I absolutely applaud you for showing your mistakes and letting us know how you fix said mistakes. Also teaching your daughter your craft. I can tell you're a great Dad.... Ok, annnnnyway... This table is SO SOOOOOOOO Gorgeous. Fantastic work Jonny.
I live in Tokyo, Japan. A few years ago ,on a whim, I took up a kintsugi class. We did it on broken bowls and other potteries. It's not as easy as it seems but it really worth the time and efforts !
Beautiful work! As for to stain or not to stain, each piece will speak for itself. The fact that you had problems w/ the overfill was the piece correcting your choice to bring you to where it wanted to be. This is a table I can see being put in a prestigious position in a huge office type atmosphere. Beautiful job!
I came over from Blacktail, and this is the first video I watched. Kitsugi is one of my favorite techniques, for repairing broken items, and this sold me on sticking around for a while. Thanks!
First, As a teacher, Im glad your daughter seemed interested and got to try herself. Second, this table looks stunning. I really love the fading with the gold. super cool
ALSO, you are a totally cool dad... having your kid in the video makes your videos so much more connected to your viewer then the run of the mill vids that are so pro shop- no fun factors included. Your jokes and family oriented approach along with your mistakes as you progress through the project is what separates you from the hundreds of other shop shows out there.
Dangerous thing to ask. It is usually best to keep children out of a public video. You can connect with his personality and sense of humor if you must.
It's beautiful! At first when you said you were going to stain it black I thought that was sacrilegious, but to see the finished product, the black stain brought out the natural brown colour and the gold leaf really sets it off, excellent!!
Beautiful. I think the kintsugi technique with the black stain really enhanced the natural beauty of the cookie. Staining the base the black gave it a cohesive look. Well done, I think you did a great job. I enjoy watching your channel because you're willing to try new things.
I love it when your daughters in the videos seeing families being happy, and having fun makes the videos better. It’s part of the reason why I like, watching fab rats, or Matts off-road recovery
kintsugi is the technique you're using but the philosophy it's meant to represent; Wabi-sabi. The wabi-sabi aesthetics is inspired by the world-view of finding beauty in the imperfect. That's why they put gold in the cracks of the pottery. It's meant to signify the beauty in the flaws of the bowl.
Kintsugi apparently translates as golden joinery as in joining broken pottery. A Japanese emperor imported a Chinese tea service and some got broken and we're repaired by joining the pieces together with gold wire staples, he said surely there's a better way of doing this. I paraphrase but essentially that's how kintsugi came about.
@@andrewclarkehomeimprovement Interesting. I'm uncertain as to the validity of the claim, but it would be pretty funny if my understanding of the Wabi-sabi philosophy in relation to kintsugi was based on bullshit. Now let's talk about your grammar. It's not good my guy. It made your comment difficult to read and understand. I'm going to help you out: "Kintsugi apparently translates as golden joinery as in joining broken pottery. A Japanese emperor imported a Chinese tea service and some got broken and we're repaired by joining the pieces together with gold wire staples, he said surely there's a better way of doing this. I paraphrase but essentially that's how kintsugi came about." Kintsugi translates as golden joinery. A Japanese emperor imported a Chinese tea service and got some broken pottery. His workers repaired it by joining the pieces together with gold wire staples. Upon completion he said, (I'm paraphrasing here) "Surely there's a better way of doing this." Essentially that's how kintsugi came about. I doubt you will find this helpful, but the people you correspond with might, if you take it constructively. Honestly, I could have, and should've, taken it a step further, but I wanted it to be in your writing style. Fuck it. The best version: Kintsugi translates to; golden joinery. A Japanese emperor received a broken tea set, from a Chinese company. His workers repaired it by fusing the pieces together with gold-wire staples. Upon completion he said, (I'm paraphrasing here) "Surely there's a better way of doing this." Essentially, that's how kintsugi was invented. *came to be.
I have to say I have been working with epoxy for two years and watching UA-cam videos for 4 years. You are the first I have seen actually using tape!! Bless you! Have a great day
I just found your channel with this video suggestion. I might be slightly obsessed with kintsugi repair and just love the idea of something that is imperfectly perfect and where imperfections are highlighted, not hidden, and the result is something so much more beautiful because of the imperfection. Beautiful table and love that the breaks were embraced rather than covered up. The mishap uncrating it and transportating it is a part of the journey of that slab, just as every ring is.
Props for trying out the kintsugi technique on such a large piece. I've seen in before in bowls and pottery, first time I'm seeing it on furniture. This piece wasn't my cup of tea, but then again, I'm not about to buy a several thousand dollar table anyway. Thanks for the content and especially for showing us how you worked through the various problems and mistakes along the way, that is exceedingly helpful for the rest of us mere mortals.
Jonny, I yelled out loud when you cracked the slab but you proved that sometimes the best work begins with a mistake. Table is BEAUTIFUL! Love the dissipation of the gold towards the outside perimeter.
Honestly, I had my doubts about: staining a live edge piece, staining walnut, kintsugi on such a large scale, the entire idea -- BUT the finished project is beautiful! I'd be proud to own this table. Good job sir!
Seeing your daughter in the video was wonderful! You should do a video where you two work on a project together if she's interested! It'd honestly make me so happy to see you passing down your craft to her! Each video I have seen her in, she seems so nice and happy, especially the projects you have made for her! I'd love to see her more ^^
The table turned out great. I love the idea of kintsugi, beautifying the flaws of repair with gold. This would be awesome to own, paired with kintsugi pottery/dishware
ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL MAN! THE INSPIRATION OF USING AN ANCIENT TECHNIQUE TO REPAIR SOMETHING AND YOU MADE THE RIGHT CALL, FADING IT OUT TOWARDS THE EDGE!
This is the second video I've seen making an epoxy table with mapa burl, and that wood really is amazing. The gold inlay to 'repair' the cracks added more character than just a simple cookie slab. You're a true artist with the medium!
12:29 looks like something I've seen before, where the edges of the piece get raised by the sealant used around the edges of the mold. But... I LOVE the final thing, just incredibly beautiful. Thanks for sharing.
I'm a bit biased because I love darker colors, but the dark stain made it look so much better! I feel like certain parts pop much better with it. Beautiful table :)
FYI regarding the circle jig. It's worth the time to just make one with metal rods that go into your router plate holes as they are infinity adjust and you'll never have to waste time making a custom one out of wood ever again.
Beautiful. Like a bolt of lightning across a dark sky. We have storms just like it in Australia. I have seen the same method of Katsugi on cracked floor tiles, so using it on wood is just another clever adaption.
It is wonderful that you are teaching your daughter how to do what you do. It is invaluable knowledge. I LOVE the work you did on the table. Great job!!
This was my first video of yours. Loved it! I'm a oil painter, landscapes, but for some reason I love watching people make things out of wood. Your table are beautiful!! Love the concept of being a maker. Someday I think I'm going to pour me a table. You're good at what you do.
This is the first video that I've watched from you. Absolutely spectacular! Absolutely no sin and standing the Walnut especially since it turned out so amazingly beautiful. I have a friend who studies Japanese art forms painting and drawing and this is very familiar with the kintsugi art form. I've sent her your video:-) hopefully she'll give you a comment after she seen it.
vielen Dank für diesen fantastischen Arbeitsablauf. Mit großer Gespanntheit und viel Freude habe ich Ihrer Arbeit zugesehen. Das ist ein sehr aufwändiges Projekt. Nochmals vielen lieben DAnk uns allen zu zeigen wie so etwas komplexes gebaut und vorher mit viel Arbeit hergestellt werden kann. Danke fürs teilen und großen Respekt von mir an Sie , aus Deutschland.
If you ever do it again. With gold leaf supply, you’ll see a burnisher. Which is a polished piece of agate on a stick. If you burnish it, the gold will be even more beautiful. It is lovely. Congratulations
This turned out so high-end looking. It should go into a multi-million-dollar home. I would love to know what price you put on it too. You put a lot of work into it, but the final product is a masterpiece.
Pencil marks...good idea! I took my students to Japan in 1999 and saw quite a few examples of kintsukuroi repaired ceramics. We also saw many examples of Shou Sugi Ban on traditional fences as well as modern houses. Table is amazing! Will you keep it? Sabarashi!
I'm with ya. It had such a nice, 4 leaf clover-ish shape. If it was up to me, I would have left the natural shape, lay it out with the 4 pieces assembled, but leave about a 1-1/2 inch gap between all the pieces and fill the gaps with gold swirl apoxy.
Absolutely beautiful! Truly! I’ve begun watching a good deal of woodworking content, but this is genuinely the prettiest table creation I’ve seen thus far. Phenomenal and honestly perfect. Wish I could afford this for my home. God bless whoever buys this lovely piece, I believe a lot of love and consideration went into it, and will translate to the lucky owner for years to come! Best!
the stain is gorgeous, really brings out the character of the wood! I think the only thing that could be improved is the transition between the gold foil and black epoxy, there are some spots where you can see a repeated pattern caused by pressing the foil sheet down which is a small distraction. I think if you had mixed the gold foil with clear epoxy and used that, it would have created a more random application that you could mask off and feather out with more control. beautiful table overall!
using the pencil to check your sanding works fine, but try out powdered guide coat, they also have it in aerosol (I use mirka currently). A product dedicated for finding any imperfections through the sanding process. Not only good for sand scratches, but also checking for straightness or flatness. Another body mans tip! Hope this comment finds your eyes, let Cam know too!!
I absolutely love the idea of celebrating and drawing attention to the scars that make something unique, especially when it makes the whole thing stronger. Beautiful job!!!
It is a very good book for beginners as well as for those that are already into ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxTNB_zFBSnTo_O1PqfVUwgi7ityw0JlKt A very good basic ebook to keep as a reference too. I like it and the way the subject matter is presented. It has humor and that helps with the reading.
I really like this table. I would prefer the gold being more of a sprinkled effect like in the larger areas but it still is a nice look. Thanks for your videos.
Really enjoyed the video and I love it that you include your "whoopses". Normally I don't like the staining of wood's natural colors, but I think the devil's in the detailing and it just worked with the kintsugi. Great work! And, I love a good "bad"-dad-joke!
Hi there, I think it looks beautiful. You have done a cracking job on this table. I would love to own a table like this. Thanks for taking us on your journey with your woodworking. Keep up the great work 👍
I loved the stain on both the slab and the walnut base, however personally I liked the table MUCH better before the gold leaf. That being said, great job on both the video and on the stunningly beautiful table. Finally I want to say that what you do on this channel is nothing short of art, everything you build is beautiful and one of a kind. And thus... it is perfect.😉
Beautiful. Once I was sanding a boat filled with epoxy and micro glass mixture.. I really lliked the the wiev, so natural. I think it should be tried on a table making
Magnif! I love the Japanese modern morph. Try some Japanese joinery too, some time on your under structure. I did for a bed frame made with 5/4 walnut harvested and milled locally in Central New Jersey. It turned out great but no pics. There are some good Japanese jpiner books out there.
Put a box fan beside your curing epoxy table facing slightly upward so there's an updraft away from the table surface, it'll keep most of the bugs and dust away from the surface.
Black stain will look good but I don’t think it was the smartest thing for the gold but I trust you because your an amazing artist and woodworker Edit: it ended very good Also did the survey:)
Amazing build, the table came out great. Only thing that i personally think would look nicer is if the gold in the cracks wasnt just plain gold and instead had a swirly gold effect like you get if you mix epoxy with the powder pigments. Nontheless, your skills are top notch, that table looks like its the highest quality possible!
I stained walnut with a clear black many years ago - it looked very Japanese stylish - & so does your table - hope someone with a big foyer is looking for something like your work. Lovely piece.
Beautiful piece. I wonder how the gold-to-black transition would have worked if you had blended gold flake into the black filler epoxy? I hope this piece finds a home worthy of its aesthetic. And you’re right about Springsteen: while I find his musical talents over-rated, he is a good guy when it comes to the working class, standing up for what’s right, and treating everyone with equanimity.
Man I love seeing your stuff, especially since your a local, doing similar stuff I am (I do metal and carbon fiber though). You are a huge motivator to get me off my bum and get to making. keep it up and stomp on the haters. Amazing builds.
The table came out great! Life is always an adventure when working with big burls and epoxy. What doesn't kill us, burn the shop down, or get us arrested, makes us stronger woodworkers! Nice that the daughter made an appearance to show you how it's done! Wait! He has a daughter, that means he procreated??? How the heck did that one happen...😉
Undoubtedly, definitely, you have created a unique, unprecedented, unparalleled, marvellous masterpiece. I , definitely, enjoyed watching your performance, and , beyond any doubt, I’ve learnt a lot. Thanks, always.
Beautiful table! I think you pretty much had to go with the black stain, it really highlighted the kintsugi gold more so than just unstained Mappa. Great job!! Hey you really rock the beard, kind of look like 80's Bruce!!!
A local Native American Casino restaurant has the most beautiful kintsugi tables in four translucent tile colors! I love going there to celebrate. Always encourage and empower family members, they could be holding the keys to a brighter world, even if you yourself have already given up.
Jonny you’ve probably thought about this before, but if the CNC is your biggest surface, why not make 4-5x8 MDF or mellamine surface that you can lay on top of the cnc table to use for finishing/assembly or epoxy pours? I have to do this with my workstations in my small shop. The MDF is also much flatter than most stuff usually so it’s good for assembly too. Anyway just a thought. Best!
THAT TABLE IS BEAUTIFUL. IT MAKES ME SOO SORRY I'M DEAD BROKE. AND LOOKING DOWNHILL. BUT I COULDN'T LET THIS GO BUY WITHOUT RECOGNIZING THE ARTISTRY AND PATIENCE INVOLVED IN THE WORK. BRAVO!
That is the 2nd time that I have heard you trashing The BOSS!! He is my favorite all time. I saw him in 1987 @ The LA Coliseum. One hell of a great concert!!
Stunning table--2nd time watching, and the table is even more beautiful the 2nd time! I like the stained walnut: it's beautiful with the black and gold foil. Your instinct is perfect.
@@JonnyBuilds this might be the most beautiful table I have ever seen in my life. I was literally in awe at the final product. It was just so beautiful.
I think the finish was perfect. The black mean the black with the gold two of my favorite colors anyway I’d love seeing those together, but I think that table came out gorgeous.❤
YES! My husband is a huge Bruce fan and I don't think that much of his music. It was first really big concert I ever attended and I only did it for the hubs. I'm loving this table and have a beloved cereal bowl my sister gave me that broke. Plan on doing something very similar to repair it. Oh, yeah, I subscribed!
That is very dreamy love it so much. Im a very amateur furniture maker ha ha got some Australian western red cedar made a coffee and dinner table also my small kitchen benches. But haven't been able to finish them been very ill etc. But you have inspired me to get the done. Learning a lot watching you thanks.
I love tuning in to watch ancient Japanese crafting techniques. *proceeds to watch someone make an epoxy table in bewilderment* yes I know he uses one later.
Fantastic piece. Looks absolutely first class. Not a woodworker so don't really care about the stain/don't stain debate, but do appreciate the angel/devil motif, but the result speaks for itself. That trumps all debate!! PS. Went to look at your website for more pics of the piece, and it has obviously sold and been removed. Might I suggest an Archive tab to your site, detailing those pieces you have made and illustrated on UA-cam, which have passed to some fortunate owner. Love your work.
For clarity's sake, Stains are heavy pigment mixed with some sort of hardening binder that sits (mostly) on top of the wood and covers up at the grain and figure Dyes are pure pigment mixed in either water or some other solvent that soak into the wood and then evaporate leaving only the pigment, highlighting and accentuating grain and figure Dye is always a fun and good idea in Fine Furniture with heavily figured Woods, stain should never be used in Fine Furniture
I absolutely applaud you for showing your mistakes and letting us know how you fix said mistakes.
Also teaching your daughter your craft.
I can tell you're a great Dad.... Ok, annnnnyway...
This table is SO SOOOOOOOO Gorgeous.
Fantastic work Jonny.
I live in Tokyo, Japan. A few years ago ,on a whim, I took up a kintsugi class. We did it on broken bowls and other potteries. It's not as easy as it seems but it really worth the time and efforts !
The thing is that it doesn't seem easy to me. It must take a lot of patience! I have appreciation for people who do that kinda stuff.
That’s awesome
Kintsuge is one of the most beautiful mending methods/art forms.
Beautiful work! As for to stain or not to stain, each piece will speak for itself. The fact that you had problems w/ the overfill was the piece correcting your choice to bring you to where it wanted to be. This is a table I can see being put in a prestigious position in a huge office type atmosphere. Beautiful job!
I came over from Blacktail, and this is the first video I watched. Kitsugi is one of my favorite techniques, for repairing broken items, and this sold me on sticking around for a while. Thanks!
same
First, As a teacher, Im glad your daughter seemed interested and got to try herself.
Second, this table looks stunning. I really love the fading with the gold. super cool
My biggest takeaway from this was at 22:55- the kaizen foam/sandpaper "dispenser". Table looks good, too...
I know, right? I know what my top drawer is transitioning into!
That gold leaf really sets it off! When done right, gold really enhances the beauty of wood. You Sir, did it right!!!
ALSO, you are a totally cool dad... having your kid in the video makes your videos so much more connected to your viewer then the run of the mill vids that are so pro shop- no fun factors included. Your jokes and family oriented approach along with your mistakes as you progress through the project is what separates you from the hundreds of other shop shows out there.
Dangerous thing to ask. It is usually best to keep children out of a public video. You can connect with his personality and sense of humor if you must.
It's dangerous for his job. UA-cam policies could screw him over for doing that
Keep up the good work 👍👍🏆awesome job
Bruce Springsteen is horrible 😂😂😂😂😂😂 I so agree … he had maybe 3 songs I liked … I said LIKE 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
It's beautiful! At first when you said you were going to stain it black I thought that was sacrilegious, but to see the finished product, the black stain brought out the natural brown colour and the gold leaf really sets it off, excellent!!
Beautiful. I think the kintsugi technique with the black stain really enhanced the natural beauty of the cookie. Staining the base the black gave it a cohesive look. Well done, I think you did a great job. I enjoy watching your channel because you're willing to try new things.
I love it when your daughters in the videos seeing families being happy, and having fun makes the videos better. It’s part of the reason why I like, watching fab rats, or Matts off-road recovery
kintsugi is the technique you're using but the philosophy it's meant to represent; Wabi-sabi. The wabi-sabi aesthetics is inspired by the world-view of finding beauty in the imperfect. That's why they put gold in the cracks of the pottery. It's meant to signify the beauty in the flaws of the bowl.
VERY beautiful explanation of Kintsugi.!!
Kintsugi apparently translates as golden joinery as in joining broken pottery. A Japanese emperor imported a Chinese tea service and some got broken and we're repaired by joining the pieces together with gold wire staples, he said surely there's a better way of doing this. I paraphrase but essentially that's how kintsugi came about.
@@andrewclarkehomeimprovement Interesting. I'm uncertain as to the validity of the claim, but it would be pretty funny if my understanding of the Wabi-sabi philosophy in relation to kintsugi was based on bullshit.
Now let's talk about your grammar. It's not good my guy. It made your comment difficult to read and understand. I'm going to help you out:
"Kintsugi apparently translates as golden joinery as in joining broken pottery. A Japanese emperor imported a Chinese tea service and some got broken and we're repaired by joining the pieces together with gold wire staples, he said surely there's a better way of doing this. I paraphrase but essentially that's how kintsugi came about."
Kintsugi translates as golden joinery. A Japanese emperor imported a Chinese tea service and got some broken pottery. His workers repaired it by joining the pieces together with gold wire staples. Upon completion he said, (I'm paraphrasing here) "Surely there's a better way of doing this." Essentially that's how kintsugi came about.
I doubt you will find this helpful, but the people you correspond with might, if you take it constructively. Honestly, I could have, and should've, taken it a step further, but I wanted it to be in your writing style.
Fuck it.
The best version:
Kintsugi translates to; golden joinery. A Japanese emperor received a broken tea set, from a Chinese company. His workers repaired it by fusing the pieces together with gold-wire staples. Upon completion he said, (I'm paraphrasing here) "Surely there's a better way of doing this." Essentially, that's how kintsugi was invented. *came to be.
@@brettohansen4979 Thank you for your suggestions. Duly ignored.
@@andrewclarkehomeimprovement Of course.
I fully agree with you on Springsteen. He is probably the most over rated "artist" on the planet. The table is gorgeous!
Agreed.
#facts
Come ON!?!? Really? Springsteen was pretty awesome. Maybe not the absolute best but certainly wasn't half as horrendous as yall make him out.
I have to say I have been working with epoxy for two years and watching UA-cam videos for 4 years. You are the first I have seen actually using tape!! Bless you! Have a great day
I just found your channel with this video suggestion. I might be slightly obsessed with kintsugi repair and just love the idea of something that is imperfectly perfect and where imperfections are highlighted, not hidden, and the result is something so much more beautiful because of the imperfection. Beautiful table and love that the breaks were embraced rather than covered up. The mishap uncrating it and transportating it is a part of the journey of that slab, just as every ring is.
Props for trying out the kintsugi technique on such a large piece. I've seen in before in bowls and pottery, first time I'm seeing it on furniture. This piece wasn't my cup of tea, but then again, I'm not about to buy a several thousand dollar table anyway. Thanks for the content and especially for showing us how you worked through the various problems and mistakes along the way, that is exceedingly helpful for the rest of us mere mortals.
Jonny, I yelled out loud when you cracked the slab but you proved that sometimes the best work begins with a mistake. Table is BEAUTIFUL! Love the dissipation of the gold towards the outside perimeter.
Honestly, I had my doubts about: staining a live edge piece, staining walnut, kintsugi on such a large scale, the entire idea -- BUT the finished project is beautiful! I'd be proud to own this table. Good job sir!
Seeing your daughter in the video was wonderful! You should do a video where you two work on a project together if she's interested! It'd honestly make me so happy to see you passing down your craft to her! Each video I have seen her in, she seems so nice and happy, especially the projects you have made for her! I'd love to see her more ^^
The table turned out great. I love the idea of kintsugi, beautifying the flaws of repair with gold. This would be awesome to own, paired with kintsugi pottery/dishware
I'm trying to figure out something. What kind of chairs would you pick to use with this table?? Sorry, 🤔 I'm still wondering!! 🙇♀️
🤶🎄🎅 Janet ✌️
ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL MAN! THE INSPIRATION OF USING AN ANCIENT TECHNIQUE TO REPAIR SOMETHING AND YOU MADE THE RIGHT CALL, FADING IT OUT TOWARDS THE EDGE!
I liked the "fade" part of the gold more then the solid gold leaf. This beautiful all the same. I like the stain on the legs too!
This is the second video I've seen making an epoxy table with mapa burl, and that wood really is amazing. The gold inlay to 'repair' the cracks added more character than just a simple cookie slab. You're a true artist with the medium!
12:29 looks like something I've seen before, where the edges of the piece get raised by the sealant used around the edges of the mold. But... I LOVE the final thing, just incredibly beautiful. Thanks for sharing.
I'm a bit biased because I love darker colors, but the dark stain made it look so much better! I feel like certain parts pop much better with it. Beautiful table :)
same, i think this turned out better in the darker colors then if he hadn't done it
hi i want to talk to you if you have facebook or instagrame
I like darker colors too because they really pop especially if it’s a redwood and red oak.
FYI regarding the circle jig. It's worth the time to just make one with metal rods that go into your router plate holes as they are infinity adjust and you'll never have to waste time making a custom one out of wood ever again.
I love infinity adjust
Goddamm, infinity adjust!!
TO INFINITY ADJUST AND BEYOND!😁😁😁
Beautiful. Like a bolt of lightning across a dark sky. We have storms just like it in Australia. I have seen the same method of Katsugi on cracked floor tiles, so using it on wood is just another clever adaption.
It is wonderful that you are teaching your daughter how to do what you do. It is invaluable knowledge. I LOVE the work you did on the table. Great job!!
This was my first video of yours. Loved it! I'm a oil painter, landscapes, but for some reason I love watching people make things out of wood. Your table are beautiful!! Love the concept of being a maker. Someday I think I'm going to pour me a table. You're good at what you do.
This is the first video that I've watched from you. Absolutely spectacular! Absolutely no sin and standing the Walnut especially since it turned out so amazingly beautiful. I have a friend who studies Japanese art forms painting and drawing and this is very familiar with the kintsugi art form. I've sent her your video:-) hopefully she'll give you a comment after she seen it.
Wow this turned out incredible. I love how you repaired it. Very enjoyable to watch this table come to life!
The finished table is amazing!!!!
vielen Dank für diesen fantastischen Arbeitsablauf. Mit großer Gespanntheit und viel Freude habe ich Ihrer Arbeit zugesehen. Das ist ein sehr aufwändiges Projekt. Nochmals vielen lieben DAnk uns allen zu zeigen wie so etwas komplexes gebaut und vorher mit viel Arbeit hergestellt werden kann. Danke fürs teilen und großen Respekt von mir an Sie , aus Deutschland.
If you ever do it again. With gold leaf supply, you’ll see a burnisher. Which is a polished piece of agate on a stick. If you burnish it, the gold will be even more beautiful. It is lovely. Congratulations
This turned out so high-end looking. It should go into a multi-million-dollar home. I would love to know what price you put on it too. You put a lot of work into it, but the final product is a masterpiece.
Pencil marks...good idea! I took my students to Japan in 1999 and saw quite a few examples of kintsukuroi repaired ceramics. We also saw many examples of Shou Sugi Ban on traditional fences as well as modern houses. Table is amazing! Will you keep it? Sabarashi!
To keep the flying insects off of your epoxy, try building a frame around the project an hang some mosquito netting or a plastic sheet over the top.
I can’t believe you cut it into a circle with such beautiful petted structure.
I'm with ya. It had such a nice, 4 leaf clover-ish shape. If it was up to me, I would have left the natural shape, lay it out with the 4 pieces assembled, but leave about a 1-1/2 inch gap between all the pieces and fill the gaps with gold swirl apoxy.
Beautiful table and the Kintsugi treatment made this project even more special. Kudos for a job well done.
Absolutely beautiful! Truly! I’ve begun watching a good deal of woodworking content, but this is genuinely the prettiest table creation I’ve seen thus far. Phenomenal and honestly perfect. Wish I could afford this for my home. God bless whoever buys this lovely piece, I believe a lot of love and consideration went into it, and will translate to the lucky owner for years to come! Best!
Turned out a lot better than I initially thought with the stain but it ended up beautiful. Great work
the stain is gorgeous, really brings out the character of the wood! I think the only thing that could be improved is the transition between the gold foil and black epoxy, there are some spots where you can see a repeated pattern caused by pressing the foil sheet down which is a small distraction. I think if you had mixed the gold foil with clear epoxy and used that, it would have created a more random application that you could mask off and feather out with more control. beautiful table overall!
The stain hides the character of the wood. You have to squint to even see the wood.
using the pencil to check your sanding works fine, but try out powdered guide coat, they also have it in aerosol (I use mirka currently). A product dedicated for finding any imperfections through the sanding process. Not only good for sand scratches, but also checking for straightness or flatness. Another body mans tip! Hope this comment finds your eyes, let Cam know too!!
I absolutely love the idea of celebrating and drawing attention to the scars that make something unique, especially when it makes the whole thing stronger.
Beautiful job!!!
I love how you’re using humor while you’re working. Beautiful table.😀
Love the table with the gold inlays. And the base is perfect for the table. ❤😊
It's a beaut! Stain looks great, and actually, the diminishing gold is quite a nice touch.
It is a very good book for beginners as well as for those that are already into ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxTNB_zFBSnTo_O1PqfVUwgi7ityw0JlKt A very good basic ebook to keep as a reference too. I like it and the way the subject matter is presented. It has humor and that helps with the reading.
I really like this table. I would prefer the gold being more of a sprinkled effect like in the larger areas but it still is a nice look. Thanks for your videos.
Really enjoyed the video and I love it that you include your "whoopses". Normally I don't like the staining of wood's natural colors, but I think the devil's in the detailing and it just worked with the kintsugi. Great work! And, I love a good "bad"-dad-joke!
Love the honesty in this video. It highlights the things that can go wrong. And pitfalls to look out for.
Hi there, I think it looks beautiful. You have done a cracking job on this table. I would love to own a table like this. Thanks for taking us on your journey with your woodworking. Keep up the great work 👍
Your daughter absolutely MAKES the video! It's so cool that she is interested in your passion, and her little dog, too! Heh heh...
I loved the stain on both the slab and the walnut base, however personally I liked the table MUCH better before the gold leaf.
That being said, great job on both the video and on the stunningly beautiful table.
Finally I want to say that what you do on this channel is nothing short of art, everything you build is beautiful and one of a kind. And thus... it is perfect.😉
PS: The devil made me do it.
I agree, the gold/yellow color failed.
Beautiful.
Once I was sanding a boat filled with epoxy and micro glass mixture.. I really lliked the the wiev, so natural. I think it should be tried on a table making
Well Jonny you knock it out of the park with that table its awesome, keep making the videos I find them inspiring!!!
Beautiful work! I’ve always love the Kintsugi style
cute pic
Magnif! I love the Japanese modern morph. Try some Japanese joinery too, some time on your under structure. I did for a bed frame made with 5/4 walnut harvested and milled locally in Central New Jersey. It turned out great but no pics. There are some good Japanese jpiner books out there.
Beautiful work! Love the way you went about it. Very inspiring.
if it is not the wrong direction
Put a box fan beside your curing epoxy table facing slightly upward so there's an updraft away from the table surface, it'll keep most of the bugs and dust away from the surface.
Beautiful
Black stain will look good but I don’t think it was the smartest thing for the gold but I trust you because your an amazing artist and woodworker
Edit: it ended very good
Also did the survey:)
The fact that it ended up red looking, not black, made all the difference.
@@Derploop ya this is why I’ve learned to just trust him 🤣😂 it sounds one thing but he’s been working so long he knows how it will end
Amazing build, the table came out great. Only thing that i personally think would look nicer is if the gold in the cracks wasnt just plain gold and instead had a swirly gold effect like you get if you mix epoxy with the powder pigments. Nontheless, your skills are top notch, that table looks like its the highest quality possible!
I'm not a dad, but if I were, let her know you have viewers who are in favor of letting her being in your life whenever she wants to be
I stained walnut with a clear black many years ago - it looked very Japanese stylish - & so does your table - hope someone with a big foyer is looking for something like your work. Lovely piece.
A stunning pc of furniture! What a beautiful choice of colors. Talent beyond!
Beautiful piece. I wonder how the gold-to-black transition would have worked if you had blended gold flake into the black filler epoxy? I hope this piece finds a home worthy of its aesthetic. And you’re right about Springsteen: while I find his musical talents over-rated, he is a good guy when it comes to the working class, standing up for what’s right, and treating everyone with equanimity.
Man I love seeing your stuff, especially since your a local, doing similar stuff I am (I do metal and carbon fiber though). You are a huge motivator to get me off my bum and get to making. keep it up and stomp on the haters. Amazing builds.
The table came out great! Life is always an adventure when working with big burls and epoxy. What doesn't kill us, burn the shop down, or get us arrested, makes us stronger woodworkers! Nice that the daughter made an appearance to show you how it's done! Wait! He has a daughter, that means he procreated??? How the heck did that one happen...😉
Ifyou dont know that answer, talk to an Obgyn, OR read a high school biology book.
this table is so beautiful!
Love the trick to fix the gouging marks on edge of table. Thanks for the tip.
Beautiful! I can't stop thinking how that Kumiko table base would have looked under this table, with the gold and organic shapes.
Undoubtedly, definitely, you have created a unique, unprecedented, unparalleled, marvellous masterpiece. I , definitely, enjoyed watching your performance, and , beyond any doubt, I’ve learnt a lot. Thanks, always.
End result is beautiful . YOur build, do it the way you want. Live on the edged!
Beautiful table! I think you pretty much had to go with the black stain, it really highlighted the kintsugi gold more so than just unstained Mappa. Great job!! Hey you really rock the beard, kind of look like 80's Bruce!!!
A local Native American Casino restaurant has the most beautiful kintsugi tables in four translucent tile colors! I love going there to celebrate. Always encourage and empower family members, they could be holding the keys to a brighter world, even if you yourself have already given up.
Jonny you’ve probably thought about this before, but if the CNC is your biggest surface, why not make 4-5x8 MDF or mellamine surface that you can lay on top of the cnc table to use for finishing/assembly or epoxy pours? I have to do this with my workstations in my small shop. The MDF is also much flatter than most stuff usually so it’s good for assembly too. Anyway just a thought. Best!
Love the table, I think the stain works well. Good job and glad you stuck with the table after the issues.
THAT TABLE IS BEAUTIFUL. IT MAKES ME SOO SORRY I'M DEAD BROKE. AND LOOKING DOWNHILL. BUT I COULDN'T LET THIS GO BUY WITHOUT RECOGNIZING THE ARTISTRY AND PATIENCE INVOLVED IN THE WORK. BRAVO!
That table edge made it look like a flower and you cut off the most beautiful part of the wood. It's beautiful though.
That is the 2nd time that I have heard you trashing The BOSS!! He is my favorite all time. I saw him in 1987 @ The LA Coliseum. One hell of a great concert!!
Your channel is fascinating. Your style of furniture (from what I've seen) would not go with the rest of mine, but OMG this table is gorgeous!
Total knowledge of different chemicals ,epoxy , are reqd to do such a job ,great man, will earn a fortune for this tremendous effort
Thats a beautiful table. Maybe the video doesn't show the detail but it seems just a bit dark. I love the gold leaf.
Stunning table--2nd time watching, and the table is even more beautiful the 2nd time! I like the stained walnut: it's beautiful with the black and gold foil. Your instinct is perfect.
🙏🙏
@@JonnyBuilds this might be the most beautiful table I have ever seen in my life. I was literally in awe at the final product. It was just so beautiful.
It’s beautiful. I would have liked to have seen just a still shot from above just to show the entire top for a few seconds
Great video man!! Your daughter is great!! Great work on the table!! Nice!!!
I love woodworking.
I will be making a kitchen make over in the Spring.
I think the finish was perfect. The black mean the black with the gold two of my favorite colors anyway I’d love seeing those together, but I think that table came out gorgeous.❤
IMO, I think this is the best one so far, and I like quite a few..
YES! My husband is a huge Bruce fan and I don't think that much of his music. It was first really big concert I ever attended and I only did it for the hubs. I'm loving this table and have a beloved cereal bowl my sister gave me that broke. Plan on doing something very similar to repair it. Oh, yeah, I subscribed!
So beautiful. And Wabi Sabi is a philosophy, not a technique! You were true to the philosophy with this table.
I really enjoyed the process, and the base excellent with the style and design of the table. You are truly an artist extraordinaire!
I Absoloutly adore how this piece turned out to be a treasure just because of his mentality instead of throwing it away.
Beautiful Tabel ever ! Thanks from Germany
That is very dreamy love it so much. Im a very amateur furniture maker ha ha got some Australian western red cedar made a coffee and dinner table also my small kitchen benches. But haven't been able to finish them been very ill etc. But you have inspired me to get the done. Learning a lot watching you thanks.
Wow. Awesome table. Thanks for making it and showing us the process.
I love tuning in to watch ancient Japanese crafting techniques.
*proceeds to watch someone make an epoxy table in bewilderment*
yes I know he uses one later.
Fantastic piece. Looks absolutely first class. Not a woodworker so don't really care about the stain/don't stain debate, but do appreciate the angel/devil motif, but the result speaks for itself. That trumps all debate!! PS. Went to look at your website for more pics of the piece, and it has obviously sold and been removed. Might I suggest an Archive tab to your site, detailing those pieces you have made and illustrated on UA-cam, which have passed to some fortunate owner. Love your work.
For clarity's sake,
Stains are heavy pigment mixed with some sort of hardening binder that sits (mostly) on top of the wood and covers up at the grain and figure
Dyes are pure pigment mixed in either water or some other solvent that soak into the wood and then evaporate leaving only the pigment, highlighting and accentuating grain and figure
Dye is always a fun and good idea in Fine Furniture with heavily figured Woods, stain should never be used in Fine Furniture
Super awesome and more kids and puppies is all good with me. I like the black but I like the medium tone better.. the walnut was nice darkened.