Design and Build Kitchen Cabinets like a PRO
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- čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
- Thanks Festool USA for sponsoring this video. The Festool products featured in this video are listed below:
TSV60 KEB “The perfectionist” Track Saw - www.festoolusa.com/products/s...
Cordless Drill CXS 12 - www.festoolusa.com/products/n...
Cordless Impact Drill TID 18 - www.festoolusa.com/products/d...
Cordless Oscillator VECTURO OSC 18 E-Basic -
www.festoolusa.com/products/n...
Sliding Compound Miter Saw KAPEX KS 120 REB
- www.festoolusa.com/products/n...
DOMINO Joiner DOMINO DF 500 Q-Plus- www.festoolusa.com/products/d...
Cordless mobile dust extractor CLEANTEC CTC MIDI I HEPA-Plus -
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Thanks to Rockler for Sponsoring my channel. The Rockler products featured in this video are listed below:
Rockler Heavy Duty Quick Release Front Vise - www.rockler.com/heavy-duty-qu...
Rockler Sure-Foot® Aluminum Bar Clamps - www.rockler.com/surefoot-alum...
Rockler Precision Brass Setup Bars - www.rockler.com/rockler-delux...
Rockler Marking and Measuring Tool Pouch - www.rockler.com/marking-and-m...
Rockler Universal T-Track - www.rockler.com/universal-t-t...
Rockler Clamp-It Clips - www.rockler.com/rockler-clamp...
To find plans for the Alm Fab Almighty Miter Station and the Alm Fab PRO Workbench visit almfab.com/plans
Thanks to Kerf Design for letting me tour their shop:
kerfdesign.com/
Other affiliate links to products used in video:
Visual Handbook of Building and Remodeling - amzn.to/3sTcSPL
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Sawstop 36" 3 HP Table Saw amzn.to/3Jo4oEb
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Japanese Pull Saw amzn.to/3NKdwnm
Milwaukee M18 Palm Router - amzn.to/3Y45nzB
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Freud Dado Blade Set amzn.to/3WGx5Bj
Empire Combination Square amzn.to/3Blye9n
Harvey ALPHA HW615 bandsaw www.harveywoodworking.com/col...
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Johnson 6' Level - amzn.to/3HFTk6e
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Camera Gear:
Sony a6600 Mirrorless Camera - almfab.com/sony-a6600-camera
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77mm NXT Plus UV Filter - almfab.com/uv-filter
577 Rapid Connect Adapter with Sliding Mounting Plate - almfab.com/rapid-connect
MT055XPRO3 Aluminum Tripod - almfab.com/tripod
Orion Jr DVC50 4' Compact Camera Crane / Jib - almfab.com/camera-crane
Aluminum Travel Tripod - almfab.com/travel-tripod
MC RGBWW LED Light - almfab.com/mc-led-light
PavoTube II 6C RGB LED Tube Light (10") - almfab.com/pavo-tube-light
Heavy-Duty Portable Tripod Dolly - almfab.com/tripod-dolly
360° Pan Lockable Bearing Mount to 3/8" Tripod Legs - almfab.com/bearing-mount
Tilt Brake for Orion DVC200, DVC210, and DVC250 Camera Cranes - almfab.com/tilt-brake
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For Alm Fab gear like hats, sweatshirts, and stickers visit www.almfab.com/store - Jak na to + styl
Congrats on the Festool sponsorship! That is a dream sponsor, but I can’t think of anyone I follow who is more deserving of it. Everything you do is done with quality, care, and artistry. Love the organization for the cabinets, def using something like that for my next set of cabinets. Garage/shop needs a make over, so it’ll be a chance to use there.
Thanks so much!!
The color coding is a brilliant idea!
Jay Bates does that, too.
I just want to say I enjoy your videos. My dad is a carpenter/ cabinet builder. I worked with him growing up installing kitchens, and we made our own cabinets. He is 60 and still doing so to this day. Keep up the good work, your videos are motivating me to keep moving on with my own home projects…that keep stacking up, lol.
Now that you’ve shown it, the bay division trick is so obvious, but through years of woodworking, it has never occurred to me! Genius! Thank you so much!
Love the separated toe kicks technique - remove the dynamic component and keep the other variables constant. Brilliant!
I would absolutely LOVE to see a SketchUp tutorial/workflow video from you!
Congrats on the Festool Sponsorship and the wedding! Festool tools are an absolute joy to work with. Cuts through solid hardwood like a warm knife through butter
Thank you!! 🙌
Perfect timing on this video my friend!! We are kicking over building our own cabinets too. Hope y’all are living in wedding bliss right now and taking a much needed break! ❤
I really appreciate your thoughtful approach, and the colour coding and that tiny little blade on the Festool. What a great idea. Thank you.
I wish I had watched this BEFORE figuring out the spacing between my shelves this evening. That’s a genius tip! Thank you!!
DUDE you have me over here like "THIS is what's separating me from taking my [completely unusable] 1930's shotgun house's kitchen and making it functional?" You make everything look SO EASY.
Loving this series-- keep up the good work! Also, congrats on the wedding!
I just finished my kitchen that's slightly smaller than yours. I did everything (demo'd down to the framing) except the drawers, slide out shelves and countertops. I now know much, much more about plumbing, electrical, drywall, gas, cabinets, floors, tile, painting and appliances. I made the cabinets with inset doors, which added a lot of work to the project, especially with my sloppiness with square carcasses. It turned out pretty well but it was a lot of work. Good luck!
Great video! Very similar process to mine. I started doing the color coding recently when I started using sketch up and it's a lifesaver when putting the cutlists together, so easy to see at a glance what everything is. I haven't tried edge banding before cutting everything down, that might be worth trying sometime. But often for me the fronts of the panels are on interior cuts so that wouldn't be possible anyway.
Dividing a bay/room/etc= Brilliant!! Thanks so much for sharing that tip. Much better than me eyeballing it!
Great video Michael! Love the layout and cut sheet concepts. Time savers for sure! Just a tip, and forgive me if you are already aware of this feature - but you can adjust the depth of the domino mortise on the joiner to allow for a deeper slot which will eliminate the need to custom cut each domino. You can also adjust the width of the mortise which allows a little wiggle room when you assemble. Took me a while to realize the benifit but it helps if your cuts are off even a hair, which is the case sometimes in my assembly process. Cheers!
Fellow Seattle woodworker here. I'm considering doing the cabinetry in my kitchen remodel. This is inspiring me. My wife will probably be hunting you down in the new few months. lol
When I do kitchens I get a shop to cnc cut all of the panels and joinery. Saves so much time!
Every time I hear toe kick, in my head I’m singing “toe pick!” LOL😂
Also that divide and measure for the bay was genius!
Also congrats on your wedding!!
I love everything you did here with kitchen cabinets
I'm living for these videos right now. Can't wait for the next one!
Fantastic work, Michael! You can easily see the kitchen now! 😃
Congrats for the sponsorship!!!
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
Enjoying this series very much! Thank you.
Thanks for the tour at Kerf Design, that was interesting!
This series is also awesome, Michael, love tagging along and follow you in all the stages of this huge remodel project!
And wow - festool as a sponsor.... dream come true!
Thank you!!
sketchup does have a cutlist maker, you have to make every part a component and then it can extract the exact sizes and put them onto sheets for the most optimal cutlist
Heck, it can even export images with dimensions to PDF. None of this screenshot business.
Hey Michael,
Excellent video. I am a cabinet maker located in the Seattle area and really appreciate your insights on cabinet making. I've been doing this for many years now and I am always excited to learn new techniques. Such as the color coding...brilliant. Also, I don't use integrated toe kicks either, much better to build separately then level them out. Awesome video my friend, it would be great to meet you sometime. Be well....stay blessed.
Hi! How do you typically connect the Cabinet to the Toe Kick? Screw through the base or is there another method I'm not aware of? Currently building out my first shop so have very little experience! 😅
I’m on my 3rd kitchen and I had to do a 2 piece system like that to accommodate the flooring guys schedule. I put pocket holes on the base and screwed them in with a right angle drill attachment vertically. I also put pocket holes with Tapcons going down into the floor so I can level and secure the base 100% to the floor and carcass. I’m sure more experienced guys have better ways, but that’s mine. Separate 1/4” toe kick across the entire base to hide the pocket holes.
Minute 28- not obvious! The first time I did a panel wall, I could not wrap my mind around the math of even spacing, it took me so long! Such a helpful tip!!!!
Great video cool to see your process on making the cabinets .can’t wait to see it finished. Congratulations to you and Ashley 🎉🍾🎈
Thank you!! 🙌
Beautiful cabinetry! The design is so original.
I get to watch something cool while I eat lunch! 😊
great video thanks, I appreciate you including the obvious tips and tricks, theyre new to me and a big help
Quick note on putting the cabinents in before your flooring, it's important to account for the final flooring thickness or your dishwasher wont fit or will be floored into the cavity
Okay, that "slot & hook" wall in the office is awesome and brilliant. I had to pause the video for 10 minutes thinking about the possibilities of using that setup in different ways.
The color coding is a brilliant idea!. The color coding is a brilliant idea!.
Thanks for introducing Kerf, perfect timing im looking for a wall system and the kerf wall fits the bill.
Clever trick about measuring to evenly space picture frames.
Put domino's in the endgrain first so you don't risk hammering them trough a panel. I learned this the hard way... I think you might save some plywood by using a cutlist optimizer. I never saw the prefin plywood here in Europe. Don't know why, looks very convenient. Cabinets are looking great! I can't wait to see the finished result.
I'm an architect who has used Autocad (2D) and Revit (3D) for many years to design and document buildings. I wouldn't say either of them is the best for designing /modelling joinery, but they are the software progams that I know. One thing about using a 3D program, is that when figuring out how to model something, you are also figuring out how to build it. I would add that something that is difficult to model is probably going to be expensive to build ~ I've worked on many projects where the design has been over-complicated as well as no thought being put into how to build it.
About to start my architecture degree (sep 2024) and I'm learning Revit but struggling with it- do you have any tips that you'd be willing to share? Thanks!
Great job Michael!
I'm going to be designing and building my kitchen cabinets. BUT FIRSTS... I'm practicing on making cabinets for my shop. So far I have one set of cabinets that I built for my Glowforge. But I hurt my back as I was doing them so I ended up just getting the carcasses done. I still need to go back and add the shelves and doors. LOL. But I needed it to be put in place so I could get my Glowforge up and running again. I learned a lot just making those two cabinets.
Thanks for sharing.
Nice job on those carcasses, Michael. Good choice on the wood.
Thanks for the link to the book. it's very informative. Keep up the great work 👍
Finally! A Festool-sponsored video!
Did we need one..? 🤔
Great job! One tip I would relay, is that instead of trimming down those dominos, you could have just plunged further into the one side, and more shallow in the other to make up the differences.
That track saw is nice! I think I need one!
I don't find dominos to be strong at all for cabinet carcasses, but they are slow and expensive. I can't think of any fastener where a plywood butt joint can't be easily racked and collapsed. The back and the nailers take care of this issue. I build cabinets like you build toe kicks, quick and dirty, plus staples, but I usually skin exposed sides or begrudgingly use pocket holes and never build euro cabinets. I don't know if you own a 700 but through dominos are a neat trick that can save you from trimming them on a bandsaw and this works really well when you need to have shelves line up across multiple boxes on a built in or something.
Separate toe kicks are the way to go but next time I do it I'd like to try using a ledger board on the wall with adjustable feet on the front.
Incredible Tips Here I'm impressed.
Great video...really enjoyed this one.
Would love more detail on that “kerf wall” with the mortises, looked like those were modular components that could get moved around… very interesting
The little blade is so cute.
Congratulations, to you and Ashley!
Thank you ❤️
Love your work bro❤️❤️❤️
Tremendous high quality video showing some interesting methods of work.Please ignore the comments from some of these ' no hopers'.
Am liking the monitor stand booster 😂😂
Congrats on the sponsorship Michael! Well earned and deserved. 🙂
I'm with you on building the toe kicks separate. Much easier to install cabinets that way.
Also, genius trick to color code the parts for each component; stealing that and adding to the bag of tricks. 🙂
Great video. Keep them coming please. 👌🏻👍
felicidades!!! pedazo de video, y te felicito por tu proyecto
Great, Great video! Thanks.
30:00 Such a great idea to make the entire thing in cardboard beforehand !
Dude! Sponsored bij Festool! Thats huge!
You need a TSO guide rail square for those cross cuts! 😁 Nice work!
Great work! Quick question - on that peninsula cabinet, would it have worked to use longer dominos and go all the way through the center board, instead of making shorter ones that go part way? Seem like there wouldn't be much "meat" between the mortises?
Great video as always. Looks like you included a “booth” in your design. Think about making that a U shaped banquet instead. More convivial design with 4 people and you can probably seat 2 more on the outer side of the table. I installed an L shaped fully upholstered unit in my San Francisco apartment and wouldn’t change it for anything. This design also lends itself to stretching out while reading with a great cup of Seattle joe. Thanks for all your videos.
In the design iterations in the beginning you can see one or two versions that had a U shaped banquette. The depth required for the end bench can be a limitation, and often doesn't end up working in those smaller kitchens which were only designed for facing benches originally.
Congrats on the Festool sponsorship! Curious on your impressions of purchasing hardwood online vs. at a local source such as Cross Cut Hardwoods (for those of us in the Puget Sound area).
Awesome video and congratulations on Festool sponsorship. With your hardwood edgebanding I would definitely ask them for the MFK 700. We use it all day with great results and no misshaps!
We've also adopted the naming convention from our CNC cabinet making software Mozaik for tracking parts. It's very useful in large kitchens and once you get used to it works really well:
Each cabinet is numbered starting from 1
Each side is labelled L or R and it's always as you look at it
Top and bottom is T or B
Nailers and Stretchers are N & S
Doors and Drawers are D and DR (and this can be LD and RD if a pair)
So for example 8T is the top of cabinet 8, 8N and 8S are it's stretchers and nailers. It saves a lot of writing!
Thank you!! That naming convention is really smart. I realized that if I had many more cabinets I’d start running out of colors 😂
Can you make a sketch up video talking through how you use it and the design process?
It was fascinating how quick you were and how you did stuff.
I think using 1/2" plywood for the back of the cabinets and putting it on without any grooves makes for a strong cabinet. For joining the panels a biscuit joiner together with some screws could do the job very well.
Omg this is a dream come true Michael!!! Lol for you and me, I’m so excited to see your version of a bespoke kitchen and your house just offers that history and I don’t know it’s beautiful and I love that you’re renovating it yourself and especially building your own kitchen! This house deserves a bespoke, well thought out kitchen! You’re the one to do it and I’m so thrilled to watch along the way. Like what wood choices are you going with? I’m building a solid hickory vanity and love the grain details but I can see white oak or walnut or something entirely different maybe pecan? Either way look forward to what you go with and any surprises like if you decide on using patterned ply or patterned hardwood for the edges or somewhere in your kitchen or bathrooms? So exciting
Building a kitchen made easy, plus getting married. Congratulations to Ashley and yourself!!
That bottle of Sriracha in that one kitchen is worth as much as the kitchen itself.
So, no surprise - you are beating me on the cabinet installation!
They're not installed quite yet 😉
Congrats on getting married and all the best for you two 🥂
Great video. For me, your labeling system was of interest. I especially liked your color scheme and the labeling with the dimensions at the edge. I use MaxCut myself for the automatic distribution of the individual parts on the sheets. It can happen that I cut a large piece and have to split it into 3 or more different parts. I then label the parts with tape and structure my parts like the structure in a book. So for example 1, 1.1, 1.1.1, 1.1.2. Further I give the parts names (side left..). Question to the community: How do you do that? 🙂
Lol I like the Dewey Decimal System for keeping parts organized.
Love the video, as always, and the instrumental wannabe copycat versión of "Goodbye horses". Nice taste music for a woodworking video
When you cut the dado for the back panels, you cut on the side away from the fence. Is there a benefit to doing it that way? In the few times I have done back panel dados, I set the side close to the fence and did all my cuts at the same measurement.
Silly question, at around 17 minutes you’re cutting the grooves for the back panels and you mentioned the depth of various cabinets might be different. Wouldn’t it have been easier to set the fence so that your groove starts at 1/2 or 3/4 from the back side, so you didn’t have to keep moving the fence? Or maybe I’m misunderstanding the groove’s purpose.
Great vid! And a Big fan of Kerf! What’s the reasoning behind dry assembling with clamps to mark the domino locations? Why not just mark them set dimensions on each piece?
Uk kitchen maker here. Kitchen cabinets, typically, are installed and screwed tightly together, so it is perfectly acceptable to end drill and the screw the cabinets together. However crude and simplistic that may seem, it is easy and strong, a covering end panel on open ends conceals any screwheads. No Domino ? No problem.
I am very emotionally invested in the Michael Alm cinematic universe
Nice cabinet build. I also like separate toe-kick. We are designing a kitchen remodel and plan to build the cabinets. I am considering French Cleats to hold the cabinets. On your cabinet with the "custom Dominoes", instead of cutting them shorter, did you consider making "through floating tenons"? It would have required actually making the tenons, not just cutting ready-made Dominoes shorter, but would add strength instead of lessoning it.
In my upcoming tiny house build (never enough storage in most tiny houses), I'm going to make the toe kick about 10" high so I can use it for deep draws for large it kitchen items, especially those not frequently used.
I got a kick out of the open first aid cabinet at kerf. I was looking for the bloddy bandages...
Nice just started using Sketch up and it’s worthwhile as a custom finish carpenter/ contractor! Tool wise the extra blade thing is kind of gimmicky to me ? I hv two Makita Track Saws both have the ability with a button to do Kerfs before a Final Cut ! I can see the extra blade on a Table Saw for production cutting otherwise it’s just spending money on a hobby which is fine? ( if you hv it).
Your cabinets are progressing well and as a note ! Even as a production carpenter/ contractor I do not do full kitchens?
The money is not there whereas big shops with 6-12 table saws running and making production cabinetry they blow my prices away!
Looking forward to seeing your cabinets!
Hey Michael, before moving in the Seattle area, I was your subscriber in Romania, such a small world. If you need an extra hand just let me know.
Quick question about when you cut the dado for the back panel. Is the dado a set distance from the back? I see you cut the dado with the front-facing edge against the fence, and that required a fence adjustment when switching to different depth cabinets. Why not reference the back edge and use the same setting for all carcass sides?
love the video and your process, do you have a video on the sled in the background with the square? miter sled looks like
You are a very organised gent by labelling with measurements and colour- coding the cabinet panels.
I'll never understand why people tile around the cabinets, especially on a full remodel like this. Do the flooring first then you don't lose that inch or more of cabinet height plus your floor will be level (it should be after tiling) for the cabinets. And it makes tiling easier I think, less cuts to work around.
100% agree! I was going to remodel our kitchen until I found out that the tile did not run under the cabinets into re-tile the house, of course they don’t make our tile anymore, would cost us $60,000. Always, if possible, tile, install flooring And put the cabinets on top of it.
Builders do this to save on material costs which are based on sq ft prices and put pressure on the subs/installers for a cheaper price because of the less sq ft
I prefer to put my cabinets on the flooring, but we leave it up to the customer wether they want to spend the extra money.
Tile floors area not supposed to be level, they're supposed to be straight and flat, especially if your doing it in an old house, the foundation is fucked sometimes almost 2 to 3 inches out of level in a span of 5ft
Well you’re never gonna see it and it’s wasted money.
I like your idea of using prefinished plywood. I wish that you showed how to glue them. Did you just glued the dominos? I am also interested in learing how to cut the quarter inch slots for the back panel. Thanks.
When designing in Sketchup, I love using grid lines (tape measure tool), because the cursor will snap to the intersection of the grid lines. I know you can click on a starting point and type in the desired size. I created a short cut key (Ctrl+G) to delete any and all grid lines from the work area. What I would do is measure out the space (height, width and length), regardless of the size of the project. I then use the rectangle tool to draw out the width and length. Push-pull tool to to raise it to the height. I then delete all the faces, leaving the outline of the space. Make it a group so nothing else drawn will stick to it. This outline is the parameter or boundary of limits to work within. Meaning, anything I build has to fit within the limits of the boundary/boarder.
When designing large projects, I will use/place one of the characters/people in Sketchup as a visual scale reference to a large project.
I like using Sketchup when designing a project. From a small box to a large shed. Sketchup allows me to have a visual representation of my idea. It also allows me to see any design flaws in my thinking process, what will work and what will not work. I have also imported house floor plans and build all the walls from the floor plane to get a good visual of what the interior will look like.
The Triangle Kitchen was originally an idea from the three Beecher Sisters. I think they were from Brooklyn, NY and their Dad was a famous preacher. One of the daughters, correct me if I am wrong, was Harriot Beecher Stow who grew up to be a famous author.
Laughed about cardboard. Literally but an island this week with - inch thick cardboard.
Great video.
I used short wardrobe packing boxes for visualization in a new kitchen. Close enough in height and depth to get a rough idea.
Nice @Michael! So when you domino the cabinets together do you use glue at the domino joints?
That's what I would have done and at least glued both ends of the domino.
Also confused/surprised by this!
I never understand the thinking of tiling to the cabinets and not to the wall. It costs a little more, but have some pride in your work.
The colour coding is clever - I feel like a colour printer might help tho!!
For real 😂
There are some things I like about the Ikea Cabinets, the Plastic Feet keep the wood several inches off the floor, so in case of a small flood you don't have to worry about the cabinets getting wet and I like the Euro-style of no face frame so all you see is drawer faces, makes a more modern look IMO.
Honestly, I’ve installed 3 Ikea kitchens and use one of them daily. I think they are darn good for the price.
@@MichaelAlm I also use the 4 bay measurement trick when I'm spacing things in CAD like post spacing for a deck or something like that.
Your plumbing pipe goes through you jack and king on your kitchen window. Totally not structural sound. Love the vids
I know… it’s stood for 80 years like that, so I think it’s fine hahaha
i was wondering why your toe kicks seemed so tall until you i saw you placing them directly on the subfloor rather than the flooring. that's a cool way to do it - save a little bit of flooring material.
Absolutely awesome cabinets. Did I miss, or did you boys how us how you flushed your edge banding to the panels and how you finished the edge banding without marking up your pre-finished plywood?
Thanks! I used a trim router with a flush trim bit
As an interior designer and a drafter for an architect I will say sketchup is my go to but we use autocad so I’m constantly using sketchup to make sure I have the spacing right. I’ll use sketchup to extract elevations for autocad.
Kitchens are fun but can be tedious.
Wow. You have AutoCAD but use sketchup for some detail stuff? I’d like to hear more about why. I went from manual drafting to AutoCAD back in the day. Used for many years in commercial HVAC, plumbing, civil, etc. There were so many drawing aides included I find it interesting that you’d rather go to a separate package to figure out spacing. Not sure what you mean by using a ketchup to extract elevations from AutoCAD. I am not a sketchup user but after hearing so much about it in this video I’ll have to spend some more time with it. I cant afford AutoCAD now since I’m no longer in that design industry.
@@mikecoughlin4128 time and accuracy. I learned in 3D then learned 2D in college.
My eyes are more accurate to 3D planning than in 2D but I’m getting better with planning in 2D.
Congrats dude, welcome to the married life!