LIOGIER hand-stitched wood rasp, râpe à bois piquée main
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- Опубліковано 20 січ 2011
- LIOGIER râpes et rifloirs piqués main : www.liogier-france.fr
Boutique en ligne : www.hand-stitched-rasp-riffle...
LIOGIER hand cut rasps and rifflers : www.liogier-france.com
Webstore : www.hand-stitched-rasp-riffler... - Навчання та стиль
Un travail magnifique que je découvre grâce à Olivier Verdier
Le piquage à la main est vraiment impressionnant, quelle maîtrise !
There is nothing magical in producing these rasps. All it takes is know-how and practice. My family have been refining both of them and transmitting it from father to son for 4 generations. Personally, it has been 32 years that I strive daily to produce the best possible hand-stitched rasps, mainly for sake of seeing what woodworkers are able to achieve with them in their hands.
I wish we could find your products in Turkey too
J'ai découvert vos râpes grâce à Olivier Verdier je suis impressionné par la technique du piquage à la main.
Chapeau messieurs 👍
In a world full of cheaply made and disposable items, I am glad there are true craftsmen like this left. They deserve our support because they make something that is purpose-driven and made to last.
Impressionnant le piquage ! Quel boulot !
merci beaucoup monsieur liogier . C/etait tres interessant. Dans une monde qui achete les outils du chine, ici aux etais unis, c/est vraiment une bon rape a bois.
I just received my first hand made rasp from Mr Noel Liogier. No words can describe the fit and function of one of Mr Liogiers rasp, it must be experienced.
Now, which one to purchase next.
A true piece of highly functional art!
thank you Noel,
Scott
Very simple put I have an wood rasp that was hand made, that is over 100 yrs old that my great grand dad, grand dad and dad use in their woodshops and it is still sharp!!! and I still use it. Czo Tortilla is right when I was a professional mechanic and used Mac and Snap-on tools now in my shop I will buy craftsman if I need something.
Vous êtes des artistes
This is really amazing craftsmanship!
J'ai été modeleur de fonderie pendant 13 ans je peu vous garantir que des râpes j'en ai usées (3 par ans) de différent fabriquant, de tous vous avez été a mes yeux celui qui fabrique les plus efficace (et au meilleur rapport qualité prix ) de c'est outils a l’allure si simple et rudimentaire mais a l'efficacité sans pareil quand j'ai besoin de râpes je vais chez vous pas ailleurs
Wow
Top
travail remarcable !!outils que j'aprécie pour mes sculptures sablées
merci! Michel campeaus culpteur ( lemaillet)
Very Impressive
ça a bien changé le rappe game français
Un an après je rigole bien a ce commentaire , merci hahah
@@abaratien Merci j'ai cru me prendre un vent éternel
❤️🔥🔥🔥❤️🙏
To add: none of this comments on Mr. Liogiers rasps. This is a product I could definitely envision myself trying, but there are other 'brands' of tools that very much leverage deeply irrational beliefs in the consumer about quality, relative to cost.
@cowshrptrn Because the teeth on a machine made rasp are aligned, so they shape the wood leaving grooves in it and are less efficient. An hand-made rasp leaves a near-finished surface. Why on earth would people make hand-made knife blades, saw blades or plane irons when you have plenty of $1 tools? Why on earth would people make hand-made furniture when we have... Ikea? Maybe for the quality?
@cowshrptrn When the planet experiences the coming collapse, artisans like this will be in high demand. I also have skills and equipment which will be highly sought during rolling blackouts, and where some areas will be without energy for longer periods.
You would do well to start preparing for such times. The majority of society scoffs at such a notion, but they are ignorant to history and unprepared for reality. Even if such times never come, this kind of skill deserves to be preserved.
I agree with you that you don't need "high end" products for everything. Yes a timex is good enough to have time, and you don't need a Stradivarius to play a masterpiece. But this was not my point. You can't use a "home depot" rasp when you're making or restauring high end furniture. This kind of tools are not for the "weekend woodworkers" (I'am one of them and don't own any expensive tools). They are reserved to professionals who NEED them and that's why they are still made. Not for the "show".
Why on earth do people pay $15,000 for a Rolex when it keeps time worse than a $14 Timex?
Why on earth do people pay $4,000,000 for a Violin that doesn't even demonstrate itself as 'superior' when the listerners and/or players are wearing a blindfold?
The consumer is a very irrational animal. "Boutique" products often times offer an uptick in performance, but well into the realm of seriously diminishing returns, relative to their cost levels.
The interesting part is, people will start to make the most bizarre and irrational excuses about how the Frenchman posesses magical powers that the Chinaman does not when it comes to making that rasp... Buy the expensive one based on our own moral construct but when people try to make a 'practical' case that a Chinese man in China cannot make a guitar as well as a Chinese man using the exact same tools working in a factory in the USA, well, it gets pretty comical to say the least...
Why on earth would you hand make a rasp? I figure for something like that you would be better off using a press for the head, maybe if you want it high quality make the handle on a lathe.