How to Make a Bread Board and Bread Knife Combo

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  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2024
  • A bread Board is a Cutting Board set aside for cutting bread. in this video, we make a breadboard and holder for the bread knife. this is an all in one board that can be hung up and used at any time. in the last video, we made the bow style Bread knife.
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Komentáře • 75

  • @petersloan7604
    @petersloan7604 Před rokem +1

    That looks very like Elm. Great project!!

  • @Oldschoolozzy77
    @Oldschoolozzy77 Před 5 lety +1

    We have a bunch of this on our property. It’s an aggressively invasive species, with giant thorns, sometimes called a thorny locust. We cut some down annually. I may be able to bring you some!

  • @MWAWoodworks
    @MWAWoodworks Před 6 lety +2

    the simple and beautiful utility of a blade and a board. Love the execution, James!

  • @dendrofil-motofil
    @dendrofil-motofil Před 5 lety +1

    Это ЗДОРОВО! Раздарил уже более 100 разделочных досок, общим весом около 250кг, но если такое подарить, это будет фурор! Вот что обязательно сделаю зимой.

  • @cedaroakfarm8596
    @cedaroakfarm8596 Před rokem

    Good video and instruction to make both the bread saw and board. I'm going to try this. thanks

  • @orelygarcia
    @orelygarcia Před 6 lety +1

    Nice one James, thumbs up my friend.

  • @katzhunter4473
    @katzhunter4473 Před 6 lety +6

    Yay! Now I can rip and crosscut my breads in style! 👍🏼 🥖

  • @KarlBunker
    @KarlBunker Před 6 lety +3

    Very nice!
    In the "what would you have done differently" department, it needs a hole to hang it from. Rigging up a way to find the balance point so it hangs straight would have been an interesting little sub-project.

    • @WoodByWright
      @WoodByWright  Před 6 lety

      I was planning on doing that but I don't know if I want to hang it or slide it yet. We will see.

  • @wb_finewoodworking
    @wb_finewoodworking Před 6 lety +1

    Super project James. It’s one that I can even make with my power tools. Now I need to figure out who on my gift list needs one.

  • @user-oy4gf6ck5u
    @user-oy4gf6ck5u Před 6 lety +2

    Just Lovely !!!! Simple and useful !!

  • @reforzar
    @reforzar Před 6 lety +1

    Very cool. The wood is beautiful.

  • @Alysuis
    @Alysuis Před 6 lety +1

    Loving your content! so much different than the other wood working videos that I'm used to seeing!

  • @robertbosley8820
    @robertbosley8820 Před 5 lety

    Love it. My only modification would be to perhaps add a magnet to the handle and the breadboard to prevent the knife from falling if you hang the board up. And a hole with a strap to hang it from.

    • @WoodByWright
      @WoodByWright  Před 5 lety

      Thanks. There is a slight frinch clearness (yes I made it up LOL) to the holder so it won't fall. We keep it hanging from the side of the cabinets.

  • @myrawright282
    @myrawright282 Před 6 lety +2

    So cool! Wish I could eat the bread but..😁
    The grain on that board is amazing!!!

  • @opasworkshop8373
    @opasworkshop8373 Před 6 lety +1

    Awesome job James you've inspired me by saying it can hang on the wall, so I may give it a try also! Looking forward two Tuesdays video shout out slash collaboration!

  • @taylormaxwell875
    @taylormaxwell875 Před 6 lety +3

    It looks like honey locust which is quite hard, beautiful and fun to work with.

    • @taylormaxwell875
      @taylormaxwell875 Před 6 lety +1

      The sap wood is almost yellow and the heartwood is a rusty red. The sapwood can be bright yellow with boiled linseed oil.

    • @WoodByWright
      @WoodByWright  Před 6 lety +1

      That is high on my guess list too.

    • @taylormaxwell875
      @taylormaxwell875 Před 6 lety +1

      I made the comment before I saw the part of the video when you actually applied BLO. When I saw that I was pretty certain that the board you have is honey locust. The bark looks similar, the bright yellow sapwood and especially the rusty red color and pattern of the heartwood are a dead ringer for it. Honey locust is a very hard wood. My neighbor had a relatively small honey locus tree cut down and I was able to get part of the trunk and some bigger branches. I milled it myself via wedges & hammer, a fro, hand planes and some on the table saw. It was fun. I have built a few things from the wood as well as carved a couple of dish/bowls and spoons. It is beautiful wood.

  • @IEnjoyCreatingVideos
    @IEnjoyCreatingVideos Před 6 lety +1

    Good job on the cutting board James! Thanks for sharing the video with us.😎👍JP

  • @JT-hw6mq
    @JT-hw6mq Před 6 lety +1

    He's right, a good card scrapper is a joy to use. Especially if its a WW card scrapper like I have. The only thing that would make it better is that apron he's giving away.

  • @FredMcIntyre
    @FredMcIntyre Před 6 lety +1

    Really nice James! 👍👊

  • @Thom4123
    @Thom4123 Před 6 lety +1

    Beautiful job really like how you designed the knife to stay with the bread board. I’m going to say it looks like birch or a flaming birch totally a guess it just looks like the wood I used a while back. Take care my friend

  • @grandadz_forge
    @grandadz_forge Před 6 lety +1

    Wife is bugging me for one. Cool project!

    • @WoodByWright
      @WoodByWright  Před 6 lety +1

      LOL I am sure to get one made it will require some new tool!

  • @extreme.4576
    @extreme.4576 Před 6 lety +1

    Great project, that work looks like Calico Hickory. I use that wood for cutting boards and mallets. Great wood but dulls my blades pretty quick!!

    • @WoodByWright
      @WoodByWright  Před 6 lety

      it is not like any hickory I have used before. thought similer in hardness.

  • @cobberpete1
    @cobberpete1 Před 6 lety +1

    Looks Great. Do you think it could use a magnet to assist holding the knife if you hang it up on a wall??

    • @WoodByWright
      @WoodByWright  Před 6 lety

      You could but it is very tight there is no chance of it falling off the wall.

  • @metz12harofreak
    @metz12harofreak Před 6 lety +1

    Looks similar to honey locust

    • @WoodByWright
      @WoodByWright  Před 6 lety

      that is what I am currently leaning toward!

  • @MakeBrooklyn
    @MakeBrooklyn Před 6 lety +1

    Nice simple board and a very clever way to mount the knife. One question though ... that looks like a crosscut bread knife so did you add a little extra set to the teeth?

  • @Oldschoolozzy77
    @Oldschoolozzy77 Před 5 lety +1

    Looks like honey locust to me, pretty common around our area.

    • @WoodByWright
      @WoodByWright  Před 5 lety

      yup. I have sense confirmed with the sawyer I got it from. I was originally thinking black locust. it is fun stuff.

    • @Oldschoolozzy77
      @Oldschoolozzy77 Před 5 lety

      Wood By Wright.. looks fun! I’m going to be using this video for a late Christmas present. I’ll have to show you final results, great lil project

  • @thomasarussellsr
    @thomasarussellsr Před 6 lety +2

    Is there a bit of a French Cleat in place at the top of the knife/holder to keep the knife parked on the board when it is hung on the wall? Maybe hang the knife on one edge on stand offs if necessary to keep the cutting surface flat?

    • @WoodByWright
      @WoodByWright  Před 6 lety +1

      Thomas Russell no it is a tight enough fit that it can not just slide off it has to come strait off so no fear of it falling.

    • @anthonyoltmann3721
      @anthonyoltmann3721 Před 6 lety +2

      A small magnet on the insert and the knife won't fall off.

  • @SteifWood
    @SteifWood Před 6 lety +1

    possibly breadwood (Lignum panem)

  • @marcuskiser48
    @marcuskiser48 Před 3 lety +1

    Could that be Osage orange ?

    • @WoodByWright
      @WoodByWright  Před 3 lety

      No. This one was White oak and Cherry. Osage Orange is fun stuff to work with though.

  • @cyrilbrun8764
    @cyrilbrun8764 Před 6 lety +1

    Hey James , subed and been watching for a year and a half , but don't think I've ever commented . Been making a living for 25 years as a wood worker , all power tools . For a year (thanks to your channel and 2 others ) I've been looking for the basic , no power , wood hand tools and a few others . Although very little to pick from here in Ontario Canada I have purchased a few , although the stanely 45 and 55 just don't exist here . My question today is , I was of the understanding BLO was not food safe , only the Raw Linseed oil . Although I've never used either linseed oil , I know linseed oil provides a very nice finish . So I'm confused as to how to finish my cutting , or bread boards as you say you used BLO which is my understanding to be unsafe for food . Thanks in advance , just finished watching the tour of the tool show , wow , nothing like that up here . Cyril

    • @taylormaxwell875
      @taylormaxwell875 Před 6 lety

      If you buy "boiled" linseed oil at the store it is actually not "boiled" instead it has chemical agents that help it polymerize sooner. Those agents make it not safe for food. If you take raw linseed oil and boil it, it will work just about as well (dry quickly) and is safe for anything such as eating or on surfaces you eat from. However, the boiling point for linseed oil is not far below flashpoint which makes it fairly unsafe to make unless you take great care to keep the temperature below the flashpoint and do it in a safe place. Wood by Wright showed how to do it in a video. He also talks about how you can go through a process of putting it in the sun (there are videos out there about this) and filter it over time. This process leaves a product that dries faster than raw linseed oil but not at as fast as actual boiled linseed oil or "boiled" linseed oil with chemical agents that you buy at the store. I hope this helps.

    • @WoodByWright
      @WoodByWright  Před 6 lety

      thanks man! that means a lot. my home made BLO is safe as there are no additives. the stuff you can get at the store has chemical dryers to speed up the drying time. you probably dont want to use that around food.

    • @cyrilbrun8764
      @cyrilbrun8764 Před 6 lety

      Thanks for your informative response Taylor , I will look for that vid. as well .

    • @cyrilbrun8764
      @cyrilbrun8764 Před 6 lety

      Thanks , Taylor also replied you have a vid. on making it I must have missed . I have gallons of 50 yr old , raw linseed oil of my grandfathers , I must check and see if its still liquid .

  • @dan__________________
    @dan__________________ Před 6 lety +3

    From the color in the video and the grain pattern, it looks like red oak.

    • @WoodByWright
      @WoodByWright  Před 6 lety +1

      I can tell you for sure it is not.

    • @MDTROTLINER
      @MDTROTLINER Před 6 lety

      Yeah Dan both the bark and the wood looks like red oak to me too.

  • @johnwarner1534
    @johnwarner1534 Před 6 lety +1

    could the wood for this project be green ash?

  • @practicallyIndependent
    @practicallyIndependent Před 6 lety +3

    it almost looks like some form of Hickory.

    • @WoodByWright
      @WoodByWright  Před 6 lety

      Feels like it. But never played with a hickory this color.

    • @practicallyIndependent
      @practicallyIndependent Před 6 lety +1

      Wood By Wright I have some hickory that kind of looks like that, and the fact that it's very hard made me think it might be the same type.

    • @RIBill
      @RIBill Před 6 lety +1

      Wrong bark for hickory. It might be black locust.

    • @WoodByWright
      @WoodByWright  Před 6 lety +1

      that is what I am leaning toward right now.

    • @hypnolobster
      @hypnolobster Před 6 lety +1

      I'd be surprised if it's black locust. That stuff will be somewhat yellowgreen depending on age, have very rough fuzzy bark and is astonishingly difficult to plane. Reversing grain, but also very poor adhesion and tears out in big sheets. It definitely resembles some of the hickorys with the smooth segments of bark and the shades of honey colored heart and sapwood, though there are tons of weird US hardwoods with open pores and distinct sap.
      The definitive test is if it glows under blacklight, though! That's the easiest way to check if it's black locust.

  • @prevailcallswoodturning3509

    Looks very much like bitternut hickory

    • @TheOlsonOutfit
      @TheOlsonOutfit Před 6 lety +1

      kitchensmylife cakesandcookies I was thinking hickory too, but I'm watching on my cellphone sooooo

    • @WoodByWright
      @WoodByWright  Před 6 lety

      It is not like any Hickory I have used so it is just as hard. That being said I've never worked with Butternut before. I'm not sure what the difference is it would be fun to look into.