Ancient Technology of Making Cabinet Furnitures - Impossible Looking Dovetail Joint
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- čas přidán 30. 03. 2018
- Hello Everybody,
For this month, a lot of people who loved my previous videos have asked me to show them the skills of the great master artisans (very few people alive) and even older but they’re still trying day by day to pass on traditional values to the next generations.
#woodworking #japanesewoodworking #ancienttechnical
To thank and honor them, we decided to create a series of video shows about them and their work from the footage available from my friends and myself.
Based on the interview of a Master Craftsman: Shimpei Kimura and witnessing Kimura's work, Everything has been redone. I have rewritten the content, new effects work, new music, and a new creation is created as follows: "Ancient Technology of Making Cabinet Furnitures - Impossible Looking Dovetail Joint"
Today, this video will probably be more appealing because of the appearance of Master Craftsman: Shimpei Kimura, the master of furniture making in japan
Furniture makers are known as “Sashimonoshi"(Cabinetmaker)
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/ @woodworkingenthusiasts - Jak na to + styl
So, this is what it feels like to be both inspired and discouraged simultaneously.
No kidding. Wow
Chin up... I think he might have done this once or twice before. :-)
This wood looks so soft. Like butter. I tried hand chiseling some red oak earlier and failed.
@@peterkenton I tried chiseling some red oak last week and got three stitches in my index finger.
@Nevermind yes, I found out you can't hold the board and chiesl. if it slips you are cut.
After watching the video advert i was still skeptical. But when i finally downloaded the plans czcams.com/users/postUgkxZF0EMnrujZvqHhGkxiz559uIABJWR9TG i was very impressed. The whole plan was just as you said in the video. Thank you very much. I now have a large and valuable collection for my woodworks. This is great!
No power tools, no fancy workbench, no fancy jigs, or measuring devices. Just years of dedicated practice and dedication to the craft. Amazing, I hope younger generations follow you so this art is never lost.
I wish I could follow this guy around for a year to get some of the knowledge he has.
In all the years of working in this trade, believing I was reasonably "experienced" in what I was doing - this video proves me wrong in everything I have ever done! This gentleman certainly inspired me, he is a true craftsman.
David Sheppard ...DITTO, I’m no master but I’ve 15+ years in cabinet design and building, taught me by Grampa with hand tools then later, self-taught using power tools when convenient.
using traditional carpentry tools..your work is amazing
In my first work I always used Woodprix plans.
He is a real master. He does everything in patience. Watching him was like meditation. Thank you for sharing this video 👍💯
You are on to something there, I find these very soothing, the degree of accuracy is incredible.
I'm just blown away by this mans skills and patience. I've spent years believing I was blessed to have been given the opportunity to acquire all that I have learned. Yet for the first time I feel so humbled watching another man wield his simple hand-made tools like a mighty sword against my entire shop full of power tools ....a true artisan indeed! Maybe I should ask if they have any openings at the meat-packing plant.
If you enjoy precision craftsmanship I encourage you to check out a channel called clickspring. The guy is an absolute master. His channel started with him making a clock by hand and now hes halfway finished recreating the antikythera mechanism. If it weren't enough of a challenge he is remaking and using period correct tools like a vise, drills and even hand files.
Absolutely incredible the skills this man possess, no power tools no problem. Something all fine woodworkers should aspire to.
glad you enjoyed it!
I’ve never seen craftsmanship to this level before. Absolutely staggering!
@ 8:07 when he pushes the last drawer in, you see one or two popping out because of the air pressure from his ultra tight fit and thus demonstrating how easily they glide. If you know anything about woodworking,this blows the mind 🤯
@@maggs131 the original soft close hinge
@@maggs131 Really need to drill a hole in the back. It shows off quality but its a huge pain for actual usability.
@@matthewwright57 you are right, it would be a pain. I feel like a failure tho because I never made a cabinet that required a vent
Those drawers are too tight. You want them to glide smoothly, not rub. Those drawers will likely bind on a humid day, and the other drawers pushing out is a design flaw.
Cuts are so perfect that it’s fricken air tight... that’s why a drawer opens when he tries to close another drawer. Like a piston engine... the air pressure causes another drawer to open.
I noticed that too. That blew my mind.
😉
So how do you ever close it?
knpstrr close it slowly
knpstrr use a vacuum before closing
These craftsmen are absolute artists. But they couldn’t be more humble, zen and serene....
This man has mastered his craft. Awesome to see traditional Japanese woodworking still being practiced.
Yeah, That is our pleasure!
Anyone that doesn't appreciate this gentleman's craftsmanship with wood, just doesn't understand the precision required. And doing it with hand tools makes it much more difficult. A true artist. Wonderful work, thanks for sharing!
True indeed
I imagine he would say "power tools ? Do not allow one to feel the wood."
@@caseyspeaks6380, as Wayne B pointed out: 0.0.34-0.0.37.
This is OLD SCHOOL precision.
Master level ORGANIC CARPENTRY.
absolutely... you said it...such fluidity and lack of hesitation is simply amazing...
hahaha, l like ORGANIC carpentry
When you use your leg as a clamp while cutting out dados with a chisel, you have reached immortal status.... wow.
Well that was humbling.
The furniture is so well constructed that when you close a drawer the others open pushed by the internal air. Impressive.
Thank you for such a good video #sarokarNGO
Thank you for such a good video #sarokarNGO
Impressive precision but I prefer that no drawer opens “automatically”. I suppose that the finished product doesn’t do that.
how though? the other slots are open!! how??
I am not sure, if this is intended. One drawer should not open if you close another, otherwise it gets annoying in daily use. Thats the reason that you build the backside of a drawer a little bit lower than the side-parts, so that the air can flow within the cabinet, over the backside of the drawer.
But I am very sure this master craftsman knows all that, so I am sure, that he has a reason to build the drawers like that and I would like to ask him about that.
But I cannot imagine the reason being the random opening of a drawer, when you close one.
Simply amazing! The fact the air pressure from one drawer pushes out the other just shows the level of accuracy & skill, all with hand tools too! Can only dream of ever being even half this good :(
Practice, determination and discipline will get you a lot further than dreaming.
So it IS actual air pressure pushing out those drawers??? The drawer fits are that precise?
build the drawers 1/32" oversize in every direction and take off .001" swipes with the hand plane.
It's just shocking to come here after watching so many western carpenters with their dado jigs, powered routers and table saws, electric cordless drills (handheld and press), massive workbenches-so fancy! Here is this man, all hand tools, working from the floor, making heirloom masterpieces. Not gonna lie, this viewing experience is so Zen. Just breathtaking, humbling, inspiring. Thank you so much for sharing this video, a real treasure.
Well, our pleasure and glad you enjoyed it too
That has to be humblest CZcams video title with a superlative in it. That joint is such an sideshow, although beautiful. Plus everything without a sliver of sanding. Absolutely beautiful.
I know machine tooled wood has its place, but I love hand tooled wood. I admire this gentleman's craftsmanship so much.
Thank you for sharing this video.
Somehow, Japanese woodworkers seem to be the best. I also love their tools. Those drawers are cushion fit...in other words they are so precise that the air pressure of pushing one drawer pushes out another. I'm just a hobby woodworker but if I had the chance to live my life over again I would choose to be a craftsman of this status and lead a very simple but satisfying life.
In my humble opinion, Japanese and Nordic woodworkers and craftsmen in general, owe their master skills to a couple of factors: patience... infinite patience, and humility to never cease to learn, from others and from their very own mistakes.
It really helps that Japan has a system in place to fund the Living National Treasure. Basically an artist of sufficient quality gets an annual stipend to preserve and pass on their craft, helping to free their time to dedicate to just doing whatever it is they do as well as it can be done. It is a lifetime award of about $30,000usd a year.
Alan Simpson i agree i have own one of their tool the japanese kana or blockplane it Works like charm, i could not sleep without planing a wood.
Ale Vera
Alan Simpson
It's never too late.
初めて木が手作業で働いているのを見ます...私の褒め言葉...本当にとても良いです!
どうも
I own a small trim carpentry business and enjoy working with my hands to create decor that others appreciate. I could make far more in another line of work, but am fortunate to have the option. That said, this level of craftsmanship makes me emotional. I could watch for hours.
A true craftsman at work. You are an inspiration to all woodworkers everywhere.
Salute to the master craftsman !
Love the satisfaction in his face seeing the drawers being pushed out from another being pushed in... The tolerances being so small, so exact, that they’re effectively air sealed. It’s beautiful.
Those corner joints are so tight it's incredible. I love that design he used.
@1 New Notification you don't like it.
@1 New Notification I thought so. There wasn't a gap in sight
@1 New Notification you as well.
Dear Sir,
What pleasure & joy it is to witness some mere slabs of wood being transformed into truly magnificent pieces of furniture. I can imagine having one of those in one's house & never tire watching it's natural beauty. Kind regards.
I love your commentary here, i'm really appreciate it
Dear Sir,
Thank you very much for your hearted response. Good projects &/ documentaries deserve good comments. I do believe yours definitely qualify. To not comment would be a failure to acknowledge what is worth appreciating & expressing one's opinion. Kind regards.
ToolsConsumables :(
Stunning craftsmanship
Craftsmanship that must be respected by all who have ever worked with timber. Truly inspiring to watch the precision tools that themselves were handmade. Delightful to watch. Thank you for sharing
Well said! Thank you very much!
The ancient art and science of wood work! Just brings back memories of how things used to be done by these Master craftsman. The tools, hand saw, wood plane, vice etc and various gauges for making and measuring the wood is done with such precision and care beautiful. Still own a 4 piece hand made wooden settee and arm chairs that was handed down form 3 generations ago. Thanks for the upload
WOW! THAT WAS FREAKING AWESOME!
I've got nearly every power tool invented and he used none... Not even a power drill to fit the handles. I felt like an apprentice again when watching him work. Impressed!
I'm glad you enjoyed it and keep working on it... you’re improving
I feel the same, sometimes I stop to work due to the lack of certain tools, this video make me appreciate all the tool I have, this also encourage me to seek solutions when seems to not have one
The cuts are so perfect, it pushes inside air out. Love his perfection and dedication.
I'm glad you enjoyed it!
Drawers fit so perfectly they cause an airtight seal and back pressure. Amazing.
So that´s the reason! Thanks I was wondering :)
I no longer consider myself a cabinet maker ☹️ I am a mere saw feeding mortal with math skills
Michael Westen Ditto...😩
it is very humbling!
Ben Ruddle : you are so right. I have 10’s of thousands of dollars worth of machinery in my workshop... I’m just... embarrassed
Knocks IKEA out of the ball park any day of the week!
Totally.
Ditto
God level cabinetmaker.
Oh ...my...days, 42 years as her Majesty's joiner...that is deliciously exquisite piece... Congratulations !
English Mik
you know it's awesome when he made the dovetails by hand
This is an amazing craftsman. The quality of his work is top notch. A fit so tight the closing of one drawer pushes another out. Nearly air tight!
billybob holcomb oh that is why makes sense haha he really is amazing
tight and smooth
That’s nice and all but it’ll drive me crazy to open another drawer by closing one all the time. 😉
Seems like a good idea, until nearly every drawer gets so tight it's stuck because the wood swell.
Yeah, piston fit, looks super today, feel like a dimwit next week when drawers frozen solid and no way to get behind them to dry out and push them out. Drawer bottoms swell against box sides, and full height drawer backs scrape against dust board. Sure, no central heat or air in many homes still, but western construction evolved with same conditions during the same time, same tools, and gave more due to the movement of wood across grain.
Wow, no translation needed. Amazing to watch
An artistes, a master. What dexterity! Non electrical tool, only his hand.... Impressive!
Thanks!
His workmanship is that good he created a vacuum which forces the drawers out - simply amazing.
I’m glad you enjoyed it.
This is insane. He doesn't have a tablesaw, drill. He doesn't even have a workbench!
yeah, although the younger Japanese woodworker have all of what you mentioned, they still keep such woodwork posture and their hand woodworking tools
This is hard wark bro , it's not your amireca
@@yematosan8837 I'm saying it's amazingly insane. I couldn't make something so precise without a jointer, planer, tablesaw etc...
Though it does inspire me to try a small project completely with a minimum of hand tools - learn how far my knowledge and skills alone can take me.
@@harryroger1739 If you’re looking for hand tool projects, Rex Krueger has a bunch on his channel. Might be worth checking out.
Those tiny drawers are for his back-pain killers collection
This is pure craftsmanship, ingeniousness and legendary woodworking, you Sir are brilliant, you make such piece of art.
2
My Gosh... what a GREAT HANDWORK. What a real Artist.
What a talented man. Society needs more skilled artisans like him.
Piston fit drawers are doable and maybe not practical but those mitered blind dovetails are mad skills. Beautiful and very precise build. I wish one day I’ll be half of craftsman he is.
The best is he was doing them by sight rather than markings, i get it wrong when i've spent an hour setting it out !!!
What type of wood is he using on the drawers? Is it a softwood or are those marking gauges so amazingly sharp to cut the dovetails in any wood?
it's called Hinoki, Hinoki is a softwood, related to Yellow Cedar, Port Orford Cedar, and Atlantic White Cedar (north American species of the same botanical family, none of which are true cedars by the way).
Thanks Denny!
It saves time when you cut the pins by eye, and since these are hidden anyway it doesn't matter if they're not 'perfect' ( and you 'mark them over' for cutting the tails anyway). You often find this on older furniture.
Wow your beautiful and extremely skillful work is astounding, Bravisimo!
A mere 50 years ago I was an A level woodwork student here in the UK being taught by a brilliant woodwork teacher. For my main project I made a bureau using this dovetail joint, it was called a secret mitre dovetail. Lovely to see it being made by a genius.
He has forgotten more about woodworking than I will ever know. Incredible to watch.
great video, great build.
Even though he had no machine,like elec.planer or jointer,his tools are perfect to use.he made furniture better and i was amaze.
This is so upsetting to me... this gentleman's mastery of the craft is breathtaking. Just incredible. Bravo.
There should be an award for this
That cabinet is simply an item to display almost a lost art. Blessed are the recepients of such pieces of art.
Thank you for sharing. あなたはマスターです。
This man is truly an artist. A very rare artist nonetheless
this man ist not an artist - he does not create art, but furniture. That is called a craftsmanship and that asks for the same kind respect.
Truely A Master.I'm in total Awe.
The epitome of a CRAFTSMAN. People today don't appreciate this art.
Wow.. Incredible ! TOP
Your work is impeccable a true Craftsman.
A pleasure to watch and learn.
Thank You for sharing. 🙂
That's a hell of tight cabinet. Notice that the thing is so air tight, that closing one drawer creates enough air pressure to force open another. That is extremely precise wood working right there. The maker seems to be pleased with this too, if you notice he smiled when it happened at the end.
As a former cabinetmaker...it is a honor to watch a master. :)
Ma: What takes you so long?
Me: Closing a cabinet!
Impressive !
I have never seen such a Carpenter. Traditional way of making the Furniture. Perfection matchless. Nowadays people are using so many expensive machines but no match with this Carpenter. Awesome 👏
I didn't realize watching someone build a piece of furniture (in this case a work of art) could be emotional. I was absolutely enthralled watching him work his mastery
Awesome work...👍🏼😊
My back hurts just watching him work on the ground like that, and he's probably pushing 80.
Those tiny drawers are for his pain killers collection
Beautiful Mastery, Thank you!
Hiding the dovetail joint with a mitered lip is clever. I've not seen that done before and looks easy enough to do. Your instruction on this joint is appreciated.
Thank you sir for teaching.
Glad it was helpful!
Beautiful work.Congratulations
Watching this is meditation for me 🙏
This guy is amazing.
As I was watching this master craftsman, I wonder what he would think of our way of doing things with our power tools.
I think he would smile and laugh inside.
It was truly amazing watching him work.
Thank you sir!
Great point!
Everything he does and he uses (wooden tools!) is profoundly beautiful. This man is putting his soul in that piece of fourniture he's creating. There is no money to pay such a philosophical craftmanship. Big respect.
thanks for sharing, so educatable
he must spend a day sharpening for every day building
I’ve made some pretty awesome pieces of furniture while working as a cabinet carpenter. But this video shows it being done without any electrical machinery - all by hand!
I’ve been humbled.
Very Beautiful workmanship.
He is an exceptionally talented craftsman.
I love watching him work.
Who would unlike a video like this?? :/
Plumbers
Stunning.
WOW!!, Speechless,And in Awe!!, Perfect soundtrack, music as beautiful, and tranquil as fluid as his hands as he works.
Glad you enjoyed it!
my father was a carpenter. He utilized traditional tools in producing chairs, tables, wardrobes etc. I used to help him when i was a child. he didnt use electric at all.
I have never been more inspired to just turn the electricity off in my workshop.
oh man ... same here
I meant turn off the power and use hand tools only, not sit on the couch and watch CZcams full time you goose. lololol
I wish they would have shown how he actually matched up the hand measured dovetails. It looks like he just freeformed that. That is insanely difficult.
Pins any old shape and spacing. Offer them up to tail board, mark 'em out.
This demonstration of superb craftmanship functions as a meditation for me. I will never be able to reach his skills, but it is such a pleasure to watch.
I know today we have tools to 'save us time' but you can't beat handmade craftsman ship in projects. No power tools here, just pure hard work and pride in the work he does.
levels of wood-working
entry -> intermediate -> advance -> master -> japanese
The Chines are also masters of woodwork.
但現在很多入榫技術已經失傳。。反而日本人就當寶,中國人要反省。
JP - The Europeans are also master of woodworking! I know is not trendy to say it now days, but if you travel a bit and have some knowledge about woodworking, you'll see its true.
Indeed. But the Japanese are in an entirely different level. In Europe, the French and Italian cabinets are famous, but those are the exceptions, not the norm. The Japanese are blessed with a thousand years of superior woodworking tools and an abundance of wood. But looking at a bloke like the one in the video, this level of woodworking skills is witnessed only with violinmakers and stockmakers in Europe, and this bloke was just making cabinets.
@@YaoiMastah Agreed.
Imagine how long the instruction booklet would be for this, if they sold it at ikea 😳
IKEA selling a box of rough wood and some hand tools😂😂 I love it
Funny, good one
It would be biblical in length, including the Dead Sea Scrolls, The Old Testament, and the New Testament, all in one volume, and in the Ancient Languages...
Talent + skill + training + practice = beauty. It's an honor to watch you work.
I've never been more humbled. Did you see him wipe the extra glue off the panel using the plane shavings of the boards he glued up to make the panel!?
Maaaaaannnnnnn....
J Brass look how close he is sitting with the wood....his whole body is engaged ....absolute artistry and humbleness.....beautiful.....and here I am wasting my life in a meaningless office job
Amazing. And no nails used either anywhere except for wooden dowels.
Impressive
This is beyond any kind of comment. This, simply, is the elevation of craft to the highest possible level.
Now that’s a true Master of the craft....
Just incredible workmanship, unfortunately I'm still stuck at pocket screws. And besides there's no way for me to sit down on the floor using foot as a vice without my back or bottom giving out.
Ha ha lol! Pocket screws are so efficient in getting shit done but we all desire craftsmanship :-)
it all starts and stops with the feet. check out katy bowman
But pocket screws are good for a few decades at most. Well setup joinery will last centuries, or even millennia in the right environment. Look at wooden furniture and joinery survivng from Egypt's Old Kingdom.
hehehe. lol
@@theeddorian, a few decades? You too, with the generosity.
in an age of cnc machines and power tools of all sorts
don't get me wrong i love what can be done with machinery and in particular cnc machines
its fantastic what can be done with cnc
but it gives the feeling of mass production
no matter how good the item appears to be and i know they are designed for to mass produce items
but what this man is doing is the real meaning of hand made furniture
and not hand crafted as hand crafted could also use machines at different stages
so his furniture is truly hand made from start to finish
amazing craftsmanship simply amazing how could a value be put on such excellence
To have a CNC machine, you need a lot of money. While the cabinet (that's cabinet), could get a lot of money from the people who can appreciate the art and the skills.
And ...
The CNC is good for making something that need faster time to make for something that needed by a lot of or all people. But ... not everything is needed by a lot of people. With those concept, I think ... it could make a proper balance between demand and supply, without wasting to much resources.
there are maybe 50 people in the world that can do this. To plane the wood by hand and model it so it has vacuum fit. God level craftsmanship.
A little bit hyberbolic, there, I think, Hercool.
Amazing craftsmanship. The skill of even getting the grain patterns to match so perfectly was beyond me.