Stock Prep by Hand - Christopher Schwarz
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- čas přidán 1. 02. 2017
- Learn how to process rough stock by hand and make it project ready - it's not as difficult as you might think. Excerpted from "Build a Hand-Crafted Bookcase," by Christopher Schwarz - available at videos.popularwoodworking.com...
- Krátké a kreslené filmy
Typical Christopher Schwarz teaching video. No-nonsense, concise, and very informative in a "Heck, you can do this, too" fashion. One of the woodworking world's best and most generous teachers.
I’ve seen other people say it, but I like Chris’ style of teaching, he cuts through all the nonsense and tells it like it is, but still injects a healthy dose of personality.
I know im asking the wrong place but does anyone know a way to get back into an Instagram account??
I somehow lost the login password. I would love any tricks you can give me.
@Sean Brendan Instablaster :)
@Nolan Andy i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site on google and im in the hacking process now.
Takes quite some time so I will get back to you later with my results.
@Nolan Andy it worked and I now got access to my account again. Im so happy!
Thank you so much you saved my ass!
@Sean Brendan You are welcome =)
Knowing this makes it easier to understand what the joiner and planer machines are trying to do. Thank you!
I like this non-fussy approach. Too many other demos I've watched are just fussy ad nauseum. This is the best Schwarz video I’ve seen 😎
Stodoys has very good and accurate woodworking plans.
Amazing video, and it's great to see you're not worried about putting a little sweat into it. I'm enjoying your Anarchist series right now, and it's clear you are a great source of knowledge and instruction! Not sure how this vid only has 276k views though.
Traversing is probably how lots of wood was worked during prehistory, not with planes but with gouges or adzes made of softer metals. It's a very easy and forgiving cut if slightly labour intensive, almost feels like surfacing a stone block. I use it to roughly square smaller pieces of very tough or gnarly wood.
It's been 16 years my grandfather has passed away and this is how he did all of his work. A real master. Thanks for this video.
Chris thanks for this video. For someone like myself who has been doing hand tool work for like a whole week it is alway great (and greatly appreciated) to find someone skilled taking the time to teach.
This is the most useful video of preparing stock that I ever seen. And look at the amazing skills of Christopher. He cuts wood like butter.
Agreed. I've seen lots of videos on on stock prep by hand...and this one made me feel like I'll actually be able to do a halfway decent job of it!
Chris’ DVD on using planes and which one to use when was a real revelation to me many years ago. I’m forever grateful.
Excellent ! This is the best 20 minutes I have ever seen on this subject. Any thing with Chris is good.
Absolutely fantastic vid with everything exactly what I wanted to learn. Fantastic what this man has also done for woodworking by hand with Lost Art Press.
WOW!!! What a great clip! I recently bought your DVD on no fear chair making I absolutely love your instruction and style! Every time I had a question you are answered at exactly as I asked! freaking awesome! I will be buying more of your DVDs for sure! Thank you Christopher!!!
Thank you very much Chris! Best and smartest video I have seen on flattening! Thanks again.
Seems weird to see Chris without Roy Underhill. That’s where I was first introduced. Love his teaching style.
Thanks for making & posting this video. I really needed it after wasting an entire day trying to process a piece of 2" x 10" x 5'. Thank you!
Learned more from this video than I ever did in middle school woodshop. My cutting boards won't know what hit 'em when they need flattening.
I must compliment you on the video. Very informative and it is perfect for what i am currently busy with. No funny tricks, just straight to the point with good sound advice.
I subscribed and hope to learn more.
I've watched this more than once and it's always good. I seem to learn or pickup a little bit of the puzzle. I think this presentation of the 20 or more I've watched on YT is the easiest to understand. Paul Sellers is great but I think Christopher's presentation is easier to follow. Thanks!
Yeah, I've watched this three times and I just learned something this time. "The bark side". So simple, but I didn't really listen to that the first time I watched this.
Rob Cosman is great too.
Fine resource video, well presented. Thanks Christopher!
A very informative video presented in a concise manner. Just what I need.
great educational video, with focus on details. Practical demonstration is priceless!
Great video. Thanks for this. You make it look easy. I will try this later and see!
One of the most helpful vids I’ve seen. It so easy to chase your tail if you don’t know the procedure. Thanks!
Thanks for sharing.
Great video on a much needed process that is critical to good workmanship
This video expanded my mind. Thank you, Chris.
I agree with the previous statements this was the most informative video on how to prep stock that I've seen and I've probably seen over a dozen. I was very disappointed at the end when he said now you can put it through your thicknesser..... I've been obsessed with doing everything a 100% by hand no power
Very helpful! Thank you! You are the Gilfoyle of woodworking.
Good methodical video, thank you. it is very nice to see the way you work.
This was very helpful. Thanks for your teaching style.
May The Schwarz Be With You!
I value smartazz people to make us laugh at ourselves.!
His Schwarz is bigger than mine....
This is exact how it is done. Very good explanation.
Great lesson! Thanks for sharing.
Very enjoyable video, even for experienced folks. Be well.
Is nice to watch skilled workers.
It's good to see the Schwarz in a video again.
excellent video chris , thank you ! looks like your jack plane's blade could split a hair !
for myself , having been a carpenter " tradesman / craftsman " of over 50 years ,
i think i'm a cross between a mad scientist and a wood butcher ...
and being a dinosaur , and proud of it .. i truly enjoy your old world approach ,
and your no-nonsense no ego explanations and demonstrations .
one thing i have come to learn i regard as most important when working with wood ,
[ finish carpentry ] is how much i rely on the sound and feel of the material i'm working on , as i work it - [ planing , , joinery work ,etc. ] to tell me when the board or piece is as good as it can get , or when i know it is " there " . . rather than relying on constant measuring .
if i recall correctly , i saw a video of you making a small piece of furniture ,or something ,
where you used a marking gauge for the entire project , and no tape measure .
Thank you for sharing this very usefull techniques with us. Waching this video makes me want to jump on my hand tools en put a lot of passion in to a nice piece of stock.
Thoroughly enjoyed your video
Awesome guy,did not choke out Underhill!
Great vid Christopher, thanks for sharing it.
A suggestion would be to give us a peek at the very original cup by using the light under the straightedge method, and then occasionally re-sighting it after taking the high spots down so that we can better understand the progression/degree of correction.
Hand powered tools woodworking, an effort, a joy, a craft a stratospheric and priceless mindset, at least it seems to me.
You are poetic
Great information. Thank you.
Wow. This was amazing! I am trying to start with traditional woodworking, but so far I also heard and was thought that traditional woodworking is great for all the joints and finishing, but for rough stock preparation is really to much of a hassle. So you need a big format saw, a planer, a thickneser, a bend saw, and that is a lot of big, noisy and expensive equipment. Sure, they help and speed up the process, anyway probably good to have them is some form. But this video made me think is this really a must, or just an excuse of modern day lazy woodworkers :) Thank you!
Very clear, thank you so much from Paris France
thanks heaps for a great tutorial
Thanks, nice to see you again - missed you
Nice job man!!
I just finished a class where I got to use a joiner plane in the preparation for a glue up. Very satisfying.
Great video
excellent video... very informative
great Job thanks as always
It was awesome work!
I don’t know but I can imagine him having a gun slinger around his waist where he puts his Jack in. One of my favorite vids on flattening boards.
I love how u simplified this process
Well that made total sense and also looked quite easy. I am quite sure that the actual feel and skill of movement and pressure are just impossible to transmit in a video but then I suppose the great pleasure of this activity is acquiring that feel, judgement and skill through practice and messing up. I am seriously tempted to start some simple projects and just get some rough wood and square it up.
That will do for me! Thanks.
Very informative. Thanks.
Always wondered how you would do S4S with all hand tools. Great demo, and you seem pretty fit ripping that full length by hand barely breaking a sweat!
A machine finish will never match human hand finish.
This video convinced me that if I ever have a power failure in the shop, I'll wait for the power to come back on before milling any stock square and straight. ;)
Sure anybody can use a calculator to do long division. Just think of this as learning your times tables. Pain in the ass? Perhaps. Do I enjoy getting a bit of a workout and working with my hands and saying, "I made that, not some machine."? Why yes. Yes I do.
You will never be able to do fine furniture with a machine.
@@bighands69 Sam Maloof used a bandsaw; you must be the only person in the country who thinks his chairs are not fine furniture.
Great video. To the point.
Nice job!
wow thanks for sharing
So helpful!! Cheers
Damn! Thank you Sir.
Nice Work
excellent informative video
Boy those planes are sharp.
This is a very informative video and I am thankful it was produced. But I do have one complaint and it has to do with twist. I have seldom seen a board that did not have some twist and getting rid of that twist with hand tools is very difficult. There was only about 2 minutes dedicated to twist out of a 20 minute video and it appeared that the board still had some twist. I would go so far as to say that twist is the most frustrating problem I have as removing it can be a nightmare. After using the winding sticks I flip it over on a flat service to see if it fits flat and very often it still rocks. I have very often spent an entire day getting a board ready to be used as a shelf in a book case so I flip it back over and try again. Each time the shaving are thinner and thinner until it gets to perfection of something that is acceptable.
I can't decide which I find more sensorily satisfying: The crisp ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZP sound of Chris's well-tuned planes, or the long, wide, paper-thin curly-cues that ripple out the top of his planes like foamy waves breaking at the beach. (I also appreciate Chris doing the labor, of course, allowing us to watch and listen in comfort, without breaking sweat. But that sort of appreciation is mere intellectual gratitude; it's of a lower order than the thrilling, visceral joys of the senses that are remembered decades later, those that really matter in life.) I'm going to let this question incubate for a few days, give my ears and eyes and memory room to debate the ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZP versus curly-cues issue among themselves. I'll report the final result when they reach a decision.
[insert wisdom here]
thernly w
thernlyzz
zzzx2zzsßwll
Great info, the weird thing is have been doing much of this not realising why now I know cheers.
Edge jointing by hand has, for me, been one of the most maddeningly frustrating things that I have tried to learn in my woodworking hobby. When I finally get a board true to the face across the edge, I realize that there is a significant high spot on the edge in the middle of the board. When I create a valley in the middle of the board and go to plane the whole edge straight off of that to correct the high spot, I realize that during that process I took the edge out of square again. After I bring that edge back to square I realize... so on and so forth until there isn’t much board left and a monstrous mess without much to show for it. Always learning and getting a little bit better with each plane stroke, I know, but sheesh. Faces haven’t been much of a problem, but those edges are my nemesis right now.
If you are edge jointing two boards put both boards into the vice together and hand plane them at the same time.
Look up Paul Seller video on jointing.
I was out of breath after watching you hand rip that board!
Thank you for sharing your expert knowledge Chirs.
Hi there from Portugal,
Nice tips :D
Obrigado(Thanks)
Great vid. I am in the middle of milling boards with hand planes for my workbench right now. Every piece is cupped and twisted. This is almost exactly same method Andrew Hunter did milling a board with Japanese hand plane.
Awesome instructional video! Sub'd
good job , Thank you for video
Thanks
This guy is not messing around.
His ribbons look better than my finished products.
Thank you for such a detailed and down to earth video...Keeping eyeing my planes sitting on their shelves as i use power jointer, and planer(thicknesser?) for projects...One of these days I just need to do SOMETHING with only handtools. cheers...rr
Excellent technique by Schwarz. The funny part about this is that he was able to traverse the board in one sweep the first time across the board. If I could find lumber even half that flat I'd have a lot more hair on my head.
Parabens!!!!!
Hi Chris, you mentioned starting on the bark side of the board. Can I assume you mean the growth rings start low, then peak at the middle and finish low again across the board. Or in other words the rings rise of the bench? Cheers
thanks
Etymology:
From Middle English spelc, or spilc (“little rod by which things are kept straight or a splint for binding up broken bones”), ultimately from Old Norse spelkur (“splints”).
Verb Edit
spelch (third-person singular simple present spelches, present participle spelching, simple past and past participle spelched)
(intransitive) To splinter while being crosscut.
Spelching can be avoided by cutting in from the outside face where possible.
Modern usages vary from the traditional to the vulgar in the extreme...
I guess it shows how alive and brilliant the English language really is! 😜
Please convey my appreciation to the production crew (cameras, directors, post production, etc) for treating the viewers like grownups and presenting a straightforward piece that clearly shows what needs to be seen without a lot of crap. Such a refreshing break from the Cerebral Palsy School of Cinematography with the pointlessly wobbly cameras and scenes switched every second to emphasize how the video is all about the artiste-wannabees on the crew rather than the presenter and the subject matter.
So I am not the only one who is upset about that stupid camera techniques. Not being a native English speaker I have never been able to word it nicely as you do. But you forgot to mention one thing in the scene switching: every ten seconds the camera needs to be taken off the scene and an interviewed person must give his/her explanation and point of view.
Using a chalk line to mark the rip cut, you only need to use two marks and a thumb tack at one end.
good vid. This does seem hard btw my eye sees what is not there sometimes:] I do think this vid will help me when am more ready.
The ancient prophecy has long foretold of the One True Face.
One face... to rule them all!
interesting to watch, sadly my back is damaged so can't do that sort of thing anymore. On the cool side for me is that I found and am restoring a 72 inch wide power planer. I also was able to get the blade sharpener with it.
72"?! Wowza.
Yes, I have looked for a long time to find the beast. It will allow me to work with wide slabs and to deal with big table tops with ease. Besides it's huge and that is cool in it self.
With a machine like that, you could take on commercial work and let it pay for itself.
Yes sir, that is part of the plan. I always try to find more than one way to have machinery earn for me. I'm not greedy but with costs these days you have to keep the funds coming in.
And you felt like that was worth mentioning in a comment to this video? SMH.
I'm confused. Can you clarify something for me? At 0:45 into the video you mention something about a 10-inch camber. My understanding of the term 'camber' refers to an arc formed across the width of the plane blade. The blade itself is not 10 inches wide although perhaps the blade might approach that in length. The width of the blade might be 1 1/2 inches and the slot through which the blade goes might be a bit more than that. I believe the cutting edge of the blade itself, measuring the arc along the width might be a bit longer than the actual width of the blade. And unless I'm mistaken, the arc of the cutting edge might be several millimeters or perhaps even up to 1/4 inch where the cutting edge would meet the wood. Thanks for your help. I really appreciate all the great videography and lessons.
Hi Chris, Enjoyed this video and approach to prepping stock very much. A question, as I'm trying to set my shop up again (having everything stolen from storage while overseas), I'd like to know what jointer, smoothing and jack planes you use here? Are they all Record planes? The Jack looks to be an older Record, but can't work it out, the cheeks on the jointer look too large for any Record I've seen and looks to be brand new, but again can't place it or make out the manufacturer, would really appreciate knowing, thanks!
that mirror polish on the jointer sole
I just purchased 2 bad axe D8 saws one rip one crosscut both 24 inch saws.. the rip saw would have that board cut in about 10 strokes..it’s sick worth the money 👍😊
Is there a specific reason why you startet and moved the jointer in a slight angle to the board when flatening the board to the true face instead of rectangular? Many thanks for your answer.
He rips with a handsaw faster than I can run my circular saw. I gotta sharpen my tools!
In 30 minutes I can do a leg with a taper that is of fine furniture level. That means cutting, scrubbing and plane finish that no machine can even possibly match for quality.
I am not against machines it is just that the work is not to the high standards of human skills.
I can have a fine furniture level table done in two days all by hand. Most people would probably spend half a day trying to set up a taper jig. And then spend half the day sanding the finish and I do not need to do a sanding finish.
Which music is at the beginning and the end of the video?
Thank you very much!