 my buddy..still follow this paul seller..ur lagend
I used this during my college woodworking class and my tutor told me that if he saw me using this technique again he would shove the chisel up my arse...it worked brilliantly though, so thank you for the demonstration with such detail that i understand almost instantly. i will use it in my own time aha
same but he didnt tell me that bit just didnt like me doin it probs because he knows its good and he diudnt know about it
@@lewis5738 that's why my craft teacher made my life hell, hated that I could do the things and he actually had to do teaching.
He banned my cambox because it had a soldier as part of the scene.
And when asked to invent something to help the elderly, I came up with a stick with a dimple on the end strapped to a wall and able to slide up and down an inch.
Problem: my Nan had issues bending down to turn off the sockets.
Solution: raise the switch mechanism up to an easy level.
I got told that was useless and he failed me for not doing the work😂
Turns out he was a friend of my father's dodgy foreman, the guy who wanted his hands on my father's business.
Started to knock me down early.
Thank God we have teachers like this guy in the world. He's awesome.
This became my favorite method of making tenons after learning it from you Mr. Sellers. Thank you for your work and instruction. Good video.
This is by far my favorite video. Great instruction, good camera angles, and good sound. Over all the best wood working channel I've come across as of yet. Now I just need to finish gathering tools and prep them. Then I can finally start my own projects.
Thank you Mr. Sellers and production crew.
Wonderful class. It's always a joy to see Paul Sellers working.
I have been stumbling around trying to establish a direction in learning woodwork in my Air Force retirement and now I have. Your comments about the acquisition of true skill as the way to derive joy from woodworking hit me between the eyes. All your videos are a safari to me. Thanks awfully. I sure would like to see you conjure the genie of the wood in person one day after I have gained the fundamentals.
I have been sawing my tennons, and then paring to refine. It takes ages.
This looks so much simpler, so much quicker, and so much neater.
I am now going to go away and learn this today.
About to post a blog on this issue so we will see what we can contribute to enhance our endeavour.
Splitting has never made sense to me, until this video. Thank you Paul.
Just did my first ever tenons today using this technique (following your workbench series). Found it cleaner and faster than my unsteady sawing skills. Thank you!
Great job Paul, I'm glad to see you shedding some light on this technique. I do it for all my tenons now.
hey Paul. I am a 63 yr old retired machinist that is now in love with woodworking and I can not tell you how much your videos have helped me. I am working on my granddaughter's desk now and able to apply so much of what I have learned from your videos. lots of mortise and tenons and a great pair of Stanley Sweetheart chisels and I'm on my way. thanks for taking the time to doing what you're doing to help people like me.
Its so cool to see all of your decades of experience. You remind me of my mentor in my trade. I think there are few things cooler than someone spending a lifetime perfecting their trade. Thank you so much for sharing your expertise, you are a true artist!
.....soooo interesting and priseice like a Swiss watch !!! big compliment!!! kind regards from Switzerland and thank YOU !!!!
thanks for the vid. It's nice to see someone who shows how to do woodwork without a scary array of daunting expensive machinery, which can make you wonder whether woodworking as a hobby is going to completely empty the bank.
As always, a joy to see you doing some perfect work by hand(s). Thanks Paul
This is great. I am currently building a Sellers workbench out of "select" construction grade two-by-fours and, when using the chisel method, am finding that the grain often splits with deep furrows because the growth rings are so huge. I don't own a suitable handsaw so I ordered a tenon saw. But I am looking forward to using this technique when I start using more suitable wood for woodworking projects. Thanks for all the great videos, Paul.
What a joy it is to watch you work, sir! Your skills are buttery-smooth, and your delivery is silken, and clear. Thank you!
Its a joy seeing you work the wood and you really seem to nail all the important things beginners need to hear. Your an excellent teacher and a great human for passing on your skills and experience.
I just found your videos today and I'm hooked. You offer excellent advice. Thank you.
That's great and that's what this is all about. Well done!
Excellent video. Just got my first antique Stanley 750 1/2" chisel, and yes, I'm new to using chisels for fine wood working, but this video gives me a great direction to shoot for. Thanks Paul. I'm finally subscribing.
Perhaps I should have made this clearer. When I am not talking or demonstrating this technique is very quick. Much quicker than sawing. However, it is not always possible to split because of difficult grain. In those circumstances it is best to saw.
Paul...if you dont mind me callin you by your sunday name,im glued to your vids,absolutly great and informative,even got the chisels out of Aldis..great stuff
Yes, there is. I am using a 1" wide chisel. Wider chisels are less common and take much more effort to sharpen the wider they go. I use a 1" chisel for most of this type of work. It's the right weight to strength ratio and it is most likely that none of those watching the video will own a wider chisel. I want people to be able to put into practice what they see without going out to buy. I don't think that many craftsmen used chisels much wider than 1" for general work. Thanks for the question.
Thank you for all your demonstration videos. I have learned a lot from you and in fact you have made it so I understand how the wood works in conjunction with my tools and how I should use them. I do really appreciate all you are doing.
Yeah, I see it now. When the grain is running parallel, all it takes is a couple of whacks and a bit of paring. Sawing could never be so quick.
I will give this technique a try. Thanks Paul.
Hi Paul. Thanks to your teachings tonight i cut my first mortise. Once i got the technique right it was fairly easy but it could have been easier if i could get my chisel sharper. I'll work more on that tomorrow. Thanks again.
bloody hell. this looks ridiculously easy. amazing.
Thanks very much. This video probably spares many people from even more mistakes :D
That technique is brilliant , I'm anxious to try this . Can you imagine the time and wear and tear on the elbow by not having to use the saw ? Thank you for the tutorial Paul . God bless .
This is very usefull, I'm in my second year of woodworking and this method has worked for me very well.
You are a wonderful teacher
Sr I'd love to be an apprentice of yours ... its mesmerising the way you explain just about everything !
What a great demonstration. Thank you paul
I don't know why but i had fun watching this.
Pura vida Paul great and beautiful woodworking technique
Thank You for these videos. I am learning a great deal from you. Found a great use for some of my scrap 2x4.
Great video, Paul!
Two things that are not reflected in the video:
1) when you make your test cuts you put the chisel not in parallel to the gauging line, right?
2) do you intentionally select not the widest chisels for such relatively broad tenons?
awesome video - I am planning on getting a set of chisle's and have been watching how to sharpen video's including Paul's. I really like his down to earth style.
This man is a legend
This method of cutting tenons looks so satisfying. I think I shy away normally because it feels difficult to get a good quality square edge. I am definitely going to give this a go now. Superb video Paul. @Rag'n'BoneBrown you might find this interesting too.
I learned a lot! thank you for sharing your beautiful trade.
It all works so well ... if your chisels are as sharp as his are. I see your nod to sharp chisels and your chisel sharpening video in comments below.
If the saw cuts were made with a table saw, why not cut the tenon by continuing to use that table saw? No problems with grain, quicker, no chance of cutting too deeply...?
Thanks for the demonstration.
I use a curf knife to mark the shoulders and cheeks and have found that it can force the split away from the grain.
Awesome skills with a chisel, I need to practice that more. And maybe sharpen my chisels even sharper
Wow you let it look so easy man. practice make perfect right??. I am going to use this at the shop, and I know my chisels have to be crazy sharp. I am so happy with the machinery in the shop.
A wonderful lesson.
Fantastic stuff Paul.
Another great video. Thanks Paul.
I mis-read this a "pairing."
Great methods & explanation.
I wonder who clicked dislike? LOL This is a great instructional video.
they were trying to click thumbs up but missed
Hay Eric, if you happen to know that guy, tell him he can change it.
You make it look so easy
Thank you very much for all youre videos Master!!!
Awesomely done mate!
just great. simple and effective
Thanks Paul! Do you need a tenon saw to make the initial stop cuts, though? Why not just use the saw if you're already making a cut? Is it just preference or can you make better cuts just using a chisel?
hi Paul great video what weight is your nylon hammer
for someone wanting to get into wood working, as shown by you, what assortments of chisels and mallets would you recommend? besides your standard saw, ruler, and pencil, and drill, what other things would you recommend having?
Like your information have all my Dad sew and chisel.
That was perfect. Thanks Paul.
So full of premium content
Great work Sir, what kind of vice hardware?
Great video... as always ;)
Paul, do you have any suggestions for someone struggling with angled tenons (like with splayed legs of a table, chair or bench)?
Truly a splendid lesson SIr!
Great close-ups and good examples of "reading the grain."
It took me a long time to comprehend this method when my father taught me so long ago, but he was not as patient a teacher as you.
Question: Is this an excerpt from your DVD teaching series?
It certainly is well-produced with good lighting and camera work.
If it is part of your DVD series, I believe I will get a copy.
I'm a bit confused when he paring does he lift the chisel a little bit, or does it be kept flat on wood? That's a video on itself
Pura vida Paul and guys which is first tenon or Mortise ? Let me know thanks pura vida
Mr. Sellers, I noticed your pieces of wood are roughly 3.5"-4" wide. Is there a specific reason why you don't use a wider chisel and split the tendon in 2 passes instead of 3 with a smaller chisel?
great video as always
My tenon ended up a little bit hourglass shaped when I tried this technique. Is this common among beginners? Is it just practice at keeping the chisel parallel, or did I miss some part of the technique?
I had the impression that this technique is mainly used in framing. Nice illustration.
But, why do it this way? Is sawing the tenons any harder or slower?
Wood whisperer 👍
All my problems seem to be due to rushing cuts and not conversing with the grain like that.
(my father was a master carpenter but didn't pass on much info 😂)
Maybe I missed it... The *reason* to do tenons this way, instead of sawing, is that it is faster / less work?
Hey Paul! I love your videos, they have inspired me to take up more traditional woodworking. I did my first practice hand chop mortise and hand paired tenon using oak but as i was pairing from the side, i got splitting? Could this be from not reading the wood grain correctly or from not having my chisels sharp enough? That being said, would you say its better to saw the tenons vs splitting and paring? Also id be real interested to see you do some work on other woods to see how they differ in hardness, like working on Maple, Hickory, Walnut, etc. Thanks again for all you do!
I think it’s a question of trying both but if in doubt saw. There is not doubt, once you mastered the splitting technique it is very fast. But you do have to develop the technique and this only comes by practice.
So beautyfull... Such an artist. Love it. Tx
thanks for sharing it , very useful thanks
Thanks. Nice sharp chisels.
Would this work to cut tenons with 6.5" shoulder that are 2" square in 6" x 6" cedar?
Great Video. Much thanks.
now i need to buy a vise!