Beer Mug
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- čas přidán 12. 09. 2024
- Making a Beer Mug
In this video I'm cutting circles out of timber to make a beer mug
And at the same time getting use to my new scroll saw
Other channels that have made beer mugs / goblets etc
Bram”s Shed
• Saxon type Waes Hael g...
Carl Jacobson
• How To Make A Beer Mug...
Steve Good
scrollsawworksh...
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Harry’s Woodcraft
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Humidity - Silent Partner
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All three of those mugs are works of beauty. I believe if I were to make one, it would be just like the one you made in this video. I t has nice coloration and shape. Thank you for sharing your talents.
Love your homemade presses. Great idea!
Very nice Harry. Scroll saw seems to be working a treat as well.Cheers mate, Keith.
+Keith Barrow
Thanks mate: the good thing about this one is I got to play with my new scroll saw, LOL
Hope all is well with you and the good lady, take care Best wishes Harry
Hi Harry<
I just found your channel and subscribed!
I'm 73 years old and just started turning about 5 months ago with carbide tools.Yesterday I bought several conventional tools and hope to learn how to use them 1/2 as well as you do!
I want to make 3 beer tankards for some Aussie friends who are coming for a visit and your video helped me a lot!
Thanks for a great video and hope to see more of your videos down the road!
Tom
Smart job Harry! The Mugs Look Brilliant. I hope to have a go at one over the next couple of months. Thanks for sharing.
+Rich Gage
Hi Rich, Nice to hear from you mate, hope all is well down your end,
It's not a bad little project, it just took me ages doing a little bit each night, if you make one, send me a couple of pictures, I'd love to see it, take care mate speak soon, Harry
Nice job, Harry. I like the spalted Beech best of the three. The handle design goes best with that one.
+Mark Hazlewood
Thanks Mark, I think I agree with you, and Thanks for watching & commenting,
Cheers! Harry,
Very nice job on the mugs Harry. It's cool that you used reclaimed wood.
Take care my friend and do a kindness
Mark
+MARK Baid
Thanks Mark: yes that timber is very old, it came from the Albert Dock here in Liverpool, one of the all boys down there Told me, he thinks it's been down for about 80 years, can you imagine all the people that have walked across it, and now I'm drinking out of it, lol thanks for watching mate and your support, Best wishes Harry
Dear Harry, your beer mugs turned out very nice! Great projet to use your new scollsaw!Best wishes, Ingo
+IngoderLiegeradler
Thank you very much Ingo, much appreciated, Best wishes Harry
Now all we need is some beer! Nice project.
+Willem Kossen
Thanks Willem: and thank you for your support, Best wishes Harry
fantastic all three of them look awesome
+LCJ farms Hi Linwood, Thank you very much, for your kind comments! And also for watching the video!
Cheers! Harry,
Great project Harry, turned out very well. I was looking for a way to make a Kuksa, ( which are traditionally carved by hand )a Scandinavian mug on the lathe but your cut circles offers another option, Thanks for some new ideas, to me anyway. Cheers, Kevin.
+Kevin Bradley
Hi Kevin: funny enough I was watching a video only a couple weeks ago on carving a traditional kuksa,
I carved one a couple of years ago when I was doing some bush craft, I know the traditional wood for carving a kuksa is birch, it will be fun to find a way of doing one on a lathe, I may look into that in the future, thank you for watching and also your support, Best wishes Harry
Very clever Harry nice work
+Mick Wilton
Thank you very much Mick, much appreciated mate, Best wishes Harry
Nice mugs Harry. Cheers!
+Mitch Peacock - WOmadeOD
Thanks Mitch, thanks for watching and your support, Best wishes Harry
Wow! What a nice project Harry! I am a fan of IPA's so, you got me thinking about doing one or two of those tankards! When I came back from Uruguay, the last time, I brought with myself a few pieces of wood, among them, two were really heavy, a square block of IPE and a couple of planks of pink lapacho. The last one looks very similar to the wood you used, it is extremely dense, so much so, that it does not float in water :) and very hard as well. Because it grows in lands where there is a lot of silica, it is often that you have silica mixed in the wood structure, that means your tools get blunt in a hurry. That said, it is a beautiful wood and super durable. There goes my like my friend! Cheers! Daniel
+Daniel Vilarino
Thank you Daniel my friend, I really appreciate your support, if I keep practising my woodturning in about 50 years I will be as good as you, LOL and thank you for the information, you are quite correct this wood does not float in water, and it blunts your tools very quickly, I look forward to watching your video when you decide to make the tankards, as I do all your videos, thanks again my friend and Best wishes Harry
Very nice looking beer mugs Harry, thanks once again for sharing your process...!
Hi Harry, Sorry it,s me playing catch up this time. Very nice beer mugs they do look great, like me Harry you don,t wast any off cuts.
Best Wishes Alan.
Nice mugs. Like how they came out. Sorry to hear the character of the woods gave some trouble, but, I think you came away great! Thanks for sharing!
+AnkleBiter Woodworks
Yes I found the Brazilian Walnut (Ipe) was a bit challenging to turn, and it took forever to cut on the scroll saw, so I just dun a little bit each night, thank you for watching and also your support,
Best wishes Harry
+The Little Garden Shed Workshop Cool beans. Feel free to check out my channel if you have a chance.
Excellent Beer mugs Harry, they really do look brilliant mate. i will be having a go at something like this as I am now the proud owner of my very first scroll saw......had it two weeks and not used it, apart from making a few cuts. lots to learn there I can tell you.
Take care, and love to Jean
Mie
+Mike Waldt
Thanks mate I really appreciate your comments, good luck with the new scroll saw, you'll find it very addictive, thank you for your well wishes for Jean, she has been much improved over the last couple of weeks, I took her to the local shops yesterday in the wheelchair, the first time she's been out for a couple of months, and she was made up, so things are looking up, thanks again mate take care yourself,
Best wishes Harry
Hello Harry , Fantastic demonstration on making beer mugs mate ,you said you was not to happy about the wood you used that came from the docks, look at it another way mate, you made something with a lot of history attached! Hope to see more of your scroll saw in action in future videos and lovely choice of beers too in the end pictures lol I shall get my drinking vessel and raise a toast to you ! Thank you very much for the mention mate ,it is really appreciated ! Great video and a great set of beer mugs ! hope you and Jean are keeping well, Take care Bram
+Brams shed
Thanks Bram, yes Jean has been doing well the last couple of weeks,
That wood from the docks looks good when it's finished, But it's a bugger to work with,
The wood came from the wooden walk way around the Albert Dock, one of the all boys down there
Told me, he thinks it's been down for about 80 years, can you imagine all the people that have walked across it, and now I'm drinking out of it, lol take care mate, Best wishes Harry
Beautiful Mugs, Harry. Love that dark wood on the brim and I will be visiting those links, thanks for sharing.Thumbs up.
+OG Timbercraft
Thank you very much Orely, Best wishes Harry
They look great Harry :) You come up with some great projects! I'll have the Kentish Ale please :)
+Ian Maude
Thank you Ian, I'll raise a glass to you when I eventually open a bottle, may be in the summer, I'm not a big drinker mate, but I do like a bottle of real ale every now and then, thanks for watching mate, Best wishes Harry
Great job !
+jonh walsh
Thank you very much John
nice mugs Harry ,makes me crave a pint of banks' ! it's been awhile since I've been home in England,thanks for a great video
+sdmcustom woodworking
Hi Steve: I thought you were English by your accent but I wasn't sure. Banks! I think the Brewery is in the Midlands, Wolverhampton way? I must agree it's a nice pint, thanks for watching mate and your support, Best wishes Harry
+The Little Garden Shed Workshop yep I'm from the Midlands ,Shropshire
yah mug... wait that came out wrong... lol
Looks great :-) I really want to do more on the lathe but need some new tools I want to try carbide tip to see what all the fuss is about...
+Wacky Wood Works
Thank you very much , much appreciated mate, and that was a nice little pen that you made a couple of weeks ago I'll be having a go at that in the future, Best wishes Harry
good mugs . good video .
+davie kirton
Thank you very much Davie, much appreciated mate, Best wishes Harry
nice work cool.
+Robert Kutz
Thank you very much Robert, much appreciated mate, Best wishes Harry
I loved your mugs Harry, they just need some real ale in them now. Cheers, Jim
great video my friend, highly enjoyed this one - liked :)
+LjGainzTV Thank you very much, for your kind comments! And also for watching the video!
Cheers! Harry,
great mugs mate ,love the fact they recycled :) take care garry
+Garry Cottee
Thank you very much Garry, much appreciated mate, Best wishes Harry
Hi Harry,
Nice Beer Mugs and connected to your lical history all in time for the Hot Summer barbecues.
Plus don't forget to test them out, at least 3 or 4 times each.
Take care mate and pass on my good wishes to your wife.
Cheers
Andy
+Andrew Smith
Thank you Andrew: with my limited time now in the shed, this one was dragging out, just doing a couple of hours each night, it seemed to go on for ever, lol but I got to play with my new scroll saw.
Thank you for your well wishes for Jean, she has been much improved over the last couple of weeks,
Thanks for watching and also your support, Best wishes Harry
+The Little Garden Shed Workshop That's good news about Jean and of course your new scroll saw.
Absolutely beautiful mugs Glad to see you using the scroll saw as well. I believe that dark wood is Ipe, Brazilian Walnut, Lapacho, I have a bunch of it from a project I was working on a couple of weeks ago. Take care my friend.
+Al Furtado (Wood Turning)
Thanks Al: yes I think you are correct on the identification of the wood, thank you for the information, and also for your support, Take care my friend Best wishes Harry
Hey Harry !! Just catching up mate !! Been a really busy bee the past couple of weeks, these mugs came out beautifully, you can use Ca glue to seal the insides, its food safe and waterproof ....... Thanks for the video mate, much enjoyed it !!! Must catch up soon mate, cheers, Steve.
+Templeboy Turnings
hanks again Steve, and thanks for the information, that Ipe is tough wood I believe it is Brazilian Walnut, it doesn't float in water, and it blunts your tools very quickly, but having said that, I made a couple of pens with it last week and and they come out beautiful, i’ll show you them in a couple of weeks,
Thanks again mate, take care, Harry
Great job Harry. A toast.. "May your reach always be beyond your grasp." Harry is that a new lathe I thought you had a red one.?
+Bill Holly
Hi Bill: Great toast, yes I've had this lathe for about six months now, it is the 1628 from Axminster,
I'm only using the little red one now to make pens and small projects, I have had it for about two years and I have near killed it, LOL but that has been a great lathe, it is the 1218vs from Axminster,
Thank you for watching and also your support, Best wishes Harry
Hello, I just wanna ask what type of wood did u used for the project?? thanks
Hello Harry just wondering if you sell the tankards over there . I make them here in the 🇺🇲 I put lids on them , like what the U K found on the Tudor ship of Henry the eighth in the English channel. I use stave construction . Thirty Dollars, is just about the top dollar here what do you sell yours for if you do .
Azobé (Dutch) or
red ironwood or ekki (English spoken countries) or
Bongossi (German)
This trees are growing in Africa : Lophira alata = latin name
Extremely hard and heavy (it sinks in water !!!)
Don't make it thinner than 50mm are it go everywhere except the way you won't ... :o)
Nice mugs Harry. Cheers!