I really enjoy watching your videos because I feel I can watch them and then go create something of my own. Even though I don't have all the tools you have I can modify what I have to work. Basically the most important thing you convey is your thought process. Thank you!
This is a valuable addition to my woodwork collection ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxkNYRBJuiJ6EwD-tQSAlxg0eFKsnR2cgz I still will rate this woodwork plan as the best in my reference library. It always seem to stand out from the rest whenever you go through the library. This is a masterpiece.
Who is this stranger walking around the shop, talking to you and interrupting the video with no shame ? I love your videos. They’re filmed and edited very well. It feels like you are a very hard worker and aim for perfection. Thank you very much for these !!!
@@MakeEverything I am in the middle of making a 8 foot long Chery live edge slab mantle that is 3” thick and 14” deep for my house. That’s how I found your Channel. Subscribed!
I just made a built-in dresser with European Beech from a huge tree we had to cut down at work. I let the wood dry for two years after it was rough-cut in our garage. Came out pretty nice.
I used your techniques to make a fireplace mantle for my wife for a Christmas present. The jig for welding the pins and drilling into the back of the mantle worked like magic. When I went to mount the mantle on the wall, it slid in good and tight like a perfect fit. Thank you for publishing your ideas and techniques and making my project a success.
Really enjoyed watching this video. Best part is there are no gimmicks during the video. Straight talk and explanation of the process. You don't spend time trying to be funny or be goofy. Well rounded craftsman. Helps to know different ways to make something.
I recently did a live edge mantle. It was 32 inches wide and the customer wanted live edge on the end as well. So I cut the two ends on an angle and then took the grinder and made it uneven. Love the bracket and the template for it!
You've kindly shared a good deal of accumulated experience and wisdom in this video. I suspect years of trials and anticipations made or not lie within this apparently seamless translation to the finished product. I also appreciate how you've taken the time to incorporate the welding into your skillset such that the project could be moved to completion under your extraordinary care and integrity. This was such a pleasure to watch. I wish my dad could have seen this. He was a fine carpenter with an industrial arts degree and decades of work as carpenter or junior high woodshop instructor. I bought him a subscription to Fine Homebuilding towards his latter years. Videos like this, unavailable during his time, he so would have enjoyed. I spent many years as a carpenter myself, sometimes agonizing and self-scolding. A good night's rest most often resulted in fresh a perspective. Thank you.
I did a similar bracket with a live edge shelf, although my process was a little different: first I drilled 5/8” holes in the flat bar, then laid that along the back edge of the shelf and traced out the location of the holes. From there I drilled 5/8” holes into the shelf using a block with a bushing (to keep the bit straight).Then I put 5/8 solid rod in each hole, laid the flat bar on with the holes lined up, and tack welded the rods to the flat bar. Finished with filet welds on the other side, and chamfered the holes to clear the welds. Came out pretty much perfect!
Wow, not only did the shelf look beautiful, it was great to watch someone who takes great pride in what he does, and the fact that you clean up as you go and vacuum while drilling is awesome. Wish more people thought to do that while they work. Great job and excellent work ethics.
Just a quick tip... Put your steel pins in your mantle first, using a layout guide stick to keep your pin holes parallel with each other. Leave them sticking out with enough room to weld on your wall mount. Shim your wall mount to the height you need on your work bench and tack weld it to your pins. It's easier to adjust the wall mount to the pins than trying to locate pins in a slab edge. Awesome mantle btw-J. :)
Nice job! Looks awesome!! Here's a little trick that i used in my similar projects. Even on floating shelves for books and such. After you've installed your metal or wood pin bracket into your finished piece. Mark a center line on the furthest outer pins where they fit into piece. Then measure up from back edge 2 inches and drill a 1/8 inch hole into the piece up to the pin. Then take a long style Allen head set screw and coat it with wax and thread it into hole till it hits pins to lock in place to assure it wont work its way out through heat and cold and vibration. Then just loosen the 2 set screws enough to pull piece back off guide pin bracket. The only thing you will see is 2 tiny hole under bottom edge. Very hard to see if your not looking for it.. Its just a guarantee that piece will never relax and wiggle out away from wall down the road.. You can also just use one on the cent. Pin as well. Anyway great job. Looks beautiful bro! Make America great again by building it with your hands.. 🇺🇸🇺🇸✌😎 Thanks for sharing.
Really nice production video. Your video is as good as your woodworking. Kept my interest all the way through. I'm building a floating shelf now. I don't weld. I did take a 2x3x 1/4" angle iron and bolted it to the wall then cut a slot in the shelf to fit it together. I'll need to put a screw or bolt from top or bottom to lock it in place. I was gong to route a slot, but I recessed the track in the tile in the wall with a grinder instead. Vacant house. Thanks again for taking the time to make the video.
I have no expertise whatsoever in these types of endeavors, However, I have a basement which needs finishing a fireplace that I just got finished doing a level 2 inspection and will receive a stainless steel liner. The Fireplace needs a mantle. Long story short, I found a guy locally who does exactly what you do. Of course I have contracted him for the basement. All of this to say I appreciate the detail and effort to make such a fine piece. And of course to buy local.
Ive recently made 2 floating shelves, a floating mantel and a supported mantel all out of a beechtree i dropped and milled my self. I really like your mounting idea i may have to use it on another!
Thanks for the video, I just wished I had watched it before I made my own bracket. Your Jig is an amazing idea, I'm having some fitment issues as not all the bars are lined up, but now I can go back out tomorrow and correct my mistakes.
Again, as per all of your instructional videos, just excellent. I really like the way you articulate what you are doing while omiting what you don't need us to watch (sanding). Your expertise with the numerous tools you have is also very impressive. Well done. Cheers from Canada.
Excellent video. Very interesting and informative. Love you're shop too. I love working with wood, am a retired art and framing business owner for many years.
Very well done. Especially, well thought out and executed….maybe a little over kill, but better strong and sturdy. Who knows, they may want a family Christmas photo sitting on the mantle lol.
I learned an awful lot with this video thank you so much for the share and for taking the time from start to finish most videos people cut it down to five or 10 minutes and you don’t actually see the whole process were you allowed us to see the whole process and for a new woodworker this was perfect thank you
Your finished mantle was super..you are like an artist..I would of liked to see it end up on a better looking fireplace...like mine.. I guess you just light the fire and sit back on the stairway and enjoy the crackling flames
Nice job. Love the way you did the hidden bracket. Should be solid. That fireplace seems to just be stuck in a left over space. Kind of odd having it so close to the stairs.
Fascinating process - those 24 minutes flew by. It might just be me, but you have a great command of the English language to go along with your mad "make everything" skills. Well done.
I never would have thought it was so complicated by looking at it installed. Watched the video because I was curious how to attached it to the wall. When you're so meticulous about the fabrication you can get away without epoxying it in place.
Tom Builds Stuff as complicated as it seemed, once you’ve done it once or twice it’s hard to imagine doing a floating shelf any other way. Thanks for watching!
I was very intrigued and amazed by the process and extremely in love with the end result. Unfortunately I’m not a builder, but I would definitely buy those wood Floating shelves.
I’m working on this project, following your video every step of the way. I decided to get cute and try 3/16” flat stock for the bracket. It was sturdy as hell but I could tell it was going to be impossible to get off when I performed the test fit. I went back to the local steel yard and picked up some 1/8” flat stock and re-welded the mount your way. Can’t blame me for trying, lol. I decided to make a video and will post it and link your awesome video. Thanks for all the useful tips! Louie
Just a tip. When doing a floating shelve on a normal wall with studs, make sure you get the layout of the studs at the install site so you can drill your holes into the metal plate which will ensure you hit studs when mounting. The other tip is use a thicker flat bar steel like 3/16 or 1/4”. This way you don’t get any twisting. It didn’t matter much on this install because you can get a screw on each end of the mount bracket. On a stud framed wall, your shelf may extend past the last stud on each end and you’ll have to float the shelf out from the last bolt... hence the thicker steel won’t allow it to twist and will remain tight to the wall. I like the method you did drilling the holes, that’s the hardest part to get them to line up! Great work!!!
Great job on the shelf and on the video! As someone else said, thanks for explaining your thought process. I have a double tree (that was joined at the bottom) from our yard that we had taken down and cut into slabs. I plan on making a bunch of stuff for our home and for clients. I learned a lot from this video that will help me with that. Just subbed.
when I heard what you and your buddies did to that squirrel , I told myself I've got to party with this guy. Dude you are a maniac me and you together .. forget about
I really enjoy watching your videos because I feel I can watch them and then go create something of my own. Even though I don't have all the tools you have I can modify what I have to work. Basically the most important thing you convey is your thought process. Thank you!
That was really cool. I have a sawmill myself. I’m going to make some black walnut floating shelve for my house to surprise my wife. Thank you.
This is a valuable addition to my woodwork collection ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxkNYRBJuiJ6EwD-tQSAlxg0eFKsnR2cgz I still will rate this woodwork plan as the best in my reference library. It always seem to stand out from the rest whenever you go through the library. This is a masterpiece.
Who is this stranger walking around the shop, talking to you and interrupting the video with no shame ?
I love your videos. They’re filmed and edited very well.
It feels like you are a very hard worker and aim for perfection.
Thank you very much for these !!!
I have been a finish carpenter for 35 years and I will tell you right now that jig is genius. Great job man
I appreciate that compliment!
@@MakeEverything I am in the middle of making a 8 foot long Chery live edge slab mantle that is 3” thick and 14” deep for my house.
That’s how I found your Channel.
Subscribed!
Extremely sophisticated work. Too good to just be in a pokey alcove next to the stairs man that deserves to be in a big lounge room. Superb work.
Man, you really got a gift! Super thanks to share your knowledge the way you use to do, even the invisible parts of the work.
Thank you for that!!
I just made a built-in dresser with European Beech from a huge tree we had to cut down at work. I let the wood dry for two years after it was rough-cut in our garage. Came out pretty nice.
I used your techniques to make a fireplace mantle for my wife for a Christmas present. The jig for welding the pins and drilling into the back of the mantle worked like magic. When I went to mount the mantle on the wall, it slid in good and tight like a perfect fit. Thank you for publishing your ideas and techniques and making my project a success.
Really enjoyed watching this video. Best part is there are no gimmicks during the video. Straight talk and explanation of the process. You don't spend time trying to be funny or be goofy. Well rounded craftsman. Helps to know different ways to make something.
Can I say professional. That was incredible to watch.
I recently did a live edge mantle. It was 32 inches wide and the customer wanted live edge on the end as well. So I cut the two ends on an angle and then took the grinder and made it uneven.
Love the bracket and the template for it!
Nice, I did the same exact thing on a 22 inch double Live Edge coffee table
You've kindly shared a good deal of accumulated experience and wisdom in this video. I suspect years of trials and anticipations made or not lie within this apparently seamless translation to the finished product. I also appreciate how you've taken the time to incorporate the welding into your skillset such that the project could be moved to completion under your extraordinary care and integrity. This was such a pleasure to watch. I wish my dad could have seen this. He was a fine carpenter with an industrial arts degree and decades of work as carpenter or junior high woodshop instructor. I bought him a subscription to Fine Homebuilding towards his latter years. Videos like this, unavailable during his time, he so would have enjoyed. I spent many years as a carpenter myself, sometimes agonizing and self-scolding. A good night's rest most often resulted in fresh a perspective. Thank you.
Thank you very much!
I did a similar bracket with a live edge shelf, although my process was a little different: first I drilled 5/8” holes in the flat bar, then laid that along the back edge of the shelf and traced out the location of the holes. From there I drilled 5/8” holes into the shelf using a block with a bushing (to keep the bit straight).Then I put 5/8 solid rod in each hole, laid the flat bar on with the holes lined up, and tack welded the rods to the flat bar. Finished with filet welds on the other side, and chamfered the holes to clear the welds. Came out pretty much perfect!
Wow, not only did the shelf look beautiful, it was great to watch someone who takes great pride in what he does, and the fact that you clean up as you go and vacuum while drilling is awesome. Wish more people thought to do that while they work. Great job and excellent work ethics.
Just a quick tip... Put your steel pins in your mantle first, using a layout guide stick to keep your pin holes parallel with each other. Leave them sticking out with enough room to weld on your wall mount. Shim your wall mount to the height you need on your work bench and tack weld it to your pins. It's easier to adjust the wall mount to the pins than trying to locate pins in a slab edge. Awesome mantle btw-J. :)
Excellent video, clear and concise descriptions, great craftsmanship.... perfect. Thanks
Nice job! Looks awesome!!
Here's a little trick that i used in my similar projects. Even on floating shelves for books and such.
After you've installed your metal or wood pin bracket into your finished piece.
Mark a center line on the furthest outer pins where they fit into piece.
Then measure up from back edge 2 inches and drill a 1/8 inch hole into the piece up to the pin.
Then take a long style Allen head set screw and coat it with wax and thread it into hole till it hits pins to lock in place to assure it wont work its way out through heat and cold and vibration.
Then just loosen the 2 set screws enough to pull piece back off guide pin bracket.
The only thing you will see is 2 tiny hole under bottom edge. Very hard to see if your not looking for it..
Its just a guarantee that piece will never relax and wiggle out away from wall down the road.. You can also just use one on the cent. Pin as well.
Anyway great job. Looks beautiful bro!
Make America great again by building it with your hands.. 🇺🇸🇺🇸✌😎
Thanks for sharing.
Amazing craftmanship! The hidden bracket design is very clever.
Excellent work! Mantle looks great.
Great vid on live edge mantel build. I hope to build my own from a red oak log milled from a tree on my property. Your video will be most helpful.
Really nice production video. Your video is as good as your woodworking. Kept my interest all the way through. I'm building a floating shelf now. I don't weld. I did take a 2x3x 1/4" angle iron and bolted it to the wall then cut a slot in the shelf to fit it together. I'll need to put a screw or bolt from top or bottom to lock it in place. I was gong to route a slot, but I recessed the track in the tile in the wall with a grinder instead. Vacant house. Thanks again for taking the time to make the video.
The shelf is soooooooooooooooooooo much better than fireplace!!!!!
This is a great video dude. You’re sharing so many little nuggets of truth that take years to figure out! Preach on brother!
The flow of the video and the spoken presentation merge very well into a smooth and enjoyable demonstration. Very informative job. Thanks.
James Nasmith thank you!!!
I have no expertise whatsoever in these types of endeavors, However, I have a basement which needs finishing a fireplace that I just got finished doing a level 2 inspection and will receive a stainless steel liner. The Fireplace needs a mantle. Long story short, I found a guy locally who does exactly what you do. Of course I have contracted him for the basement. All of this to say I appreciate the detail and effort to make such a fine piece. And of course to buy local.
A million dollar shop!
Well worth my time to watch that video. Again.
Ive recently made 2 floating shelves, a floating mantel and a supported mantel all out of a beechtree i dropped and milled my self. I really like your mounting idea i may have to use it on another!
It's funny. I totally love the sanding lol
Cool mantel! Remember to use a push stick on your table saw!
Love the way you did your floating shelve better than my way,So if I do another I will try to copy you
Thanks for teaching Sir
Thanks for the video, I just wished I had watched it before I made my own bracket. Your Jig is an amazing idea, I'm having some fitment issues as not all the bars are lined up, but now I can go back out tomorrow and correct my mistakes.
Best of luck!!
The Best Video ever for this project. Thanks
Again, as per all of your instructional videos, just excellent. I really like the way you articulate what you are doing while omiting what you don't need us to watch (sanding). Your expertise with the numerous tools you have is also very impressive. Well done. Cheers from Canada.
you have a very good way of communicating so us non carpenters can understand. keep up the good work. thanks
Very nice. Super professional.
Highly recommend the Wood Owl bits for cutting the deep holes. They cut as clean as forstner bits but can cut a lot deeper. Great video!
Fantastic end result 👌🏻👏🏻
Excellent video. Very interesting and informative. Love you're shop too. I love working with wood, am a retired art and framing business owner for many years.
Very well done. Especially, well thought out and executed….maybe a little over kill, but better strong and sturdy. Who knows, they may want a family Christmas photo sitting on the mantle lol.
This is exactly what I’m building and you shared some important techniques. Thanks!
I learned an awful lot with this video thank you so much for the share and for taking the time from start to finish most videos people cut it down to five or 10 minutes and you don’t actually see the whole process were you allowed us to see the whole process and for a new woodworker this was perfect thank you
Beautiful piece of work. Thanks so much.
Good job! Love your workshop.
Great job,so many steps in this project,turned out wonderful,thanks.
I have a huge slab of black walnut I want to put above my fireplace, this is a great reference on how to get it done, thanks!!
Your finished mantle was super..you are like an artist..I would of liked to see it end up on a better looking fireplace...like mine.. I guess you just light the fire and sit back on the stairway and enjoy the crackling flames
A true craftsman!
Great video. Your project turned out very nice.
Nice job. I think you are one of the best videos available. You scared me a couple times with hands near the table saw. I again loved your work.
I learned so much from this. Thank you so much! I wish you lived in Texas. I would love to have you do this for our home. God bless.
Nice work. love the precision holes template idea. thanks for sharing
Very impressive - enjoyed watching
that template to weld the mounting bracket tubes and drill the holes is genius!
Thanks!!
Nice job. Love the way you did the hidden bracket. Should be solid. That fireplace seems to just be stuck in a left over space. Kind of odd having it so close to the stairs.
Loved all the fixtures you've used throughout the build.
Now I see why wood pieces can be so expensive... so much work!
Great video and explanation. I found it very inspiring
nice shelf well done
Fascinating process - those 24 minutes flew by. It might just be me, but you have a great command of the English language to go along with your mad "make everything" skills. Well done.
That's looks very nice..
Very well done congratulations this is the technique I will be using mine👍
Great job dude
Beautiful job.
Well done
beautiful workmanship!
Nice well equated shop
Very nice job! Enjoyed watching this and learned some things that I will be using when I make mine. Thanks!
Nice work!
I never would have thought it was so complicated by looking at it installed. Watched the video because I was curious how to attached it to the wall. When you're so meticulous about the fabrication you can get away without epoxying it in place.
Tom Builds Stuff as complicated as it seemed, once you’ve done it once or twice it’s hard to imagine doing a floating shelf any other way. Thanks for watching!
Love the hot glue to create A dam for the epoxy...
Man that thing is beautiful, and done right. You are a great craftsman and no cutting corners. Great video.
Christopher Cheek thank you very much!!!!!
Nice work. Always nice to watch quality in motion.
I was very intrigued and amazed by the process and extremely in love with the end result. Unfortunately I’m not a builder, but I would definitely buy those wood Floating shelves.
Wow! Beautiful!
I’m working on this project, following your video every step of the way. I decided to get cute and try 3/16” flat stock for the bracket. It was sturdy as hell but I could tell it was going to be impossible to get off when I performed the test fit. I went back to the local steel yard and picked up some 1/8” flat stock and re-welded the mount your way. Can’t blame me for trying, lol. I decided to make a video and will post it and link your awesome video. Thanks for all the useful tips!
Louie
looeeloco awesome!! Thanks!
Got a Sawstop. Thumbs up.
Nice work
You should have at least a million subs, this channel is awesome, great work Chris!
thanks mate, very valuable info. greetings from Bolivia!
Just a tip. When doing a floating shelve on a normal wall with studs, make sure you get the layout of the studs at the install site so you can drill your holes into the metal plate which will ensure you hit studs when mounting. The other tip is use a thicker flat bar steel like 3/16 or 1/4”. This way you don’t get any twisting. It didn’t matter much on this install because you can get a screw on each end of the mount bracket. On a stud framed wall, your shelf may extend past the last stud on each end and you’ll have to float the shelf out from the last bolt... hence the thicker steel won’t allow it to twist and will remain tight to the wall. I like the method you did drilling the holes, that’s the hardest part to get them to line up! Great work!!!
Love it ! Really want to get into welding now! Thank you
Good job👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Masyaallah, Good Job boy 👍
Nice to meet you boy, From Indonesia
Superb work! Very smart ideas here. And detail...routing that ring to allow for the weld build up, is very clever!
Great demo! Very informative.
I can do all that but the welding. Sigh. Shop is just a shed. Lol. Beautiful work and explanation. Thanks
Great job on the shelf and on the video! As someone else said, thanks for explaining your thought process.
I have a double tree (that was joined at the bottom) from our yard that we had taken down and cut into slabs. I plan on making a bunch of stuff for our home and for clients. I learned a lot from this video that will help me with that. Just subbed.
Nice work bro 👊🏼
Great job. You are a great problem solver with mad skills!
Fantastic job! Quality workmanship 😎👍
Nicely done!
I would think if you were slightly off vertical the dogs either wouldn't fit or they also wouldn't be vertical either. Great video and channel
Excellent 👍
when I heard what you and your buddies did to that squirrel , I told myself I've got to party with this guy. Dude you are a maniac me and you together .. forget about
Well thought out process. Very nice...
Very well done. Really like your shop and your many talents. Oh, yeah the shelf is nice, to say the least.
Excellent
Beautiful job!