Building the Credenza Cabinets - Modern Credenza Build - Part 3
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- Опубліковано 18 січ 2019
- Watch me show you how I built the cabinet structure for my new credenza real quick.
I have finally started building this thing!
Edge Banding: • How to Make Simple Ply...
Furniture FOR SALE: www.shaunboydmadethis.com/fur...
Patreon: / shaunboydmadethis
Furniture plans: www.shaunboydmadethis.com/plans
T-Shirts: www.shaunboydmadethis.com/mer...
/ shaunboydmadethis
/ shaunboydmadethis
/ sbmadethis
Tools I Use:
● SawStop 3-HP Professional Cabinet Saw: amzn.to/2GL2MCF
● Festool Domino Joiner DF 500: amzn.to/2LqxfcU
● Festool Track Saw TS 55 Req: amzn.to/2s3giNv
● Bosch 2-1/4 HP Plunge and Fixed Base Router: amzn.to/2x6odyz
● Makita 18V LXT Sub-Compact Drill & Driver: amzn.to/2x6sBxD
● Dewalt Jig Saw: amzn.to/2Lm2gOS
● Ridgid Oscillating Belt & Spindle Sander: amzn.to/2s0Nu8u
● Dewalt Random Orbit Sander: amzn.to/2s1Kusi
● Makita 3” x 24” Variable-Speed Belt Sander: amzn.to/2IK89E6
● Jet 16-32 Drum Sander: amzn.to/2xdeuX0
● Grizzly 2-HP Canister Dust Collector: amzn.to/2kk4Loz
● Titebond III Wood Glue: amzn.to/2IGVQfM
Camera Gear I Use:
● Canon EOS 77D Body: amzn.to/2s3Znue
● GoPro HERO5 Black: amzn.to/2s1La0O
● Canon 10-18mm Lens: amzn.to/2IHCYsQ
● Rode Videomic Pro-R+: amzn.to/2IENnK6
● JOBY GorillaPod: amzn.to/2LohJyd
Logo by Tim Lautensack
www.behance.net/timlautensack
Music:
Otis McDonald - Joe Bagale
Thank you R.G.E. - Joe Bagale - Навчання та стиль
I’m glad you’re speaking in the videos now. Watched an old one and now starting newer.
Haha, thanks! I had enough people tell me I should talk more, so I went for it. Thanks for watching!
Shaun, the smoothness of your videos is out of hand lately and I don't just mean with your ahead of their time jokes! This series was tremendously enjoyable. Seeing your process adds a lot to the experience. It was so satisfying seeing the those middle panels slot into the dados. Cheers!
Really appreciate it! I am really enjoying doing this little series and being able to dive into some of the details a bit more. Glad you are enjoying it and thank you for watching!
Enjoyable as always ! Dude, You need a bigger shop. You are a true PRO, not just a hobby little garage hacker. I have picket up a lot of little tricks from you by watching your videos.
Absolutely love your style !!
Really appreciate that! I actually just moved to a larger shop a couple weeks ago, check out my video from last week. I am loving having more space. Thanks for watching, Hans!
The series is fantastic Shawn. Thanks for starting with the design process.
Awesome, glad you are enjoying it! Thanks for watching!
10/10 - would eat here again. The waffles were delicious. Service was spectacular.
This got to me.
Can you please copy and paste this to my Yelp page? Thanks.
It's a bit farther of a drive from here in Ventura but I would definitely go on this recommendation.
Great review!
Jonathan K-M was havin' a nap upstairs while Shaun was down below using the Domino (#bones) 😁
So good Shaun, the videos get better with every post. Can’t wait to see this credenza done too.
Thanks, man! That is good to hear, and I am stoked to get this one finished!
Great series of videos! Amazing work
Thank you! Glad you are enjoying them!
Extremely enjoyable. Thank you for all your hard work. Hope too see many more projects.
Really appreciate that! Glad you enjoyed it and thanks for watching!
Yeah like Jonathan said,,,, 2 thumbs up Shaun.
Thanks Dan! Hopefully the finished product gets the same rating!
Loving this series.... looking forward to part 4.
Really appreciate it! I am stoked to get it done, as well!
Love your work mate! Thanks for posting.
Thanks for watching! Really appreciate it!
Thanks Shaun 😊, learning a lot from your neat way of explaining and precise way of working.
Really glad to hear that, I love to hear when people are able to get something out of my videos! Thanks for watching, Mahendra!
And the lay down FTW! Great stuff Shaun!
I'm glad I could finally bring it back!
Wonderful video. Thanks for explaining why you do something, not just what.
Really appreciate it! Thanks for watching!
Good series. Enjoyed it.
Right on, thanks Bodie! Can't wait to get it finished.
Always enjoy your videos bud 👍🏼
Thanks man! Really appreciate the support!
Really nice Shaun! I like the rabbeting bit joint you made. I'm going to have to try that
Thanks man! Yeah, it worked like a charm. Can't wait to check out your record cabinet build!
Great build Shaun!
Thank you!
Thanks Shaun!
Nice job, well explained - enjoying the series :)
Thank you! Glad you are enjoying it!
Love watching these vids! Inspiring
Thank you! Glad you are enjoying them!
Love it! My favourite part of the day....
Awesome! Glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for watching!
Thank you for the video! As always, quality work! Good music...!
Thank you for watching! Glad you enjoyed it!
Looking great Shaun.
I do a bit of work with Black Walnut milling it from scratch. Although I love it, I find despite using it at low moisture, it is a pretty mobile timber so I look forward watching how you seal it.
Cheers
Yeah, it can be a little unpredictable sometimes, especially during the milling process. I haven't decided on finish for this yet, but I will definitely let everyone know what I decide in the next video. Thanks for watching!
Great video. You've got loads of "style." Thanks for sharing! : )
Really appreciate that! Sometimes I question my "style" so I am glad to hear I at least have a lot of it! Thanks for watching!
The tape on the faces of the plywood when trimming the edge banding is a nice little trick to pick up!
Nice! Yeah, that can be a life saver with really thin veneer.
Best recap ever.
Haha, had to get everyone up to speed.
I like the series style videos... excellent cut aways to different movie clips too
Thanks Tim! Glad you are enjoying them!
4:47 pure class 🤣 Great work as always 👍🏻
Haha, Freddie always says it best. Thanks for watching!
I can't wait for video part four.
Vlog method keeps me wanting more.
Nothing's quite hotter th'n,
A credenza in Danish modern.
But it's safer to lay on the floor.
Bravo! You are like the Robert Frost of woodworking poetry. Inspiring!
Thanks but I'm not sure Robert Frost wrote limericks. Too bad for him.
Haha, I looked up famous limerick poets and didn’t recognize any of them, so I went with Frost. Maybe I should have paid more attention in high school English class!
Haha awesome vid. The movie quotes are on point!
Haha, glad you dig them! That is maybe my favorite part of making these.
Still digging it!
Right on! Really appreciate it!
I dig it.
Thank you!
Nice one Shaun,
Tip for the edge banding.
I use a strip of innertube (bike or car) in combination with a clamb.
Works great.
You cab use that in a next video, thats oké 😉
Nice! I have seen a few other people use that technique, as well. Might have to give it a shot at some point! Thanks!
Shaun Boyd your videos are borderline meditative. Appreciate the short sessions, easy to fit into my schedule!
Question, do you build for a living, do commission work?
Really appreciate it, thanks for watching! And yes, I make commission furniture full-time. This whole UA-cam thing has been a pretty unplanned new part of my business.
@@shaunboydmadethis thumbs up! 👍
Another excellent video :) As odd as it may sound, I'm glad I'm not the only one who doesn't wear a dust mask for every table saw cut.
Really appreciate it! Yeah, it is one of those things I know I need to be better about, but it is also the first thing I forget when I am working.
Diggin it
Thanks, man! Really appreciate it!
Podobało mi się ;)
Dzięki
This multi part series for a project is awesome. Here's a question. Do you line up grain direction in a certain way when gluing up the panels? Either for appearance or stability?
Glad you are digging it! Yeah, I definitely try to put boards next to each other to make it look as seamless as possible. If the oak part was flipped the other way and this was a table or something, I maybe would have gone for a grain-matched waterfall around the miters too.
G’day Shaun, a great accomplishment build mate, just be thankful it wasn’t me jumping on the Credenza at the end otherwise its back to the drawing board lol, cheers from DownUnder 🍻👍👍👍👍
Really appreciate it! Luckily I am the right size to not really push the limits, so it works out! Thanks for watching!
Looks good bro! I Have to get a Domino! I think I'm like the only person on yt that makes videos tht doesn't own a Domino lol.. I'm getting there I got the Craig full size stationary round to table like 6 months ago and I just purchased the 12" Bosh easy glide and miter saw starting to scratch things off the list slowly but surely right cheers!🍻
Yeah man, that is the way to do it! I built plenty of stuff with dowels and biscuits before I could afford a domino! But it is a great tool!
@@shaunboydmadethis a friend of mi e JUST got o e for xmas I've yet to use it but he sd just the feel of it is worth the money.lol
Shaun, what do you think of the Rockler Beadlock loose tenon system as an alternative to the Festools Domino system ( you know for us people that aren't quite ready to drop the big bucks yet)? And also where do you buy your Walnut plywood, do you have to order it or have you found a place that has it in stock?? I assume you're somewhere in O.C. seeing that you're always wearing an Angels cap!
great question Robert! I'm keen to hear some responses on the beadlock too as Festool is just crazy expensive here in Oz.
I haven't used the beadlock system, but just from looking at it, I would think it would be a great alternative, especially when looking at the price. The main advantage of the domino is the speed and the accuracy you can get with that speed. It really doesn't allow me to do anything better or more complex, I can just do things quicker. So the beadlock system is probably quite a bit slower, but if time isn't a dealbreaker, it seems like it would be a great tool.
As for the walnut plywood, my local (~1 hour drive away) lumber supplier always has it in stock. I actually live a few hours north and go to a place called Aura Hardwoods in San Luis Obispo.
Thanks for the continued looking over your shoulder while you build these projects Shaun. I know you mentioned in your design process video that you tend to start with the internet after you get an idea, but I'm kind of a flip through a book kind of guy. Any hints as to books where I might find inspiration for both design and building furniture?
Really appreciate it, Greg! Yeah, the internet is such a wealth of inspiration, but it can be overwhelming at times. I don't have a lot of book recommendations, but I do keep a couple on the coffee table in my shop. One is a book called Chairs by Architects which is great if you are looking for some chair inspiration. Another is a book called Palm Springs Modern and it is full of midcentury homes and interiors in Palm Springs, which is great if you are into the midcentury design aesthetic. Hopefully that helps!
@@shaunboydmadethis Super! A great place to start. Thank you.
In reading through the posts I noticed you answering a few questions. Would you consider soliciting questions from your audience and answering in a FAQ video?
I know I have a ton of little questions.( which you may already have answered ) and a repository of your answers, that you could send us to would be great.
@@gregwatson8554 That's not a bad idea! Maybe I will mention something like that in next part and see if I can get enough questions to put together a video.
My friends from high school (many years ago) and I have a saying that we still tell each other and I'm gonna let you in on the secret Lol...Too bad you didn't apply yourself in school! Nice project Shaun.
Haha, ain't that the truth! Thanks for watching, can't wait to get this one finished!
Love the way this is turning out dude, how do you like makin’ miters with the tracksaw, are they accurate enough?
Thanks, man! I am stoked to get it finished. Yeah, I definitely prefer to cut miters on the table saw when I can, but the track saw certainly does a good job. Never really had any serious issues with it.
I have a few questions I hope you can take a moment to answer. I seem to always have trouble in long bevels in cases, and I have a project coming up that requires many boxes with beveled edges. On your bevels/ miters , are you using the dominos in the tight setting on both sides? In the end, are your edges perfect perfect or are you burnishing any tiny gaps? I’m beginning to think my pursuit of ‘the perfect mitered edge’ is a fools errand. Of course it could also mean I just can’t see my mistakes! 🧐 thanks!
Yeah, long miters can be tough. I usually use the tight setting on one side, and the middle wide setting on the other side. This way I can slightly slide the panels to line them up perfectly if needed. Definitely having really flat panels helps get a nice even cut and good, even clamping pressure will decrease any gaps. For the most part I am able to get a mostly gap free joint, or very thin gaps that disappear with sanding and still allow for a nice sharp corner. Chasing perfection is a slippery slope, but I think we can at least get close. Hope that helps!
Strong stuff! Has that strength test manoeuvre ever failed? Would anything be compromised if you used only glue and no dominoes? It is coming along just fine. Thanks for these videos that are specifically you in many ways.
Haha, it hasn't failed yet, knock on wood! I'm not sure I would only do glue on the miter joints, since it is all end grain, but I could have definitely gotten away with no dominos for the panel glue ups. Thanks for watching, Juliet!
Still my fav......
Awesome! Thank you and I really appreciate that!
Again a great video. Have you made your mallet? Is it an epoxy one?
Thank you! No, I didn't make my mallet. It is a made by a company called "Wood Is Good", and I think it is made of urethane. It is a great mallet!
Do you like the router table option on your Sawstop? Like the saw?
Love the saw, and really like having the router table insert. Being able to use the same fence for both is great!
@@shaunboydmadethis Just bought it. Thanks!
You should bring back planking.
Haha! I like that idea.
When you were developing your plywood edging technique, would that be considered band practice? Not the whole band, mind you, just the woodwinds.
Haha! If only I was as good at an instrument as I am with making edge banding!
This has been so long in the making im surprised your beard has not yet grown back.
I just shave it off before I film myself each time.
What should a person expect to pay for a custom piece like this Shawn? I'd like to get into making some fancier stuff.
Pricing is always so difficult. There are probably furniture makers that could make this same piece and sell it for twice what I would ask. But just as a starting point, I would probably hope to get $3-4k for something like this.
Is your channel now a VLOG with bits of woodworking?
I don't know how much more woodworking I could add to this, but i could definitely start filming myself make coffee in the morning.
Shaun Boyd hahaha fair point. I love your channel
Thanks, man!
@@shaunboydmadethis Now that you mention it, what kind of coffee do you drink?
@@ssWinni Haha, I switch it up, but mostly Peet's.
so wait, what about selecting lumber and buying lumber again? did you go over it in Part 2? what about selecting lumber? How do you buy lumber? Are you buying select lumber?
I'll need to go back and check the tapes, but I feel like I mentioned how I select and buy lumber at some point in Part 2.
@@shaunboydmadethis fairly certain you did. ;) I appreciate your videos sir. Thanks for showcasing your skills while adding some levity.
Why not break down that walnut plywood with the tracksaw first so you don't have a move it around like that?
That is definitely a good way to do it, but I still have to get it onto my table to do that. Also I only have a 4 foot track, and I needed a long rip in this case, so table saw was the way to go. Thanks for watching!
Fair enough. Great video, of course! :)
stop laying down or stepping on the furniture dude. :-) Great job...you got this.
Haha! It is just so comfortable. Thanks man, almost there!
Selecting lumber...buying lumber...repeteadly...wow...that's new...😂...and oh...who is that dado singing guy? Dey dey do dey dohhhh...
Seriously...u need to buy a bigger house...so that you can buy sliding table saw for plywood/panel works...now go buy some lottery...good luck😁
Man, I could only dream of having a sliding table saw! Maybe one day! Winning the lottery would definitely help.
What's with the red hand of Ulster flag.... I think I might need too unsubscribe .. apart from that .. I think your awesome... make me happy by flying the saltire flag...
Haha, my dad is from Northern Ireland, so a lot of my family still lives there. I have a couple cousins that live in Scotland though, so maybe I'll get one of those up at some point, as well.
Cool... i am just across from belfast.. Stranraer to be precise..if your ever visiting family you're most welcome.