I have been a carpenter for 30 years and if you are a beginner, take these tips to heart. They are all great tips. They will save you time, money and maybe your fingers.
Im gon say that those are really practical tips for sure.. Thank you for making this Sir. No bs no any other filler content, freaking straight to the point.... ❤❤❤
Good job on the video, great ideas for someone who is fairly new to woodworking. And for those of us who have been doing it for a while too! I know I tend to get a little bit lazy at times and end up with a few extra pieces of firewood LOL!
I'm lucky when it comes to the debate between high end tools and cheaper tools. My mom always buys the high end ones and so I borrow those from her so I can figure out which ones will be the most useful for me and which ones are good enough in the cheap variety. The most important fancy tool of her for me was her Corona folding saw. I have a bad shoulder so the last thing I need to do is wear myself out just cutting the wood. I do bush craft wood work so I only use hand tools for my work. I have used all of my mom's power tools too but it was for projects we were doing together on her house.
Most these tips I already knew but I'm a little bad about not using them. Have to remind myself quite a often. I pick up new tips and am reminded of ones I already know watching these videos usually while having my morning coffee. One thing about using a stop block and cut one piece the length you want it and setting the stop block, be sure to use a clamp and it's tight so it doesn't move any. I've had a stop block move slightly. Of course if you don't put any pieces following the first against the block hard it shouldn't move. In other words like you said take your time. The old saying haste makes waste is true. Good tips and video.
Some great and handy tips. I'm looking at convenience of regularly used tools and when I get a new tool I keep all the spare parts in 1 container. Before I used to put on shelf and eventually moving them around then forgetting what tool they belong to.
Here's a tip for anyone looking for classes: check at your local community center. Not all the classes are free, but many of them are, and those that aren't often have very reasonable tuition. You can also look for woodworking clubs and guilds in your area. Some of them have organized classes. Also, look and see if there is a FabLab in your area! Fablab is a non-profit makerspace operating around the globe, bringing mini manufacturing capabilites and STEAM education to communities. They typically have full woodshops, as well as sewing rooms, art studio space, and or course, laser cutting, 3D printing, CNC making capabilites.
As always if you find you've cut a little to much. Go immediately to Harbor freight and get a board stretcher! Remember to keep a little levity for your mistakes.
#20, if you do, make sure there are no nails or screws where you cut! #11, get into the habit of just cutting off the factory ends, do it when cutting to length, goes faster than checking them all
As for quality tools, go to yard sales. A person can find brands like Makita, de Walt, etc at a fraction of the price. "The reason is my husband passed away and I don't want them." Sometimes you can equip your whole shop at a yard sale....
Yes, but inspect them carefully. A little hard to do if you're not sure what you are looking at but I brought one home just to find the charger had exposed wires right at the point it attached to the unit! Gee whiz, and chargers are something you typically walk away from! Now, I only buy tools that look exceptionally well cared for or buy new. Paying higher new prices is cheaper than possible consequences.
Hello, could you do a video on 20 plus French cleat ideas for a pottery studio. You could do a few repeats and some new ones. 1. Cubbies for bags 2. Apron hangars 3. Small tools 4. Pencils and markers and small wooden tools 5. Garrottes and shipikki 6. Ribs and kidney tools 7. Throwing bats (disks for the pottery wheel head) 8. Texture rollers and roulettes 9. Stamps 10. Cookie cutters 11. Bluetooth speakers around room 12. Party platters for potlucks during long kiln firings 13. Masks and particulate masks for glaze mixing 14. 26L Bucket storage 15. Reference book hold open with a plastic guard for keeping the step by step article from getting splashed with slip. So it can be in front of you as you try a new project- no one wants to wash their hands and dry them every step of the way. 16. Glaze and coloured slip containers bottles 17. Test tile library, 18. Test tile palette a short shelf for up to five test tiles to rest on to see how they look together. 19. Texture rollers can go in tubes 20. Packing rolls of bubble wrap for shipping 21. Inspiration image of the day- put a foam back in a shadow box with a hard board that presses the photocopy of an inspiring pot against the window, you can store 50 behind the front one. 22. Dowels inclined up to hold kiln furniture accessibly when loading the kiln. They have holes in the middle it works perfectly, 2 meters away from the kiln for fire safety. Stilts, spurts and saddles get their own storage and by length. 23. Mug display grid. - a hanging shelf grid with each square displaying a mug by a different artist- a photo of the mug on the left side, info about how it was made on the right- artist, year, clay body, firing cone, which kiln, techniques, weight height, who has liked it, used it. 24. Throwing list for day- three or four pegs to hang a bookmark sideways made of clay saying what is being thrown(it has a centred hole about 1cm ) then on the left is a smaller tile with a number stamped on- 3, 7, 14, 21, 28, 35, 77. 98. 112. 25. Mason stains in little ziplock baggies. On a dowel organized by rainbow with blue at the front. 26. Orton cone boxes 27, spray bottles full of water 28. Soda sprayer 29. Goggles And most tools will get wet so having a 3degree tilt for water to run off will help. Some tools are hot like kiln furniture so it needs hardwood or even a ceramic peg- no plastic for hot stuff. 30. Extruder plates/extruder dies 31. Paddles 32. Sponges all sizes 33. Dottles 34. Clearly labelled Slab roller canvases for brown clay , porcelain, low fire and stoneware. This prevents low fire dust exploding the porcelain in the kiln at the higher temperatures. 35. Storage labeled for wooden slabs for using wire to cut at a controlled height. 36. Fold out ware board shelves. Like one you did for wood storage 37. Paint brushes- European hairy side up, Asian, hung from pegs. 38. Eyewash station 39. First aid kit for bandaids 40. Full on first aid kit and book. 41. Throwing and trimming chucks. 42. Cottling boards and clamps 43. YumI or bow harps. 44. Kiln was cartons 45. Plaster bat for throwing station- at a 3degree tilt- for wet clay to be quick reclaimed. 46. Sprigg mold 47. Surform tool and spare blades. 48. Sandpaper sorter 49. Hand wash liquid soap holder and towel 50. Hand wipe towel holder by throwing station 51. Cattle syringes for mixing wild clay tests 52. Drill and big glaze mixing bits I’d be happy to answer questions. I think you would draw in more viewers with this woodworker/ potter crossover and you could find a local pottery studio to do a beneficial install for them! It could be a series, one long one. Or you could have the show end with you dropping off the new French clear solution and interact with them to explain it/ ask about it. Love what you are producing and the friendly enthusiastic way you do it. Thank you so much for your work!
Love the video. Thanks for the tips. Any chance you could tell me what stain you used to give that piece of wood that red color when you were talking about stain testing? I loved the way it looked.
If it is a good brand, then I would say sometimes. If you need to be 100% sure, once the stud finder locates a stud, then use a very thin nail to tap through the drywall to make sure before making a bigger hole. Most drywall is 1/2" to 3/4" thick, so as long as the very thin nail is just over 1" it should be easy to use. Just tap it lightly, and if there's a stud, you will definitely feel the nail get harder to drive in. My father taught me this trick many years ago and it has saved me a few times.
One of the problems with some stud finders is you don't know if you're at the stud's center or edge. Using SLC's recommendation and a couple more pokes, you can find the span of the stud and decide where the center is.
The saw blade thick always screws me to this day especially the big foot blade I swear is different every time one day it is 3/16 the next a 1/4 . I don’t know how many times I have been yelled at n embarrassed by that blade messing around with my reality. Skill saw tho tried and true 1/8 all day every day god bless it
Do not need a bloody fancy pc building program that takes a lot of time to learn all the different doda's, just use a piece of paper and pencil and go , did it like that for 40 years and always accurate 😁😁👍👍 and here we have another one with a so called ''small'' shop , boy you not even know what small is 🤦♂🤦♂🤦♂🤦♂🤦♂🤦♂
The one thing that I disagree with. And this is just something that drives me NUTS. Is hanging any hand tools on a wall. And I can't believe everybody does it. I can't stand reaching for a tool, that is hanging on a wall and it's all dirty and dusty. IT ABSOLUTELY DRIVES ME CRAZY. And you know darn well, if a tool is sitting out or hanging on a wall. It's going to get dirty or dusty. So I have ALWAYS kept my hand tools in a drawer or cabinet. This way they are ALWAYS clean and ready to use. And I don't get crap all over my hands and or my project.
I completely understand where you are coming from. In my case, I usually blow out my shop once or twice a year but there is still a little dust on occasion.
Hi, I am wondering how you identify wood type / wood species from scrap lumbar ? The color and wood density is the only parameters I can think of but many wood species share similar color and wood density so whats the best way ? Is there a good guide or book on the subject ?
Yes, inquiring minds want to know. 🤣 I'm a complete newby and picked from the free scrap pile at Lowes just to experiment with (new to me) power tools.
I have been a carpenter for 30 years and if you are a beginner, take these tips to heart.
They are all great tips. They will save you time, money and maybe your fingers.
Us newbies appreciate this content. Thanks. Merry Christmas
"Take your time" is the most important one
Im gon say that those are really practical tips for sure.. Thank you for making this Sir. No bs no any other filler content, freaking straight to the point.... ❤❤❤
Thanks for this tip collection. Such a convenience compared to taking notes from different videos.
This video is worth millions, thanks for the info
All 25 are definitely on the need to know 👍🏻
Here is tip to check squares. Put it against a straight edge and draw a line. Now flip the square over. The lines should be exactly the same
Amazing tips and advice. Thanks for your effort mate.
Excellent advice and straight to the point. Thank you.
Good job on the video, great ideas for someone who is fairly new to woodworking. And for those of us who have been doing it for a while too! I know I tend to get a little bit lazy at times and end up with a few extra pieces of firewood LOL!
I am right there with you with that extra firewood 🙂
I want to build a shelf for my room. I've never built something from scratch before so thanks for this tip video :)
I'm lucky when it comes to the debate between high end tools and cheaper tools. My mom always buys the high end ones and so I borrow those from her so I can figure out which ones will be the most useful for me and which ones are good enough in the cheap variety. The most important fancy tool of her for me was her Corona folding saw. I have a bad shoulder so the last thing I need to do is wear myself out just cutting the wood. I do bush craft wood work so I only use hand tools for my work. I have used all of my mom's power tools too but it was for projects we were doing together on her house.
Excellent information for the new woodworker and, at times, a veteran.
Many thanks for your excellent video, and all the great tips!!
Most these tips I already knew but I'm a little bad about not using them. Have to remind myself quite a often. I pick up new tips and am reminded of ones I already know watching these videos usually while having my morning coffee. One thing about using a stop block and cut one piece the length you want it and setting the stop block, be sure to use a clamp and it's tight so it doesn't move any. I've had a stop block move slightly. Of course if you don't put any pieces following the first against the block hard it shouldn't move. In other words like you said take your time. The old saying haste makes waste is true. Good tips and video.
Some great and handy tips. I'm looking at convenience of regularly used tools and when I get a new tool I keep all the spare parts in 1 container. Before I used to put on shelf and eventually moving them around then forgetting what tool they belong to.
Very useful tips. I learnt some of these by doing some costly mistakes...
I feel your pain
Great woodworking tips for beginners! Thanks!
Here's a tip for anyone looking for classes: check at your local community center. Not all the classes are free, but many of them are, and those that aren't often have very reasonable tuition. You can also look for woodworking clubs and guilds in your area. Some of them have organized classes.
Also, look and see if there is a FabLab in your area! Fablab is a non-profit makerspace operating around the globe, bringing mini manufacturing capabilites and STEAM education to communities. They typically have full woodshops, as well as sewing rooms, art studio space, and or course, laser cutting, 3D printing, CNC making capabilites.
That is great to know, I had no clue about FabLab. Thank you for letting everyone know!
😲 Thanks so much!!
Do you find the sound deadening material makes a substantial difference in noise outside of the workshop?
It definitely helps with noise and temperature
Great information, thank you for the video!
As always if you find you've cut a little to much. Go immediately to Harbor freight and get a board stretcher! Remember to keep a little levity for your mistakes.
i bought my board stretcher at northern tool and it works great!
These are Wonderful tips!! Thank You!!
Thank you Scott
These are great tips thanks for sharing 👍
Very helpful and practical tips! Thank you!
Cool Video!!!! Thanks For All The Great Info!!!!
#20, if you do, make sure there are no nails or screws where you cut! #11, get into the habit of just cutting off the factory ends, do it when cutting to length, goes faster than checking them all
Thank you for some great info!
Great tips. Thank you
Wow. So useful tips
Well done. Many thanks.
Being new to this found the video very helpful
Excellent video!!!
Great content 👍
Thank You
👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼Great tips and for me some reminders.
Awesome. My wife likes to tell me that we all need reminders some days.
Great tips as always
Thank you Mark
As for quality tools, go to yard sales. A person can find brands like Makita, de Walt, etc at a fraction of the price. "The reason is my husband passed away and I don't want them." Sometimes you can equip your whole shop at a yard sale....
Very good point, and great addition to the list
Yesss 👍👍👍
Yes, but inspect them carefully. A little hard to do if you're not sure what you are looking at but I brought one home just to find the charger had exposed wires right at the point it attached to the unit! Gee whiz, and chargers are something you typically walk away from! Now, I only buy tools that look exceptionally well cared for or buy new. Paying higher new prices is cheaper than possible consequences.
Thank u for this video
Hello, could you do a video on 20 plus French cleat ideas for a pottery studio. You could do a few repeats and some new ones.
1. Cubbies for bags
2. Apron hangars
3. Small tools
4. Pencils and markers and small wooden tools
5. Garrottes and shipikki
6. Ribs and kidney tools
7. Throwing bats (disks for the pottery wheel head)
8. Texture rollers and roulettes
9. Stamps
10. Cookie cutters
11. Bluetooth speakers around room
12. Party platters for potlucks during long kiln firings
13. Masks and particulate masks for glaze mixing
14. 26L Bucket storage
15. Reference book hold open with a plastic guard for keeping the step by step article from getting splashed with slip. So it can be in front of you as you try a new project- no one wants to wash their hands and dry them every step of the way.
16. Glaze and coloured slip containers bottles
17. Test tile library,
18. Test tile palette a short shelf for up to five test tiles to rest on to see how they look together.
19. Texture rollers can go in tubes
20. Packing rolls of bubble wrap for shipping
21. Inspiration image of the day- put a foam back in a shadow box with a hard board that presses the photocopy of an inspiring pot against the window, you can store 50 behind the front one.
22. Dowels inclined up to hold kiln furniture accessibly when loading the kiln. They have holes in the middle it works perfectly, 2 meters away from the kiln for fire safety. Stilts, spurts and saddles get their own storage and by length.
23. Mug display grid. - a hanging shelf grid with each square displaying a mug by a different artist- a photo of the mug on the left side, info about how it was made on the right- artist, year, clay body, firing cone, which kiln, techniques, weight height, who has liked it, used it.
24. Throwing list for day- three or four pegs to hang a bookmark sideways made of clay saying what is being thrown(it has a centred hole about 1cm ) then on the left is a smaller tile with a number stamped on- 3, 7, 14, 21, 28, 35, 77. 98. 112.
25. Mason stains in little ziplock baggies. On a dowel organized by rainbow with blue at the front.
26. Orton cone boxes
27, spray bottles full of water
28. Soda sprayer
29. Goggles
And most tools will get wet so having a 3degree tilt for water to run off will help. Some tools are hot like kiln furniture so it needs hardwood or even a ceramic peg- no plastic for hot stuff.
30. Extruder plates/extruder dies
31. Paddles
32. Sponges all sizes
33. Dottles
34. Clearly labelled Slab roller canvases for brown clay , porcelain, low fire and stoneware. This prevents low fire dust exploding the porcelain in the kiln at the higher temperatures.
35. Storage labeled for wooden slabs for using wire to cut at a controlled height.
36. Fold out ware board shelves. Like one you did for wood storage
37. Paint brushes- European hairy side up, Asian, hung from pegs.
38. Eyewash station
39. First aid kit for bandaids
40. Full on first aid kit and book.
41. Throwing and trimming chucks.
42. Cottling boards and clamps
43. YumI or bow harps.
44. Kiln was cartons
45. Plaster bat for throwing station- at a 3degree tilt- for wet clay to be quick reclaimed.
46. Sprigg mold
47. Surform tool and spare blades.
48. Sandpaper sorter
49. Hand wash liquid soap holder and towel
50. Hand wipe towel holder by throwing station
51. Cattle syringes for mixing wild clay tests
52. Drill and big glaze mixing bits
I’d be happy to answer questions. I think you would draw in more viewers with this woodworker/ potter crossover and you could find a local pottery studio to do a beneficial install for them! It could be a series, one long one. Or you could have the show end with you dropping off the new French clear solution and interact with them to explain it/ ask about it. Love what you are producing and the friendly enthusiastic way you do it. Thank you so much for your work!
I will definitely keep that in mind. Thank you for all of the ideas!
Good vid. Some of these things I already knew, some things I should have knows . . . And some were just "duh" Thanks
It's amazing what one person thinks "duh" and another person had no clue.
#26 - HAVE FUN!
Yes I agree 👍💯 😁
Love the video. Thanks for the tips. Any chance you could tell me what stain you used to give that piece of wood that red color when you were talking about stain testing? I loved the way it looked.
I think it is called Barn Red, but I also burnt the wood before staining.
@@SpecificLove7 Thanks for getting back to me!
How do you calibrate a square?
Question I had been forgetting to ask you..
In your opinion do/would you trust stud finders?
Thanks in advance & may all be blessed!
If it is a good brand, then I would say sometimes. If you need to be 100% sure, once the stud finder locates a stud, then use a very thin nail to tap through the drywall to make sure before making a bigger hole. Most drywall is 1/2" to 3/4" thick, so as long as the very thin nail is just over 1" it should be easy to use.
Just tap it lightly, and if there's a stud, you will definitely feel the nail get harder to drive in.
My father taught me this trick many years ago and it has saved me a few times.
Or use a magnet to find the screws or nails fixing the plasterboard or drywall
One of the problems with some stud finders is you don't know if you're at the stud's center or edge. Using SLC's recommendation and a couple more pokes, you can find the span of the stud and decide where the center is.
where do you get the classes ??
Can you do a video about how a beginner would go about setting up their shop
I will definitely keep that in mind, thank you
In the meantime Devin, Woodworking for Mere Mortals might have some stuff you'd find helpful.
I agree, except on nr 22 bying cheap machines. Buy better ones second hand. You get better tools and dont contribute to electronic waste.
Thra khawp mai
Chinese tape measures work well if Farm Tolerance is used , 1/4” .
Awesome video! FYI there was a very low frequency hum. You may want to through a high pass filter. I can hear it drop in and out during scene changes.
Thank you for the warning, I was unaware of that.
I guess is this is for newbies… really new newbies, I mean really really newbies.
Yes it is
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
The saw blade thick always screws me to this day especially the big foot blade I swear is different every time one day it is 3/16 the next a 1/4 . I don’t know how many times I have been yelled at n embarrassed by that blade messing around with my reality. Skill saw tho tried and true 1/8 all day every day god bless it
👍🏻🇺🇸❤️⭐❤️🇺🇸👍🏻
I like the prominence of the American flag
Do not need a bloody fancy pc building program that takes a lot of time to learn all the different doda's, just use a piece of paper and pencil and go , did it like that for 40 years and always accurate 😁😁👍👍 and here we have another one with a so called ''small'' shop , boy you not even know what small is 🤦♂🤦♂🤦♂🤦♂🤦♂🤦♂
Where’s the PVC?
I don't make much with PVC anymore
He has gotten into woodworking and made some impressive things 👍
The one thing that I disagree with. And this is just something that drives me NUTS.
Is hanging any hand tools on a wall.
And I can't believe everybody does it.
I can't stand reaching for a tool, that is hanging on a wall and it's all dirty and dusty.
IT ABSOLUTELY DRIVES ME CRAZY.
And you know darn well, if a tool is sitting out or hanging on a wall. It's going to get dirty or dusty.
So I have ALWAYS kept my hand tools in a drawer or cabinet.
This way they are ALWAYS clean and ready to use.
And I don't get crap all over my hands and or my project.
I completely understand where you are coming from. In my case, I usually blow out my shop once or twice a year but there is still a little dust on occasion.
Lack of space. Maybe make an enclosure like plexiglass to cover them.
You cannot get the "same exact" anything, why does America get it backwards, it's like having a "nice really car" or a "small very IQ"
are you gonna be ok?
Hi, I am wondering how you identify wood type / wood species from scrap lumbar ? The color and wood density is the only parameters I can think of but many wood species share similar color and wood density so whats the best way ? Is there a good guide or book on the subject ?
Yes, inquiring minds want to know. 🤣 I'm a complete newby and picked from the free scrap pile at Lowes just to experiment with (new to me) power tools.
Cool..👍🇬🇧🙋🏼♂️