OMG, how did I never come across your channel, 🤔🤔🤔 Your work is beyond perfection. Superb design, meticulously finished . I afraid you have a new sub, better late than never 😂😂
Loved the "finessing" processes. After nearly 50 years as a woodworker, I finally retired. But, if a friend, neighbor, relative, etc. wants a custom made piece, I will help them design and build it. Educating folks is very satisfying. One of the hardest lessons is teaching folks to cut-to-fit/finesse final joinery and not measure everything. My last project was an octagon poker table with my neighbor. He showed up with a tape measure hooked onto his belt. He tried to measure everything and would proudly exclaim, "This 19.235 inches." I kept telling him it doesn't matter as long as it fits. Finally, after a couple weeks, his wife told to stop bringing the tape measure. By the time we finished the table (which turned out gorgeous) he had learned the lesson. Thanks.
retired furniture maker here also. yep the only time i ever used a measure was on the first piece of wood i cut. after that all measurements came from the piece itself.
@@TaylerMade Exactly. I measured to get the approximate height, width, etc. Then everything else is cut to fit within those measurements. Thanks for agreeing. PS-great name.
I enjoyed your shelf project using with hickory. I completed a 8Q hickory bench (6' long X 19" wide). All total, it probably weighed proximately 240 lbs. At nearly 80, this was my first-time using hickory on such a large project. Lost's of lessons learned. I had no problem cut the joints with my track saw. However, without a jointer, I used my 1960's Craftsman 4" belt sander to get the surface flat.
Your patience, presence, and enthusiasm are just the inspiration I need to get busy, and I admire your focus on, well, focus--a skill and value in wide decline. There are times I regret not making more art in my day to day, but your approach to this project reminds me just about anything I do can be an artistic journey, including raising children, making my bed, or writing a meaningful thank you letter. My first video of yours, and I'm a new subscriber. Also walking the path of sobriety, which was the start of everything good in my life, today, so I'm happy for you.
Your channel is one of the most educational and entertaining that I know and follow on UA-cam. Your voice is perfect and your humor is intelligent and witty :)... I'm not a woodworker but I really enjoy carpentry videos. You are one of the few who doesn't hide your mistakes, which is commendable. Accept a hug from the other side of the Atlantic, Lisbon, Portugal, EU
I thought you were in the program, after hearing some familiar oneliners here and there. That makes this journey even more valuable. I'm coming up on 5 years now, and woodworking, making in general, played a large part in my recovery.. Nice work!
I use woodworking as therapy for PTSD/depression/anxiety after being a medic for 26 years. It truly does help. I hope to be a 1/4 of your talent some day. Keep up the great work on both fronts. I know how much of a battle it can be. Unfortunately my dad lost his battle with it.
beautifully executed. i love hickory. I work it mainly with hand tools and it is one of those woods that I go with impulse hardened hard-point saws for. way too much saw sharpening otherwise and good files aren't cheap. definitely gotta figure in the wear on tools when working woods like hickory and mesquite. both of them do a number on tools.
Looks beautiful. I love simple design. You're brave using the router on the last part of the tenon. I've had too many catastrophic mishaps with the handheld router to trust it like that. A chisel may take more time, but redoing a piece because you caught some weird grain or your wrist twitched a little and router jumped would take longer.
Beautiful piece, man! Nice work! I particularly like seeing woodworkers using hand tools for fine work - I’m a tech junkie and I get lazy often and throw money at expensive tools when I could just take the time to get more proficient at the craft of using hand tools. I feel like you got the balance pretty well with this project. Really enjoyed the video. 👍
I don’t often write commentary on woodworking videos since I view videos in this category as tutorials, sort of. And in doing so I have to assume or give the benefit of the”he must know more than I do to create this video” and so like a good student, I absorb information, be it technique, machinery use, or whatever. This was my first video you’ve produced and for the first time I don’t feel stupid or under skilled because you shared a couple of your fails such as cutting by hand and the router taking a chunk out of a tenon. What made me press the subscribe button is your way of explaining and the calm in your voice. You don’t dictate, talk down or “teach”. Instead you experience along with your audience, or at least that’s how I perceive your style. I loved how you highlighted a mistake in the making in the offset of a board and showed how to correct it and why. Highly effective. I’m sorry if I’m gushing. If I am it’s because I’ve watched many, many, MANY, oh so many videos by so many makers with differing styles of presentation and almost all of them, regardless of how humble they present themselves to be, they still sound like total douches, and the bags they came in! You offer no pretense. You didn’t show off fancy chisel work or insist one technique over another as being true woodworking vs cheating. That was a reason I hit the subscribe button, along with I found myself attracted to you as well. No not in a sexual way, silly man. You come across as someone with whom a cup of coffee would become an unbridled deep dive into any topic we decide to pursue. I mean, we do share woodworking in common, right? Granted you work in a real life scale and I in the miniature. I make tiny boxes containing hundreds and hundreds or individual pieces of different colored exotics such as Purple Heart, canary wood, black walnut and curly maple. Anyway, sorry for the fanboy style of this comment. My philosophy in life is if you see someone beautiful, tell them. They may not see themselves as such and you’ll give them needed confidence and a better outlook. Paying it forward isn’t too hard and paying a compliment to someone who has improved your life in any way, well, it can only do good. If they’re not receptive immediately and reject you, that’s ok, because quietly they will appreciate your words. And in that spirit, thank you. This video has helped me gain insight into my own work in philosophy and in the understanding that anyone and everyone can and do make mistakes. How you deal with it is what makes you a good woodworker and a good designer. One question I have is near the end while you summarize the video, you say something about sobriety. What do you mean by that? Is it a reference to a former life of substance abuse you’ve overcome or are you using it as an analogy? If literal, then congratulations on your continued success in sobriety. I wouldn’t have judged you if you still used though I suspect you wouldn’t be making videos of such a high standard. If as analogy, then it’s brilliant. Giving your audience a reference for being focused on the moment and to enjoy the process rather than getting through it. That alone will help so many find success in all facets of life if they’re smart enough to apply it as such. Thank you once again. You are a great presenter, I’m sure a good guy, humble, down to earth, and I’m sure a master of your craft though you try to not sound superior. Great job. May you find the success you seek in all ventures. May God bless, Peace Oh, PS, my name is Saro, I live in New Jersey (it’s not as bad as media would have you believe. It’s actually pretty great) and I work out of my garage. Figure you should know where your fans are.
Thank you Saro. You are a very kind person yourself. I think you hit the nail on the head, I definitely try to share the experiences rather thaknowledgeable. alone. So I'm happy that came across. As long as your shop and your amazing boxes give you joy, then you have exactly what you need. Yes I'm in sobriety and I meant everything quite literally. I'll see you on the next one!
Another great video, thanks! For that small cut with the router, you can build a jig that creates a plaform to keep the router level, it doesn't have to be near the cutter. Then the guide jig you already have will only maintain the dimensions, not carry the whole router
@@FortressFineWoodworks I think hes implying that you can make a jig that clamped "around" your template, with the top flush with the top of your little rounding pattern but also left room for you bit to flow around, the jig would take the weight of the router cause it would be fully flush with the top plane of the pattern piece you are templating out.
"Well, perfection is a figment of my imaginatio..." Well I got news for you. It came out perfect to me. And it should, with all that "finessing" you do. You may not see it that way but I think you have already bacome a master of your craft. Looking forward to more!
I had to look up more about wood movement in joinery, and once I understood you were strengthening the side with the mortises by reducing stress on that side of the joint as well as limiting the movement w two tenons, it clicked better :)
Love love the use of hickory!!! I’m so glad you demonstrated how to using this joinery, in fact I want to build my sister and Mom a hickory blanket ladder and didn’t want to go the route of using dowels again. They work fine but I want to challenge myself using mortise and tenon basically as you just did without the double tenons because it’s a small blanket ladder and no room for two so thank you for this! I’ll absolutely use your methods for the hickory ladders. My most recent build (not professional just love building things that I love and others love although I have a goal to sell at some point) I built a beautiful bath vanity out of mostly solid hickory and it is hard wood, even harder if you use fasteners so I don’t recommend fast building! It is wonderful for traditional joinery with glue, not at all screws and nails. It’s certainly tough to push through a tablesaw but idc it’s worth it! I’ve worked with it in making my Alm inspired Alpine pattern for a natural ombré effect using Alms pattern with all hardwoods (started with purple poplar that turned the coolest green at the bottom because it was the darkest, then mahogany, alder, hickory and at the top maple) rather than plywood and it turned out stunning but the 45° rips with that hickory were trickier than the maple, but it worked out. That’s when I went with it for my mid mod style bath vanity and I’m thrilled I used it but installing the toilet paper dispenser on the side ate up 5-6 screws because they weren’t tough enough screws and I didn’t think to use wax. Also a beautiful finish on hickory is Osmo in Raw Matte, it pulled out the depths of color in the striations of the grain perfectly and will only use that finish with hickory and lighter woods from now on! It kept the naturalness and yet also brought out hidden colors and tones. And it’s easy to sand a spot of missed glue and reapply without any obvious signs you messed up! Love hickory and I love Osmo in Raw!!!
I've loved this style of functional partition wall design for a long time, now, and your execution is beautiful! A lot of unique little takes on the concept, especially leaving a few shelves open and unsupported on the ends; not something I usually see, I think because hickory is such a challenge to work with, and it's the only thing strong enough to leave unsupported. Thank you for the inspiration, both in materials, and general outlook on life! I think I'm going to slow myself down this weekend, and also consider hickory for an upcoming project. :)
Awesome video, hope to get there someday. Woodworking has been a help in my sobriety also, helps me slow down and focus on the task at hand. Great job!
Wow. That build is fantastic. I only recently subscribed after stumbling upon your channel a few weeks ago. Your skill at woodworking and story telling are awesome way beyond your subscriber count. You truly deserve way more subscribers. Kudos.
It was very simple. It slid into place, some finish (small head) screws were driven into the pony wall and side wall, then wax filler filled the holes. Thanks for watching!
Your execution and design are just awesome. I can't help but notice the tear out on the faces from the tenon joinery. I have never worked with hickory, but I'm wondering if you would have used a marking gauge and a sharp knife prior to cutting this if that would have help eliminate the tear out. I love the look of this, it looks very much like white oak and nothing like my parents hickory cabinets. I may consider using the species down the road.
Honestly the micro bits of tearout were really only noticeable on camera because I'm using a zoom lens. In real life, it's crisp and nice. But yes, precutting the shoulder would probably help
5 місяців тому+2
Very Nice. The tutorial on the mortise and tenon was very good. Lots of little helpful tips throughout the build. Consider me subscribed.
I thoroughly enjoyed watching the video and learnt a lot from the minute details as I watched an artist create a very intricate craft. An authentic craftsman 💚🤍❤💯💯💯💚🤍❤
Congratulations. Producing a piece with patience and thought is a luxury it seems but shows ethics. If you want to be remembered in life, not a bad way to go. 😊
I am getting value and good laughs from your videos! Sorry, no mean comments from me! Another stellar video and a beautiful shelf/room divider. Has that 70's vibe to it and I love it.
It looks awesome! Hickory is my favorite wood. It is difficult to work with and heavy but worth it in my opinion. Currently making all my cabinets, doors, and window trim from Hickory for my house. Keep up the great work!
Tip for future projects is to keep lengths longer for dressing and dimensioning and cut to length later. Helps to keep dimensions more consistent, far less ends to have snipes and a hell of a lot safer on the jointer. Working with hard timbers is a whole other process. Here in Aus we are always battling with heavy and hard timbers and the endless risk of splintering and checks breaking when routering, chiseling and planing. As for cutting, sharp and clean blades and router cutters are a must to reduce burning. Also the table saw fence must be dialed in perfectly, or slightly open up through the cut, or you get burns.
Beautiful work !! It looks very 'at home' in that space. Love your [video] production as well - the music at the end was spot on! Thanks for the presentation.
I'm kinda glad I only recently found your channel cause it was so enjoyable to marathon through every single video you've uploaded. Now I've got the bell on so I can follow along with every new video. 💜🔔 Thank you for sharing all the details and insights about woodworking and life in general. Ths piece looks so amazing installed. Really suits the space.
yeah, built a couple cabinmate doors with this a few months ago using nothing but hand tools, really really hard!! high carbon content is hard on blades, I had to sharpen after every other stroke.
@@FortressFineWoodworks tea is hard on blades too, thank god i just bought a cbn wheel, makes quick work of hand sharpened blades sharpened by a beginner hand sharpener lol.
This is an inspiration! I'm looking forward to build something pretty similar for myself. But I won't joint the boards the same way due to the lack of skill 😂
If you really wanna slow down and enjoy the moment and the final result, try doing wedged, thru mortises with the wedges being a darker contrasting wood. Would probably double the time but the end result would be a eye catcher for generations. Of course the client would have the final say on the extra cost.
Dude that Hickory is… so beautiful. You made a tough would to work with seem like a buttery experience. ( not a woodworker, don’t have the requisite adjectives 😅 )
Very nice build. So many mortises. I'm wondering if you did it again, would you go to a Domino? And finding that zone where you can be "in the moment" makes woodworking really amazing. Not sure if doing the video set ups was part of that process, but the shelf AND the video were terrific. It works if you work it, so work it, you're worth it.
Definitely learned something again… I’ve seen hickory pop up from hobby sawmills on marketplace (there are a TON here in Indiana) when checking out lumber and noticed that it was definitely more reasonably priced but now I know why and will definitely steer clear. Thanks! Do you have a link for a sprayer hose you like? My Graco X5 came with a 1/4” 25ft hose. Would you recommend still using the 1/4” when spraying latex or enamel paint vs stain and top coats? Enjoy the rest of your weekend
@@FortressFineWoodworks Thanks, I wasn’t looking forward to trying to manage the 25’er while painting the inside of our RV but every question I could find posed to Graco about using a shorter hose, much less a shorter and smaller dimension hose, they recommended against it saying it could cause problems because of excess back-pressure. Their answer didn’t make much sense to me given that if anything a shorter hose should experience less pressure.
Very nice indeed, one question: how did you end up installing it? Did you just press fit into place, did you use screws or glue, maybe super powerful magnets?
Thanks so much! The dewalt pin nailer gave me a lot of jamming problems early on, but I sprayed the inside clip (that holds the pins) with WD40 and it fixed it. Now it works like a charm
*laughs in Iroko* *giggles in camelthorn* My tools were screaming. Surprisingly, my Stanley No80 with a Ron Hock blade did most of the finishing without a need for sanding though. Nice work though mate. Result speaks for itself.
I used Total Boat Halcyon Clear Satin www.totalboat.com/products/halcyon-water-based-varnish?sca_ref=5718157.55vcje6aYW And I let the glue set for about 2 hours
And then you're watching HGTV and a designer says, "And we're going to remove this shelving unit to open up the space!" Great job on the piece; it's beautiful.
Seeing B roll of the piece in situ is a nice touch. So often I wonder what the intended result is, and it's so satisfying to see. It also shows the choice for why to design like that given the geometric tiles, thicker spout on the kitchen sink, and lampshade shapes.
Wonderful work! I'd be scared of installing it, though. Going through all that trouble making sure everything is square and then figuring out that the wall you're attaching it to isn't... that'd be quite a moment.
OMG, how did I never come across your channel, 🤔🤔🤔
Your work is beyond perfection.
Superb design, meticulously finished .
I afraid you have a new sub, better late than never 😂😂
Wow, thank you! And thanks for the sub!
This was for my house and I’m OBSESSED with this piece, it’s so
beautiful.
Well it was all your idea so you get the design credit! Thanks for being a wonderful customer!
it's a really nice piece you've ordered ;)
Nice to see someone so appreciative. Class.
@@FortressFineWoodworks Can you elaborate on the price this would cost us? Material + hours? Ballpark?
So the beautiful design was yours, and the execution simply flawless. Lucky you, I hope you'll get to enjoy it for many many happy years to come!
Loved the "finessing" processes. After nearly 50 years as a woodworker, I finally retired. But, if a friend, neighbor, relative, etc. wants a custom made piece, I will help them design and build it. Educating folks is very satisfying. One of the hardest lessons is teaching folks to cut-to-fit/finesse final joinery and not measure everything. My last project was an octagon poker table with my neighbor. He showed up with a tape measure hooked onto his belt. He tried to measure everything and would proudly exclaim, "This 19.235 inches." I kept telling him it doesn't matter as long as it fits. Finally, after a couple weeks, his wife told to stop bringing the tape measure. By the time we finished the table (which turned out gorgeous) he had learned the lesson. Thanks.
I bet that octagonal table was sweet! Thanks!
retired furniture maker here also. yep the only time i ever used a measure was on the first piece of wood i cut. after that all measurements came from the piece itself.
@@TaylerMade Exactly. I measured to get the approximate height, width, etc. Then everything else is cut to fit within those measurements. Thanks for agreeing. PS-great name.
"Slow is smooth, smooth is fast". Spending time to calmly do it right (dry fit, checking measurements) saves stressful time lost from mistakes.
It really does huh? I agree
I love how you showed making of the jig. There is so much art to doing that and I don’t think it gets enough credit in these types of videos.
Thanks! I usually show making the jig if it plays an important roll in the process.
I enjoyed your shelf project using with hickory. I completed a 8Q hickory bench (6' long X 19" wide). All total, it probably weighed proximately 240 lbs. At nearly 80, this was my first-time using hickory on such a large project. Lost's of lessons learned. I had no problem cut the joints with my track saw. However, without a jointer, I used my 1960's Craftsman 4" belt sander to get the surface flat.
Yeah I see why you had to whip out the old school belt sander! That sounds fun!
I wouldn't ever believe that someone would put so much effort to make a truly beautiful and remarkable bookshelf to house a Twilight saga books 🤔
Hahaha you noticed? Don't expose the secret!
Ha ha! Winner comment 😂😂
Sangat presisi dan juga sangat indah 👌💯
Your patience, presence, and enthusiasm are just the inspiration I need to get busy, and I admire your focus on, well, focus--a skill and value in wide decline. There are times I regret not making more art in my day to day, but your approach to this project reminds me just about anything I do can be an artistic journey, including raising children, making my bed, or writing a meaningful thank you letter. My first video of yours, and I'm a new subscriber. Also walking the path of sobriety, which was the start of everything good in my life, today, so I'm happy for you.
Congratulations on your sobriety. Your journey will be among the best, and now you can feel an artistic approach to everything! Thanks!
Your channel is one of the most educational and entertaining that I know and follow on UA-cam. Your voice is perfect and your humor is intelligent and witty :)... I'm not a woodworker but I really enjoy carpentry videos. You are one of the few who doesn't hide your mistakes, which is commendable. Accept a hug from the other side of the Atlantic, Lisbon, Portugal, EU
I appreciate that. Thanks for following me and watching my videos! I'm glad you enjoy them!
I thought you were in the program, after hearing some familiar oneliners here and there. That makes this journey even more valuable. I'm coming up on 5 years now, and woodworking, making in general, played a large part in my recovery.. Nice work!
Very nice! Congrats on 5 years! I think building things with your hands is a beautiful way to keep the mind healthy.
I use woodworking as therapy for PTSD/depression/anxiety after being a medic for 26 years. It truly does help. I hope to be a 1/4 of your talent some day. Keep up the great work on both fronts. I know how much of a battle it can be. Unfortunately my dad lost his battle with it.
beautifully executed. i love hickory. I work it mainly with hand tools and it is one of those woods that I go with impulse hardened hard-point saws for. way too much saw sharpening otherwise and good files aren't cheap. definitely gotta figure in the wear on tools when working woods like hickory and mesquite. both of them do a number on tools.
Nice, that's so true. And yes, woods like hickory beat our tools to death
Looks beautiful. I love simple design. You're brave using the router on the last part of the tenon. I've had too many catastrophic mishaps with the handheld router to trust it like that. A chisel may take more time, but redoing a piece because you caught some weird grain or your wrist twitched a little and router jumped would take longer.
You are so right. I kinda went on hope this time.
Beautiful piece, man! Nice work! I particularly like seeing woodworkers using hand tools for fine work - I’m a tech junkie and I get lazy often and throw money at expensive tools when I could just take the time to get more proficient at the craft of using hand tools. I feel like you got the balance pretty well with this project. Really enjoyed the video. 👍
So you're saying you like my curved cut with the hand saw? Thanks for watching!
Ha ha! Exactly! I was delighted that I’m not the only one who can’t cut a straight line by hand! 😂
What i love is you use different species of wood. Alot of yt is white oak and walnut. Amazing video and great job
Thanks for sharing that! I appreciate it
@FortressFineWoodworks well done! Clean and precise. I enjoyed the humour. This was my first video of yours but not the last.
Glad you enjoyed it then! Thanks! And I'll see you on the next one!
Others already said everything, but I simply feel compelled to tell you how good you are.
I truly appreciate you taking the time to say that. Thanks for watching and I'll see you on the next one!
What a beautiful piece, I didn't realise Hickory was such a nice looking wood!
It is if you spend the time finding the right boards.
I don’t often write commentary on woodworking videos since I view videos in this category as tutorials, sort of. And in doing so I have to assume or give the benefit of the”he must know more than I do to create this video” and so like a good student, I absorb information, be it technique, machinery use, or whatever. This was my first video you’ve produced and for the first time I don’t feel stupid or under skilled because you shared a couple of your fails such as cutting by hand and the router taking a chunk out of a tenon.
What made me press the subscribe button is your way of explaining and the calm in your voice. You don’t dictate, talk down or “teach”. Instead you experience along with your audience, or at least that’s how I perceive your style. I loved how you highlighted a mistake in the making in the offset of a board and showed how to correct it and why. Highly effective.
I’m sorry if I’m gushing. If I am it’s because I’ve watched many, many, MANY, oh so many videos by so many makers with differing styles of presentation and almost all of them, regardless of how humble they present themselves to be, they still sound like total douches, and the bags they came in! You offer no pretense. You didn’t show off fancy chisel work or insist one technique over another as being true woodworking vs cheating.
That was a reason I hit the subscribe button, along with I found myself attracted to you as well. No not in a sexual way, silly man. You come across as someone with whom a cup of coffee would become an unbridled deep dive into any topic we decide to pursue. I mean, we do share woodworking in common, right? Granted you work in a real life scale and I in the miniature. I make tiny boxes containing hundreds and hundreds or individual pieces of different colored exotics such as Purple Heart, canary wood, black walnut and curly maple.
Anyway, sorry for the fanboy style of this comment. My philosophy in life is if you see someone beautiful, tell them. They may not see themselves as such and you’ll give them needed confidence and a better outlook. Paying it forward isn’t too hard and paying a compliment to someone who has improved your life in any way, well, it can only do good. If they’re not receptive immediately and reject you, that’s ok, because quietly they will appreciate your words. And in that spirit, thank you. This video has helped me gain insight into my own work in philosophy and in the understanding that anyone and everyone can and do make mistakes. How you deal with it is what makes you a good woodworker and a good designer.
One question I have is near the end while you summarize the video, you say something about sobriety. What do you mean by that? Is it a reference to a former life of substance abuse you’ve overcome or are you using it as an analogy? If literal, then congratulations on your continued success in sobriety. I wouldn’t have judged you if you still used though I suspect you wouldn’t be making videos of such a high standard. If as analogy, then it’s brilliant. Giving your audience a reference for being focused on the moment and to enjoy the process rather than getting through it. That alone will help so many find success in all facets of life if they’re smart enough to apply it as such.
Thank you once again. You are a great presenter, I’m sure a good guy, humble, down to earth, and I’m sure a master of your craft though you try to not sound superior. Great job. May you find the success you seek in all ventures.
May God bless,
Peace
Oh, PS, my name is Saro, I live in New Jersey (it’s not as bad as media would have you believe. It’s actually pretty great) and I work out of my garage. Figure you should know where your fans are.
Thank you Saro. You are a very kind person yourself. I think you hit the nail on the head, I definitely try to share the experiences rather thaknowledgeable. alone. So I'm happy that came across. As long as your shop and your amazing boxes give you joy, then you have exactly what you need. Yes I'm in sobriety and I meant everything quite literally. I'll see you on the next one!
Another great video, thanks! For that small cut with the router, you can build a jig that creates a plaform to keep the router level, it doesn't have to be near the cutter. Then the guide jig you already have will only maintain the dimensions, not carry the whole router
hm, I think I get what you're saying. Thanks for the tip!
@@FortressFineWoodworks I think hes implying that you can make a jig that clamped "around" your template, with the top flush with the top of your little rounding pattern but also left room for you bit to flow around, the jig would take the weight of the router cause it would be fully flush with the top plane of the pattern piece you are templating out.
"Well, perfection is a figment of my imaginatio..." Well I got news for you. It came out perfect to me. And it should, with all that "finessing" you do. You may not see it that way but I think you have already bacome a master of your craft. Looking forward to more!
That is too kind. Thanks so much, your comment made my day! I hope to see you on the next one/s!
@@FortressFineWoodworks Sure bet! Meanwhile, I have previous shows to catch up with your artistry. See you soon!
I had to look up more about wood movement in joinery, and once I understood you were strengthening the side with the mortises by reducing stress on that side of the joint as well as limiting the movement w two tenons, it clicked better :)
Exactly! Now you know! Thanks!
Hickory is an incredible wood, this is probably my favorite project
Well that's an honor! I'm glad you liked it so much! I'll see you on the next one!
Love love the use of hickory!!! I’m so glad you demonstrated how to using this joinery, in fact I want to build my sister and Mom a hickory blanket ladder and didn’t want to go the route of using dowels again. They work fine but I want to challenge myself using mortise and tenon basically as you just did without the double tenons because it’s a small blanket ladder and no room for two so thank you for this! I’ll absolutely use your methods for the hickory ladders. My most recent build (not professional just love building things that I love and others love although I have a goal to sell at some point) I built a beautiful bath vanity out of mostly solid hickory and it is hard wood, even harder if you use fasteners so I don’t recommend fast building! It is wonderful for traditional joinery with glue, not at all screws and nails. It’s certainly tough to push through a tablesaw but idc it’s worth it! I’ve worked with it in making my Alm inspired Alpine pattern for a natural ombré effect using Alms pattern with all hardwoods (started with purple poplar that turned the coolest green at the bottom because it was the darkest, then mahogany, alder, hickory and at the top maple) rather than plywood and it turned out stunning but the 45° rips with that hickory were trickier than the maple, but it worked out. That’s when I went with it for my mid mod style bath vanity and I’m thrilled I used it but installing the toilet paper dispenser on the side ate up 5-6 screws because they weren’t tough enough screws and I didn’t think to use wax. Also a beautiful finish on hickory is Osmo in Raw Matte, it pulled out the depths of color in the striations of the grain perfectly and will only use that finish with hickory and lighter woods from now on! It kept the naturalness and yet also brought out hidden colors and tones. And it’s easy to sand a spot of missed glue and reapply without any obvious signs you messed up! Love hickory and I love Osmo in Raw!!!
I hope your ladder is a fun build. The enjoyment will be worth the time to give it a try and learn! Thanks for watching!
This is the most educational video on UA-cam. I am a huge fan
Glad you're liking my videos! Thanks for taking the time to watch and comment!
I've loved this style of functional partition wall design for a long time, now, and your execution is beautiful! A lot of unique little takes on the concept, especially leaving a few shelves open and unsupported on the ends; not something I usually see, I think because hickory is such a challenge to work with, and it's the only thing strong enough to leave unsupported.
Thank you for the inspiration, both in materials, and general outlook on life! I think I'm going to slow myself down this weekend, and also consider hickory for an upcoming project. :)
Thats a great idea. Slow things down and enjoy yourself. Thanks for watching!
Awesome video, hope to get there someday. Woodworking has been a help in my sobriety also, helps me slow down and focus on the task at hand. Great job!
Congrats on your sobriety! Thanks for watching!
This video was chock full of separate tips and techniques that I can apply to many other projects! Thanks!
That's perfect! I couldn't ask for more
Wow. That build is fantastic. I only recently subscribed after stumbling upon your channel a few weeks ago. Your skill at woodworking and story telling are awesome way beyond your subscriber count. You truly deserve way more subscribers. Kudos.
Welcome aboard! Thanks for supporting the channel by subscribing and commenting!
That looks fantastic! I would have loved to see the installation in that very precise space. Great work as always.
It was very simple. It slid into place, some finish (small head) screws were driven into the pony wall and side wall, then wax filler filled the holes. Thanks for watching!
@@FortressFineWoodworks I was fearing scratches galore getting it in, especially with the weight. Great job!
Beautiful design, excellent tips on a favorite joint.
Now to see if you have some box joint projects…
Thanks so much! I do a lot of box joints in my past cabinet videos when I make the drawer boxes
Your execution and design are just awesome. I can't help but notice the tear out on the faces from the tenon joinery. I have never worked with hickory, but I'm wondering if you would have used a marking gauge and a sharp knife prior to cutting this if that would have help eliminate the tear out. I love the look of this, it looks very much like white oak and nothing like my parents hickory cabinets. I may consider using the species down the road.
Honestly the micro bits of tearout were really only noticeable on camera because I'm using a zoom lens. In real life, it's crisp and nice. But yes, precutting the shoulder would probably help
Very Nice. The tutorial on the mortise and tenon was very good. Lots of little helpful tips throughout the build. Consider me subscribed.
Thanks for the sub!
I wish that every project I make went this smooth and look that good. 🤗 You are great woodworker.
I bet your projects turn out great. You just have the curse of knowing all of your mistakes.
I really want to try mortise and tenons. This project turned out awesome
For real.... try them. You will get so much satisfaction out of it
@@FortressFineWoodworks will do have some shop projects coming up. It doesn’t matter if I mess them up there 😂
I thoroughly enjoyed watching the video and learnt a lot from the minute details as I watched an artist create a very intricate craft. An authentic craftsman 💚🤍❤💯💯💯💚🤍❤
Glad you enjoyed it! Thank you so much!
Congratulations. Producing a piece with patience and thought is a luxury it seems but shows ethics. If you want to be remembered in life, not a bad way to go. 😊
Thank you for that! And thanks for taking the time to comment!
I am getting value and good laughs from your videos! Sorry, no mean comments from me! Another stellar video and a beautiful shelf/room divider. Has that 70's vibe to it and I love it.
You are so right! No mean comments from you ever. You're probably one of the most dedicated nice viewers I have. Thank you as always!
just found this video and have subscribed because i like the design of your piece (retired furniture maker).
Thanks for the sub! I hope to see you back
I really enjoy your vids. Educational and entertaining. Thanks for bringing quality to UA-cam
I appreciate that! Thanks for watching!
The project turned out awesome! And I'd have to say the video production was top notch!
Thanks, my editor Nicole did a great job!
I put grinder blades on a skill saw to cut concrete blocks.
I think that's exactly what he was using it for!
Super dry fitting and pre finishing helps a lot.
Absolutely!
It looks awesome! Hickory is my favorite wood. It is difficult to work with and heavy but worth it in my opinion. Currently making all my cabinets, doors, and window trim from Hickory for my house. Keep up the great work!
Those are going to be indestructible!
Tip for future projects is to keep lengths longer for dressing and dimensioning and cut to length later. Helps to keep dimensions more consistent, far less ends to have snipes and a hell of a lot safer on the jointer.
Working with hard timbers is a whole other process. Here in Aus we are always battling with heavy and hard timbers and the endless risk of splintering and checks breaking when routering, chiseling and planing.
As for cutting, sharp and clean blades and router cutters are a must to reduce burning. Also the table saw fence must be dialed in perfectly, or slightly open up through the cut, or you get burns.
Yeah fresh blades are the best. It's probably time for me to sharpen my tablesaw blades
Beautiful work !! It looks very 'at home' in that space. Love your [video] production as well - the music at the end was spot on! Thanks for the presentation.
Thanks for the great feedback!
Amazing job love the way it turned out and looks in the house when you finished it. Keep up the amazing work
Thank you!! I'll see you on the next one!
Really nice design. I have to build one. Impressive accuracy!
You could put this design anywhere. Have fun!
I'm kinda glad I only recently found your channel cause it was so enjoyable to marathon through every single video you've uploaded. Now I've got the bell on so I can follow along with every new video. 💜🔔 Thank you for sharing all the details and insights about woodworking and life in general. Ths piece looks so amazing installed. Really suits the space.
That's really really nice. Thank you. Binging my content is probably one of the best ways to support the channel so truly... thank you!
Beautiful design and great craftsmanship.
Thanks! It was actually the customers idea!
Great job, sir! That hickory looks so beautiful. I need to use that more often.
Thanks! I agree, every time I finish a project with hickory I remember how nice and carmely the grain is.
very nice design and execution! taking time to enjoy even small things is key to good work imo
Absolutely. I totally agree. Thanks!
Wow, that was art and artistry. Beautifully done.
Thank you very much! I truly appreciate you watching!
This is the type of work I aspire to produce, I’ve definitely subscribed to your channel!!
I'm glad it inspires you! Thanks so much for the sub!
yeah, built a couple cabinmate doors with this a few months ago using nothing but hand tools, really really hard!! high carbon content is hard on blades, I had to sharpen after every other stroke.
Haha sharpen after every stroke. That hickory will getcha
@@FortressFineWoodworks tea is hard on blades too, thank god i just bought a cbn wheel, makes quick work of hand sharpened blades sharpened by a beginner hand sharpener lol.
Nice. And the Hickory even looks nice, Ive seen it before and I didn't like it but this hickory you used really looks good.
Thank you! They're selected from a full pallet of hickory, and I chose the boards that had the nicest darker grain.
Congratulations, it's an excellent work. Design and execution.
Thank you! Cheers!
This is an inspiration! I'm looking forward to build something pretty similar for myself. But I won't joint the boards the same way due to the lack of skill 😂
Yeah, dowels or dominoes would work too!
@@FortressFineWoodworks that's the plan.
Well, I've definitely been in the moment for 23:53 minutes. Thanks for that 😉
You’re welcome 😊
What a nice looking piece. Very well done! Congrats on not screwing anything up
I appreciate you watching!
Awesome video! That came out absolutely amazing. Great work.
Thanks Scott! Your videos are superb as well!
No other woodworking video has made want to rly try making mortise and tenon joints like this one❤
Give them a try! You'll love the process!
If you really wanna slow down and enjoy the moment and the final result, try doing wedged, thru mortises with the wedges being a darker contrasting wood. Would probably double the time but the end result would be a eye catcher for generations. Of course the client would have the final say on the extra cost.
Wedged tenons are super cool. I just fixed a chair that had those and the wedges make it so strong
The finished product was 🤩
Glad you like it! Thanks!
Dude that Hickory is… so beautiful. You made a tough would to work with seem like a buttery experience. ( not a woodworker, don’t have the requisite adjectives 😅 )
Thanks so much! I'm glad it translated through the video so you could experience it!
Very nice build. So many mortises. I'm wondering if you did it again, would you go to a Domino? And finding that zone where you can be "in the moment" makes woodworking really amazing. Not sure if doing the video set ups was part of that process, but the shelf AND the video were terrific. It works if you work it, so work it, you're worth it.
Well the mortises are for enjoyment, and the dominos would be for quick profit, so it depends on the end goal for that project.
Can’t think of a mean comment 😁. This was inspiring and satisfying! Thank you for sharing.
Ahhhh, no mean comment? I was looking forward to it though! Thanks for taking the time to watch and leave a positive comment!
The edges where the boards meet perpendicularly is so damn clean
Heck ya! Thanks!
What a gorgeous piece!
Thanks Total Boat!
Looks great and outstanding work 👍
Thats very kind. Thank you!
Definitely learned something again… I’ve seen hickory pop up from hobby sawmills on marketplace (there are a TON here in Indiana) when checking out lumber and noticed that it was definitely more reasonably priced but now I know why and will definitely steer clear. Thanks!
Do you have a link for a sprayer hose you like? My Graco X5 came with a 1/4” 25ft hose.
Would you recommend still using the 1/4” when spraying latex or enamel paint vs stain and top coats?
Enjoy the rest of your weekend
I was able to spray pretty thick paint out of the 3/16 15 footer. I think the X5 gets similar psi. Here's the link. amzn.to/4bHQOJ8
@@FortressFineWoodworks Thanks, I wasn’t looking forward to trying to manage the 25’er while painting the inside of our RV but every question I could find posed to Graco about using a shorter hose, much less a shorter and smaller dimension hose, they recommended against it saying it could cause problems because of excess back-pressure. Their answer didn’t make much sense to me given that if anything a shorter hose should experience less pressure.
Great work
Thank you !
Is it possible to get the plans somewhere ?
In your shop ?
Thank you
If enough people ask I will provide plans. I will bookmark this comment and let you know if I make them
You nailed it!!! Love your perfection!! 😎
Thanks Scott! Your comments are great!
I love your videos because you inspire me to keep learning
I'm glad it inspires you! Thanks for watching!
Very nice indeed, one question: how did you end up installing it? Did you just press fit into place, did you use screws or glue, maybe super powerful magnets?
Yeah, it's press fit into place, then some thin finish screws into the bottom and side wall. Then wax filler
Great work and great video! Respect to you for the handwork on the tendons. So how do you like that 20v Dewalt 23 gage pin nailer?
Thanks so much! The dewalt pin nailer gave me a lot of jamming problems early on, but I sprayed the inside clip (that holds the pins) with WD40 and it fixed it. Now it works like a charm
*laughs in Iroko*
*giggles in camelthorn*
My tools were screaming. Surprisingly, my Stanley No80 with a Ron Hock blade did most of the finishing without a need for sanding though.
Nice work though mate. Result speaks for itself.
Thank you! Are those Ron Hock blades pretty nice?
Fantastic looking piece of art.Thank you for sharing.
Many thanks! I appreciate you watching!
Again, another great video. I will have to say, a man of your caliber should have a Shaper Origin by now.
I appreciate that. I think you're right. It would be useful
Просто пипец. Из таких простых вещей делаешь сенсацию. Деградация.
Simple things can be a beautiful process though. Thanks for commenting!
Entertaining, informative video. What did you spray/finish it with. And how long do you leave the glue to set before working on the piece again?
I used Total Boat Halcyon Clear Satin www.totalboat.com/products/halcyon-water-based-varnish?sca_ref=5718157.55vcje6aYW
And I let the glue set for about 2 hours
Well documented went through all the elments of the video very interesting from the Republic of Ireland
Thanks for watching from Ireland!
Thanks for the leacture!
Thanks for watching and commenting!
how many days took you to finish this project? REally nice one!
Without filming and still doing the mortise and tenons, it would take about 7 days.
I do not know how Japanese craftsman's made entire houses like a work of art with just a hand saw and a hammer.
I agree, that would be insane
Beautiful video.... and wonderful book case
Now that you mention it, it would look pretty cool to load up with books. Thanks!
I'm surprised you don't have a Festool Domino. Awesome shop BTW.
I do have one, but mortise and tenons made for an interesting project
I come for the woodworking, stay for the dry self depreciating humor.
Hahaha whatever it takes to get you to stick around. I'm happy to have you as a part of the team!
So beautiful, top notch work 👏🏻
Thank you very much!
That's a really pretty piece!
Thank you! I appreciate you taking the time to watch and comment!
That is a lovely piece.
I'm glad you like it! I'll see you on the next one!
And then you're watching HGTV and a designer says, "And we're going to remove this shelving unit to open up the space!" Great job on the piece; it's beautiful.
So true though. Everyone is different.
Seeing B roll of the piece in situ is a nice touch. So often I wonder what the intended result is, and it's so satisfying to see. It also shows the choice for why to design like that given the geometric tiles, thicker spout on the kitchen sink, and lampshade shapes.
Thanks for that. It's always nice when it gives that satisfaction!
Such a beautiful wood and craftsmanship ofc ;)
Thanks for taking the time to watch and comment!
Good video worth learning,thanks
Glad it was helpful!
Nicely done!
Thanks so much!
Wonderful work! I'd be scared of installing it, though. Going through all that trouble making sure everything is square and then figuring out that the wall you're attaching it to isn't... that'd be quite a moment.
I checked when I was doing my measurements. It was a tight fit though.
Very nice piece! Great job man!👍🏻
Glad you like it! Thanks for watching!
Really cool idea and execution.. Thank you!
Ah! Thanks so much!
Fortress Friday!!!
Thats a good slogan!!!! I just might use that! (and ill give you the credit)
@FortressFineWoodworks I release all rights to you. Lol Small contribution to supporting your channel.
vu la qualité de la video et de la realisation je m abonne .
I'm glad you liked the quality! Thanks!