I'll vouch for your courses. Last year I bought the Longview Table. I'll soon be purchasing the matching chair course. After that I plan on building your Spider Table. I highly recommend the courses for beginners and intermediate builders, especially if you're like me--you suck at design. I'd call myself an...advanced intermediate...builder.
Thank you for the kind words and support. Always appreciate hearing it from other people. I genuinely do believe we make the best plans out there...but obviously I'm going to be biased. I hope that people who watch the channel often know that I'm not a very "braggadocios" kind of guy. But at the end of the day...I'm selling woodworking courses...so it's understandable that people might take my opinion with a grain of salt. For anybody interested, check them out here - foureyes.podia.com/ And if you don't like them...money back guarantee...so nothing to lose!
Just stopping by to agree: Foureyes plans are the best of the best. Absolutely worth the investment given the DAYS of problem-solving they save you, and they really do include cool skills that you’ll keep using in other projects.
I'm a small shop out of Florida, your plans look great plus the fact that you off a template too is really top tier. I think setting up a large catalogue of designs for sale or licensing would be the way to go, I do custom commissions so everything is a one off and I wish I had fusion back then to remake with ease to resell a cool piece.
Hell, I just purchased your plans for your designs. The Longview will look perfect in my dining room, so even though I don’t need the walk through on technique, I am in it for the great design aspects. Especially the leg assembly.
@@Foureyes.FurnitureYour humility and modesty do come through in your videos, but you're right: Your courses are some of the best I've seen in thirty years. You should be proud of them. They're incredibly inexpensive relative to all that they offer and the attention to detail in their production. I've learned more about design from your videos and plans in two years than I have from all other sources since I started building. I'm nearing completion on my first MCM inspired pedestal table that I designed and owe its (hopeful) success to you. Keep it up.
This piece is BEAUTIFUL. I was getting mad when you said you weren't satisfied with the resin top, but when I saw the wooden top my jaw fell to the floor. I'm not sure which one I like more, they're both pieces of art
Honestly, the table shown in the thumbnail really caught my eye. That semitransparent epoxy top looked beautiful. And it's see through, so it lets you see base through it, that adds to the beauty of it for me
I understand you aren't a fan of the epoxy top, but it's gorgeous. The back story is what makes it sooo amazing. And the back story on the inspiration for the leg design - when you told us, I literally went "huh. That's so cool". Keep up the amazing work. Whoever buys this is a very lucky person
I think an interesting idea for the leftover epoxy top (if that ends up being the leftover) is to make it a shelf underneath a higher and larger clear-top table. We had one like that in our previous house (albeit a circular table that can seat up to a dozen people), where the lower shelf was used to store extra coasters or even refills for the self-serve dishes people are eating (an extra basket of garlic bread, for instance).
As I understand it, flies are attracted to black hues. It helps with mimetism and avoiding predators gaze. Your pour is black, and lo, the flies. Great way to make me watch and listen to the ad.
I really preferred the black table top, especially with it being anchored by the two wooden dots, visually-speaking. A refreshing change from midcentury vibes. Great work.
That base is so beautiful that a transparent top (as shown in the thumbnail) would look great on it. Also, if the epoxy top needs a new purpose, I'd go with a smaller base; it felt like it was drowning in / being suffocated by the base from this video.
If the Epoxy top wasn’t chosen I‘d love to see it turned into a little horizontally oriented „closet“ maybe with handles on the wooden inserts, maybe I can inspire you :) Great video! You got a new sub from Germany
Hey Chris this is your fan in South Africa i must say when you said you are not a woodworker I am not agreeing with you on that one but i get your point. But you are my inspiration in woodworking buy far. Keep doing great job man l happy all time when release a new video
I love the story behind your design! I was a woodworking instructor years ago and each year I played my class a video of Tony Fadell on how great design begins- taking notice of everyday things.
Honestly, the transparent top you show in the thumbnail is the best because it shows the cool structure of the legs underneath it. You said the design was all about the legs, but we can't see the legs with either the black top or the solid wood top. Transparent top is the winner!
You may not be, as you say, primarily a furniture maker, but you are a very talented furniture designer. I especially admire the way you often design and make beautiful pieces utilizing what many others would consider waste material as you did here.
The completed table with the epoxy top looks really nice and modern. The table with the walnut top looks truly beautiful. Amazingly so. I'd take the walnut one every day of the week.
@@Foureyes.Furnitureyou’re probably not aware that AI is trained on the work of creators who didn’t give permission for the use of their work, get no credit, and don’t get paid. It’s theft.
I see your point about the black epoxy top. What about using the CNC to carve in a Celtic Knot pattern or some other geometric design that you could fill with a white epoxy or some other contrasting color? Gold would most certainly be eye popping.
I love your commentary. Your videos are incredible. I usually smile or chuckle multiple times jurying the video. I really like the epoxy top better and understand the long term use issues, there I would suggest a 1/2” thick piece of tempered glass with a matching bullnose edge. I remember back when you were still a desk jockey trying to decide if you such go all in. I again want to thank you for your choice to entertain me.
Both tabletops are beautiful, but the epoxy one is the winner, excellent work. Someday I will have enough money saved up to afford one of your creations.
Great build, Chris. The takeaway I have with all of your projects is not the end product, but the steps and tips you provide along the way to minimize errors. That includes the order of operations you always stress. Bill
I really like the look of the epoxy top more then the wooden top, but I understand the issues of scuffing overtime. I think the epoxy top would be best used as maybe a backing to some kinda of wall art piece. Alternatively... One could get a fitted glass top to place on the epoxy
Came for the flys, and also got that awesome cut off catch, clean room suit dance, and the angst between the art of woodworking and the utility of woodworking pieces. Thanks for another great video. If I had to pick, I'd go with the epoxy top, so the flies didn't die in vain.
Maybe cut two holes in the wood topi to match the wood pucks in the epoxy top, and fill with epoxy. Then, glue the two together, and you can flip the top whichever way you want it, making a Mega Top
Watching your videos while I hit my bong is the best feeling ever for real, I don’t know what it is about your commentating but it rolls off the brain nicely.
I clicked for the epoxy but I stayed for that gorgeous leg design. Can't get enough of it. Looks like it'd work utility-wise too, not just beauty-wise.. fit a basket in there, put it in a summer cottage with some old magazines..
Man, the quality of the video with the story telling is something else. I watch your videos for the same reason I watch Baumgartner Art Restorations, pure quality entertainment. I will likely never make an epoxy piece of furniture, nor will I ever restore paintings. But I sure do enjoy your content. Thank you very much for your excellent work.
2500 years later, an archeologist will find this piece and wonder what cultural or religious significance the buried flies have on our society. Perhaps preserving them means we worshipped the flies? Maybe they're there as guardian spirits for our journey to the afterlife? Only the ancients will know.
Hey, i have recently been to a restaurant. They had glass tops and over it was thin layer of 1cm clear silicone/plastic. It was to protect the glass top and also give option to keep their menu in between the layers. This would keep your epoxy top scratch free and also be usable. Easily cleaned.
I love the chunk graphic! Tree to little pieces to the final product. I spent a lot of years working on trail crews and we always joked about how our jobs were taking big pieces of wood (that fell across the trail) and turning them into smaller pieces of wood.
great piece as usual. I can confirm your plans are absolutely great. I got the free one and adapted it to make a bench (instead of a table). Because the plans were clear and complete, I had no issue changing the dimensions for my use. Thank you for inspiring me.
¿Alguna vez has pensado hacer mesas para dibujo técnico o artístico? De esas que se usan inclinadas, o también mesas para calcar como las que usan los animadores usando epoxi. Sería genial si tuviera las luces incorporadas desde arriba y ambos lados para poder trabajar sin sombras
And so we have the "Lord of the Flies." That was fun to watch. To borrow a quote... "A novel about the tension between groupthink and individuality." It'll be even more fun fo find out which top the winning bid chooses! Thanks Chris.
i feel like putting a sheet of glass on top of the epoxy would help it stay nice and clean looking without losing the look... but maybe thats a bit expensive to have done no idea
My favorite is Squactangle followed by sausage body. I'm very much an amateur woodworker and, as I can't do more (woodworking isn't cheap), or until I can, I appreciate the videos and the inspiration that they provide. Thanks!
Hi Chris, I started watching this video thinking I might learn something about using a new material to make tops for furniture pieces. The prospect of a transparent/translucide top with more than two centimeters thickness and a top that weighed less than a small car (I have used glass and stone for tops of similar sized pieces) was intriguing. But what I think I learned is that I really don’t want to deal with plastic shavings and dust in the shop. Hazmat suits are fine, but if you don’t need one it’s probably better. What I ended up appreciating the most was, as always with your videos, the design process. Who knew flies could be so interesting ? Anyway, thanks for the explanations. I’ll be waiting for the next installment. Cheers, Keith
Beautiful build. As someone who works with a CNC, I thought WHY when I saw you drilling a hole in the slab - I would have just secured it with double sided tape and maybe screwed only the offcut corners. Then I saw how much pain it caused in the end. But the way you solved it makes the design look even better than before. :)
First, made a mistake. Then thought of a way to turn it back into a win. And finally make it a win for other people. And during this entire process, shoot everything to create a wonderful entertainment. Wow 💖
Have the epoxy piece go as another shelf "inside" of the unit. Slightly smaller version. Either way, whoever buys it, may have someone that meticulously cleans their place and won't mind the black top! Love your work, bro.!
You're asking the wrong person which top looks better. Whilst I think you did a fantastic job on the epoxy top, it is plastic after all. And I hate epoxy except to fill cracks or knot holes. Absolutely love the final piece with the wooden top. And as usual a first class video, AI and all.
Split screen advert works! Keeps attention better than simple talking to screen about the advert product! Eye flicks back and forth, and somehow, I take in both screens
To Stop breakout on the corners of solid wood on the CNC router, you need two specific things. 1. Router must both be climb cutting as well as "roll around corners" machining 2. Finishing Compression cut tool . First you rough cut the outer shape leaving 3mm oversize, then clean cut with higher RPM and slower feed at full depth of cut.
I love the idea that a table whose entire inspiration and reason for being was centered around making use of leftover epoxy ends up without the epoxy top. It has a bit of a "ship of Theseus" feel to it. 😄
Here is an idea for the "next" excess epoxy top. After you get a layer or so thick.. embed some cool looking objects in the epoxy, that you can see if you illuminate the bottom. Maybe a whole bunch of dead flies... lol.. but I like layering some clock hands that you could make it so the table would tell time?
one quick trick to try before you continue to not like the table try, a ceramic spray on coating. either one for cars or they have specific ones for epoxy tables. alot of times it deepens the effect of the gloss and enhances the gloss.
The epoxy top would be great a shelf level below a top. Maybe a glass top? Good for art books or a sculptural piece. It would get much traffic and very little touching but you'd still see the strong black look of it.
The base is... really something else! Gives a real organic feel. It's great! Love the wooden top, yet I would love the base to be a little darker to have more contrast against?with? the top :)
fwiw i always called that shape a Raceway. Awesome idea for some waste resin. Im impressed that you realized that black epoxy wasnt the most ideal surface for a heavily used area. Both tops look amazing.
I watch because I appreciate bespoke pieces. I have no idea how to build anything out of wood. I wish I did. I’d build a pretty potting shed for myself. ❤️
7:17 gotta love the needlessly complicated editing for an incredibly subtle result also, it's kinda funny that you would say the sponsors were "kind enough" to let you keep playing the video during the ad read, when they probably know full well that that actually means their ad is likely to get more attention than it otherwise would
100% true. But many either aren’t smart enough or don’t care, and want you to fully stop and do a commercial. I definitely think this is the smarter way to go.
re: Working epoxy -- Have you dialed up Andy Phillip's channel? You router-kids can hold his beer while he works epoxy. re: Fly table base -- Nasty inspiration aside, that's a captivating base design, scale up- or downable, etc. Nice visual thinking there! Can't afford the 4K+ that the table would cost as of this moment, but kudos to the charity for having such a thoughtful & persuasive supporter.
easy way to see how much i need when im doing silicone . i fill the area with rice. then put that rice back into a bucket an i fill to that mark on the bucket. because i hate doing the math. I love your design of the table. its lovely.
Hey man, what you can try with the corners when using CNC, is turn the feed down a little, with metal it starts to vibrate in circulair ereas or corners. I guess wood breaks. Worth a try i'd say! Love the vids
Wow I like everything about the final table! It gave me all kinds of fun ideas such as doing a wood/epoxy layered effect all the way up the legs. Or maybe wood with epoxy tiger stripes in the shelves. Again, just for fun but yeah!
It’s a very touching story. Jack’s dad, Fred was my basketball coach when I was a kid… and now he is my real estate agent. He is an awesome guy, and it’s amazing to see how he has turned literally the worst thing a parent could go through, into such positivity. Jack has saved numerous other lives already, and hopefully the message will save countless more.
I would have picked both tops. Change it up every few months. They both look beautiful. Also balcktail studios nanocoating would have probably worked for the epoxy top. Love this table
The pieces I see from you tend to be more Modern pieces. Love to look. Love to get to watch them made. Art is beautiful! Can really appreciate looking at it. Very nice work!
I'll vouch for your courses. Last year I bought the Longview Table. I'll soon be purchasing the matching chair course. After that I plan on building your Spider Table.
I highly recommend the courses for beginners and intermediate builders, especially if you're like me--you suck at design. I'd call myself an...advanced intermediate...builder.
Thank you for the kind words and support. Always appreciate hearing it from other people. I genuinely do believe we make the best plans out there...but obviously I'm going to be biased. I hope that people who watch the channel often know that I'm not a very "braggadocios" kind of guy. But at the end of the day...I'm selling woodworking courses...so it's understandable that people might take my opinion with a grain of salt.
For anybody interested, check them out here - foureyes.podia.com/
And if you don't like them...money back guarantee...so nothing to lose!
Just stopping by to agree: Foureyes plans are the best of the best. Absolutely worth the investment given the DAYS of problem-solving they save you, and they really do include cool skills that you’ll keep using in other projects.
I'm a small shop out of Florida, your plans look great plus the fact that you off a template too is really top tier. I think setting up a large catalogue of designs for sale or licensing would be the way to go, I do custom commissions so everything is a one off and I wish I had fusion back then to remake with ease to resell a cool piece.
Hell, I just purchased your plans for your designs.
The Longview will look perfect in my dining room, so even though I don’t need the walk through on technique, I am in it for the great design aspects. Especially the leg assembly.
@@Foureyes.FurnitureYour humility and modesty do come through in your videos, but you're right: Your courses are some of the best I've seen in thirty years. You should be proud of them. They're incredibly inexpensive relative to all that they offer and the attention to detail in their production.
I've learned more about design from your videos and plans in two years than I have from all other sources since I started building. I'm nearing completion on my first MCM inspired pedestal table that I designed and owe its (hopeful) success to you.
Keep it up.
This is the first ad read I haven’t skipped in ages. “Letting” you continue to show the build progress is genius
16:41 "Two coats of Monocoat"
I like it
every time
This piece is BEAUTIFUL. I was getting mad when you said you weren't satisfied with the resin top, but when I saw the wooden top my jaw fell to the floor.
I'm not sure which one I like more, they're both pieces of art
Thank you so much!
Honestly, the table shown in the thumbnail really caught my eye. That semitransparent epoxy top looked beautiful. And it's see through, so it lets you see base through it, that adds to the beauty of it for me
I understand you aren't a fan of the epoxy top, but it's gorgeous. The back story is what makes it sooo amazing. And the back story on the inspiration for the leg design - when you told us, I literally went "huh. That's so cool".
Keep up the amazing work. Whoever buys this is a very lucky person
Winning bidder: "So do you want the polished walnut top, or the industrial waste with dead flies in it?"
I think an interesting idea for the leftover epoxy top (if that ends up being the leftover) is to make it a shelf underneath a higher and larger clear-top table. We had one like that in our previous house (albeit a circular table that can seat up to a dozen people), where the lower shelf was used to store extra coasters or even refills for the self-serve dishes people are eating (an extra basket of garlic bread, for instance).
As I understand it, flies are attracted to black hues. It helps with mimetism and avoiding predators gaze. Your pour is black, and lo, the flies. Great way to make me watch and listen to the ad.
I really preferred the black table top, especially with it being anchored by the two wooden dots, visually-speaking. A refreshing change from midcentury vibes. Great work.
Honestly that leg setup is mesmerizing. reminds me of something youd find in a modern Hobbit hole
Maybe that will be my official aesthetic. Modern Hobbit :)
If i thing of the insect origins, and sausage bodies, I get Gieger vibes from that base. But only for a moment, and it's not in any way bad
That base is so beautiful that a transparent top (as shown in the thumbnail) would look great on it. Also, if the epoxy top needs a new purpose, I'd go with a smaller base; it felt like it was drowning in / being suffocated by the base from this video.
If the Epoxy top wasn’t chosen I‘d love to see it turned into a little horizontally oriented „closet“ maybe with handles on the wooden inserts, maybe I can inspire you :) Great video! You got a new sub from Germany
Just flip the base over
Squectangle and Sausage body are both great names.❤️👍
They are...but Sausage Body has to be the best
Hey Chris this is your fan in South Africa i must say when you said you are not a woodworker I am not agreeing with you on that one but i get your point. But you are my inspiration in woodworking buy far. Keep doing great job man l happy all time when release a new video
I love the story behind your design! I was a woodworking instructor years ago and each year I played my class a video of Tony Fadell on how great design begins- taking notice of everyday things.
Thank you...and I haven't heard of that. Sounds right up my alley.
Honestly, the transparent top you show in the thumbnail is the best because it shows the cool structure of the legs underneath it. You said the design was all about the legs, but we can't see the legs with either the black top or the solid wood top. Transparent top is the winner!
Came out amazing!! Both tops are gorgeous
Thanks brother...let me know if you ever need any help with that 1-through-12 clock
@@Foureyes.Furniture hahaha I might, off center shelves on the plywood aren’t doing the trick 😂
@@SethFowler Please get this man to help you with that clock! That plywood is awful lol!
Yooo Seth Fowler I'm a big fan
Fully on board with calling “assembly of parts into a piece of furniture” the “Re-chunkification” of wood
You may not be, as you say, primarily a furniture maker, but you are a very talented furniture designer.
I especially admire the way you often design and make beautiful pieces utilizing what many others would consider waste material as you did here.
Thank you! 😊
Really appreciate the kind words.
you could have cur your losses, done this with a piece of some random plastic , but you continued ABSOLUTE LEGEND mad respect
The completed table with the epoxy top looks really nice and modern. The table with the walnut top looks truly beautiful. Amazingly so. I'd take the walnut one every day of the week.
The suite dance was just a cherry on top!
The use of AI in some of those shots was really interesting, and frankly quite cool. Love seeing creators find clever ways to use tools like that
Thanks...I just wanted to make that ending shot more attention holding by adding a visual to the talking. I also have fun with this kind of stuff :)
I'm curious which parts you mean and how you knew?
@@Foureyes.Furnitureyou’re probably not aware that AI is trained on the work of creators who didn’t give permission for the use of their work, get no credit, and don’t get paid.
It’s theft.
I see your point about the black epoxy top. What about using the CNC to carve in a Celtic Knot pattern or some other geometric design that you could fill with a white epoxy or some other contrasting color? Gold would most certainly be eye popping.
You could do that...I like simple minimal things in that regard though. Especially with a base that is already pretty attention grabbing.
I love your commentary. Your videos are incredible. I usually smile or chuckle multiple times jurying the video. I really like the epoxy top better and understand the long term use issues, there I would suggest a 1/2” thick piece of tempered glass with a matching bullnose edge.
I remember back when you were still a desk jockey trying to decide if you such go all in. I again want to thank you for your choice to entertain me.
Both tabletops are beautiful, but the epoxy one is the winner, excellent work. Someday I will have enough money saved up to afford one of your creations.
Thanks! and I'll be here and ready for you :)
Genuinely I like the idea of having both tops to switch out. Just hanging out in your living room? Wood top. Having a party with guests, epoxy top.
Great build, Chris. The takeaway I have with all of your projects is not the end product, but the steps and tips you provide along the way to minimize errors. That includes the order of operations you always stress.
Bill
Awesome, thank you!
3:55 it was almost amazing moonwalk. I'm impressed
I really like the look of the epoxy top more then the wooden top, but I understand the issues of scuffing overtime.
I think the epoxy top would be best used as maybe a backing to some kinda of wall art piece.
Alternatively... One could get a fitted glass top to place on the epoxy
Good idea :)
Came for the flys, and also got that awesome cut off catch, clean room suit dance, and the angst between the art of woodworking and the utility of woodworking pieces. Thanks for another great video. If I had to pick, I'd go with the epoxy top, so the flies didn't die in vain.
Maybe cut two holes in the wood topi to match the wood pucks in the epoxy top, and fill with epoxy. Then, glue the two together, and you can flip the top whichever way you want it, making a Mega Top
Swappable Top Coffee table...you're on to something :)
Beautiful, I personally like the walnut top as I agree with all of the maintenance to keep the epoxy top clean.
Watching your videos while I hit my bong is the best feeling ever for real, I don’t know what it is about your commentating but it rolls off the brain nicely.
haha...appreciate it. I take it as a genuine compliment
I love to see ribbons of epoxy flying off tools over…someone else. Great job 🌞
Me too!
I clicked for the epoxy but I stayed for that gorgeous leg design. Can't get enough of it. Looks like it'd work utility-wise too, not just beauty-wise.. fit a basket in there, put it in a summer cottage with some old magazines..
Man, the transitions in your videos are always so smooth and satisfying to watch. Especially at 12:02. So cool!
Love the mistakes.... Helps us grow.... Appreciate your humbleness
Wooden top looks way better than the plastic one 😉
Nice table and awesome video 👏🏻👏🏻
Thanks 👍
The ad read while keeping the video going was impressively effective!
Love it. But the highlight for me was the dancing. I like the epoxy top. The walnut was nice, but the epoxy was different. Like a reverse river table.
Dancing was the most fun part of the build for me too :)
This is an amazing piece of furniture, and that moonwalk was bossy. #Kudos 🕺🏻
I will almost always pick wood over epoxy. Love the legs. And I would call that shape Pill. Sounds cute!
Pill shape is probably the one that makes the most sense too.
Man, the quality of the video with the story telling is something else. I watch your videos for the same reason I watch Baumgartner Art Restorations, pure quality entertainment. I will likely never make an epoxy piece of furniture, nor will I ever restore paintings. But I sure do enjoy your content.
Thank you very much for your excellent work.
I often get comments saying that we sound the same.
Thank you for the kind words.
2500 years later, an archeologist will find this piece and wonder what cultural or religious significance the buried flies have on our society. Perhaps preserving them means we worshipped the flies? Maybe they're there as guardian spirits for our journey to the afterlife? Only the ancients will know.
I've built several pieces of furniture and website elements utilizing that "stadium" shape, my fave, that I've preferred to call an "ovoid".
3:55 That moonwalk was so clean!
Thank you kind sir
Hey, i have recently been to a restaurant. They had glass tops and over it was thin layer of 1cm clear silicone/plastic. It was to protect the glass top and also give option to keep their menu in between the layers. This would keep your epoxy top scratch free and also be usable. Easily cleaned.
You seem to be surprisingly well good at rendering and drawing, when you shaded the table so well it was unexpected
I love the chunk graphic! Tree to little pieces to the final product. I spent a lot of years working on trail crews and we always joked about how our jobs were taking big pieces of wood (that fell across the trail) and turning them into smaller pieces of wood.
great piece as usual.
I can confirm your plans are absolutely great. I got the free one and adapted it to make a bench (instead of a table). Because the plans were clear and complete, I had no issue changing the dimensions for my use.
Thank you for inspiring me.
Awesome, thank you! Glad you enjoyed....:)
Hi, I'm one of 17 persons.
Thanks for linking the epoxy polishing video, I am still trying to improve on how I do it and haven't watched that one yet.
Another thoughtful and beautiful piece. Loved the video as well!
Thank you so much 🤗
Thanks for your honesty, that you are a videomaker. Yes, you are also a designer making fine products but I appreciate your openness.
¿Alguna vez has pensado hacer mesas para dibujo técnico o artístico? De esas que se usan inclinadas, o también mesas para calcar como las que usan los animadores usando epoxi. Sería genial si tuviera las luces incorporadas desde arriba y ambos lados para poder trabajar sin sombras
And so we have the "Lord of the Flies." That was fun to watch. To borrow a quote... "A novel about the tension between groupthink and individuality." It'll be even more fun fo find out which top the winning bid chooses! Thanks Chris.
i feel like putting a sheet of glass on top of the epoxy would help it stay nice and clean looking without losing the look... but maybe thats a bit expensive to have done no idea
Yeah...I actually think if you want that look. Just scrap the epoxy and do a glass top period. Won't have the thickness though.
My favorite is Squactangle followed by sausage body. I'm very much an amateur woodworker and, as I can't do more (woodworking isn't cheap), or until I can, I appreciate the videos and the inspiration that they provide. Thanks!
i like the idea of reusing waste materials. have you ever wanted to do a scrapwood challenge build lol
I di like building stuff from scraps...but never considered a challenge.
Absolutely stunning!
Thank you so much!
SQ U I R C L E
Im not a fan of any furniture build using epoxy BUT im glad I kept watching because the tip about cleaning up router tear out was great! Thanks!
Glad it was helpful!
I love your squectangular table
Many of your pieces look like DANSK lines. Love your ideas and pieces. So classic and simple. You ROCK!
Hi Chris,
I started watching this video thinking I might learn something about using a new material to make tops for furniture pieces. The prospect of a transparent/translucide top with more than two centimeters thickness and a top that weighed less than a small car (I have used glass and stone for tops of similar sized pieces) was intriguing. But what I think I learned is that I really don’t want to deal with plastic shavings and dust in the shop. Hazmat suits are fine, but if you don’t need one it’s probably better. What I ended up appreciating the most was, as always with your videos, the design process. Who knew flies could be so interesting ? Anyway, thanks for the explanations. I’ll be waiting for the next installment.
Cheers,
Keith
Beautiful build. As someone who works with a CNC, I thought WHY when I saw you drilling a hole in the slab - I would have just secured it with double sided tape and maybe screwed only the offcut corners. Then I saw how much pain it caused in the end. But the way you solved it makes the design look even better than before. :)
Thank you...appreciate that. Definitely learned a lesson on this one :)
First, made a mistake.
Then thought of a way to turn it back into a win.
And finally make it a win for other people. And during this entire process, shoot everything to create a wonderful entertainment.
Wow 💖
Have the epoxy piece go as another shelf "inside" of the unit. Slightly smaller version. Either way, whoever buys it, may have someone that meticulously cleans their place and won't mind the black top! Love your work, bro.!
the black epoxy really looks gorgeous with the base. ik its tough with being used but truly it looks great
You're asking the wrong person which top looks better. Whilst I think you did a fantastic job on the epoxy top, it is plastic after all. And I hate epoxy except to fill cracks or knot holes. Absolutely love the final piece with the wooden top. And as usual a first class video, AI and all.
Thank you...and I guess in fairness, asking that question in a video. I'll be asking thousands of right and wrong persons :)
Split screen advert works! Keeps attention better than simple talking to screen about the advert product! Eye flicks back and forth, and somehow, I take in both screens
To Stop breakout on the corners of solid wood on the CNC router, you need two specific things.
1. Router must both be climb cutting as well as "roll around corners" machining
2. Finishing Compression cut tool .
First you rough cut the outer shape leaving 3mm oversize, then clean cut with higher RPM and slower feed at full depth of cut.
I love the idea that a table whose entire inspiration and reason for being was centered around making use of leftover epoxy ends up without the epoxy top. It has a bit of a "ship of Theseus" feel to it. 😄
Good call...Is it a leftover epoxy table if it contains no left over epoxy any longer? :)
Here is an idea for the "next" excess epoxy top. After you get a layer or so thick.. embed some cool looking objects in the epoxy, that you can see if you illuminate the bottom. Maybe a whole bunch of dead flies... lol.. but I like layering some clock hands that you could make it so the table would tell time?
Ps.. I like the epoxy top.. but the wood one looks better on that base. Great build!
one quick trick to try before you continue to not like the table try, a ceramic spray on coating. either one for cars or they have specific ones for epoxy tables. alot of times it deepens the effect of the gloss and enhances the gloss.
The epoxy top would be great a shelf level below a top. Maybe a glass top? Good for art books or a sculptural piece. It would get much traffic and very little touching but you'd still see the strong black look of it.
The base is... really something else! Gives a real organic feel. It's great!
Love the wooden top, yet I would love the base to be a little darker to have more contrast against?with? the top :)
Glad you like it!
fwiw i always called that shape a Raceway. Awesome idea for some waste resin. Im impressed that you realized that black epoxy wasnt the most ideal surface for a heavily used area. Both tops look amazing.
Love your videos. I believe you are a furniture maker,sculptor, philosopher, scientist and a funny guy!
Love the use of leftover epoxy, and it turned out beautifully - so sharp looking!
Thank you! As I always say...couldn't have done it without you (literally)
Definitely the wood top! You analogy to the black car is spot on and exactly why I wouldn't want it in my house. Beautiful table though!
Thank you
Great job with the ad, I actually didn't skip through it because the build was still going
I watch because I appreciate bespoke pieces. I have no idea how to build anything out of wood. I wish I did. I’d build a pretty potting shed for myself. ❤️
7:17 gotta love the needlessly complicated editing for an incredibly subtle result
also, it's kinda funny that you would say the sponsors were "kind enough" to let you keep playing the video during the ad read, when they probably know full well that that actually means their ad is likely to get more attention than it otherwise would
100% true. But many either aren’t smart enough or don’t care, and want you to fully stop and do a commercial. I definitely think this is the smarter way to go.
re: Working epoxy -- Have you dialed up Andy Phillip's channel? You router-kids can hold his beer while he works epoxy. re: Fly table base -- Nasty inspiration aside, that's a captivating base design, scale up- or downable, etc. Nice visual thinking there! Can't afford the 4K+ that the table would cost as of this moment, but kudos to the charity for having such a thoughtful & persuasive supporter.
easy way to see how much i need when im doing silicone . i fill the area with rice. then put that rice back into a bucket an i fill to that mark on the bucket. because i hate doing the math. I love your design of the table. its lovely.
Hey man, what you can try with the corners when using CNC, is turn the feed down a little, with metal it starts to vibrate in circulair ereas or corners. I guess wood breaks. Worth a try i'd say! Love the vids
Neat add for the insurance company, normally I fast forward through adds but in this I watched the woodwork while listening through the ad, well done!
Amazing video. I'm partial to the walnut top. The epoxy top can be a cool wall hanger like Cam did with the moisture trapped table.
Maybe I'll end up with a big clock :)
I have to admit, that is a very clean table. Love the design.
Creating this table from the idea of a flies body is ultimately creative. Really so cool how inspiration can come from anything
I WANT THAT TABLE WITH THE EPOXY TOP!
Simple yet complex & the all deep-black top is the perfect contrast! :O
Wow I like everything about the final table! It gave me all kinds of fun ideas such as doing a wood/epoxy layered effect all the way up the legs. Or maybe wood with epoxy tiger stripes in the shelves. Again, just for fun but yeah!
I just read about the foundation. Amazing story and an amazing foundation. You are truly a blessed man
It’s a very touching story. Jack’s dad, Fred was my basketball coach when I was a kid… and now he is my real estate agent. He is an awesome guy, and it’s amazing to see how he has turned literally the worst thing a parent could go through, into such positivity. Jack has saved numerous other lives already, and hopefully the message will save countless more.
You have come full circle by filling holes in epoxy with wood. Awesome video.
I like how you just described calculus as a way to estimate the volume of epoxy you need.
both are pretty gorgeous, id prefer the wood though. the base is definitely the best part, super slick.
I would have picked both tops. Change it up every few months. They both look beautiful. Also balcktail studios nanocoating would have probably worked for the epoxy top. Love this table
The pieces I see from you tend to be more Modern pieces. Love to look. Love to get to watch them made. Art is beautiful! Can really appreciate looking at it. Very nice work!
If the product was actually the video, this is a wonderful piece. This is one of the few channels I don't use the 1.5x
Appreciate that. Also please don’t use .5 speed. I’ll sound drunk.
Epoxy top looks fantastic! Love the story as well. Pretty happy you didn't include 8 legs! Spiders aren't my thing.
One Handed Maker
The wood top is pretty stunning, I do agree with you on why you decided to make it.
Thanks :)