Thank you Simon 😊 Your demonstration has helped me work out how to match the profile of an 18th century window frame. I was on the right track, but I was not sure how to go about it. I will make a Sticking Board first. What a great work holding device ॐ
excelente maestro ,muy buena su idea de hacer la fabricación de molduras se aprende harto con usted maestro gracias por explicar con detalles la fabricación de la moldura .Yo soy de Chile y tambien soy carpintero me llamo Alex
Thanks for the encouragement. I've never done any presenting to camera before I did these videos, and my No.1 aim is clear teaching, that's more important to me than anything else.
A hollow plane seems to be a great tool for rounding edges and I highly consider buying one of those. But how do you sharpen the blade? Do you have special water stones fitting the radius of the blade? How do you do it?
Good presentation Simon - personally I would have used a No 78 rebate plane on the Ovolo rather than the No 50, not a critiscism just a different thought line to achieve the same end.
I know in this instance it doesn't matter because you're hogging out waste (referring to 9min 50sec or so into the video), but isn't dragging the plane backwards along the wood going to mar the surface with the corners of the iron? Or do you have them ground off?
+ghostzart All bench planes usually have the corners ground off. Further, a fore plane like that usually has a mild radius ground on the plane, so the plane iron is rounded slightly. There wouldn't be any corners to mar anyway. Finally, the edges plane aren't in contact with the wood anyway, as he's planing the corner of the piece.
Ovolo comes from the word 'ovum' or egg, which is also related to oval. An S-shaped moulding is called an "ogee", or a "reverse ogee", depending on whether the concave or convex surface comes first. It's also sometimes called a cyma. I hope that helps. You might like this link about molding shapes and names. thedesignersassistant.com/2011/11/27/will-the-real-ogee-please-stand-up/
Really informative. Really like your style of demonstrating, no big ego stuff. Thanks a lot.
Wonderful job sir, I really like your sticking board. It is very versatile. I must make one like that.
I should be doing other things, now ... but I can't resist looking at the next video!
Thank you Simon 😊 Your demonstration has helped me work out how to match the profile of an 18th century window frame. I was on the right track, but I was not sure how to go about it. I will make a Sticking Board first. What a great work holding device ॐ
An excellent teacher Simon. Thanks.
Thank you very much for the demonstration.
Wow. Love your work.
Nice job thanks for this one
excelente maestro ,muy buena su idea de hacer la fabricación de molduras se aprende harto con usted maestro gracias por explicar con detalles la fabricación de la moldura .Yo soy de Chile y tambien soy carpintero me llamo Alex
what's all this sticking board whichcraft? I'm always looking for new/old ways of holding materials. have you a video about the sticking board?
Nice technique. Thanks for sharing with us.
Thanks for the encouragement. I've never done any presenting to camera before I did these videos, and my No.1 aim is clear teaching, that's more important to me than anything else.
In that regard you have done an amazing job. To the point but also explaining why you do what you are doing.
bravissimo !!
Super!
I'm curious how this technique wood work for repeatability to reproduce identical moulding once deciding upon a design of moulding?
A hollow plane seems to be a great tool for rounding edges and I highly consider buying one of those.
But how do you sharpen the blade?
Do you have special water stones fitting the radius of the blade?
How do you do it?
You use a slip stone or round cutter work the concave bevel in sections then flat the back on a normal stone as you would any planeiron.
Good presentation Simon - personally I would have used a No 78 rebate plane on the Ovolo rather than the No 50, not a critiscism just a different thought line to achieve the same end.
I know in this instance it doesn't matter because you're hogging out waste (referring to 9min 50sec or so into the video), but isn't dragging the plane backwards along the wood going to mar the surface with the corners of the iron? Or do you have them ground off?
+ghostzart All bench planes usually have the corners ground off. Further, a fore plane like that usually has a mild radius ground on the plane, so the plane iron is rounded slightly. There wouldn't be any corners to mar anyway. Finally, the edges plane aren't in contact with the wood anyway, as he's planing the corner of the piece.
Aren't you happy you got cordless screwdriver nowadays. 😁😁😁😁😁
Isn’t this a bead? I thought Ovolos were S shaped
Ovolo comes from the word 'ovum' or egg, which is also related to oval. An S-shaped moulding is called an "ogee", or a "reverse ogee", depending on whether the concave or convex surface comes first. It's also sometimes called a cyma. I hope that helps. You might like this link about molding shapes and names. thedesignersassistant.com/2011/11/27/will-the-real-ogee-please-stand-up/
Woodprix scripts contain most of the woodworking plans you can find.
Those plow plane shavings aren't shavings. That's veneer.
Woodglut is a solid company with the best woodworking plans.