youtube tutorials... a "best of selection" request.

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rafezetter

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I would like, if you would all allow, to request you to post links to favorite youtube tutorials you have seen that really get to the heart of the particular subject and give the most accurate information; accuracy of information is key, but a good "jargon free" presentation is important too.

If you wish to shy away from certain topics that are covered by dvd's available by members, that is understandable, which still leaves a whole gamut of topics that people could look at to get a better understanding of it.

EDIT: Any topic can be covered that relates to working with wood, as there are many places where crossover occurs in techniques, and when you come to consider it - there aren't as many core subjects as we might first think, but vastly more personal preferences on how that technique is applied, and that's where the water gets muddied, although occasionally great "outside the box" applications are found.

The reason I ask is pretty obvious; there seem to be so many, the more I watch sometimes the more muddled I become on certain topics, and with woodworking classes now almost a bygone thing in many places (with respect to Peter Sefton and others) it would be great to have a section or sticky with a "go to" selection to watch.

If you would indulge me, it would be good if there was a brief description of what's being highlighted, and what in particular stands out in this tutorial over some others. Yes even including sharpening and the various forms, as it's the preference of the user and technique, not the teacher, so keep any "mine's better than yours" for another thread if possible - keep it civil gentlemen :)

I have seen some threads that people have posted for this kind of reason, (and hopefully those people can hunt them down and put them here too if moderators will allow), but no single thread with many of them in, in the same way most of the late Polish Niki's ideas were compiled together.
 
I think that's an excellent idea and well worth pursuing.

Now, does anyone know any good sharpening vids? :-"
 
Could you, perhaps, narrow the field a little? For instance, there are one or two excellent luthiery utubes I know of, but they may not be of interest to anyone outside of acoustic guitar building.

Excellent idea, though.

Cheers,
Adam
 
One standout tutorial for me is Andy Lovelock's video 'Sharpening Western Saws', which does exactly what it says on the tin, and is an excellent and thorough introduction to the subject. It's a long one at 2 1/4 hours, but in that time Andy takes you through the tools for the job, the definitions and effects of the different angles used (rake, fleam and slope), and then demonstrates the sharpening of a rip and a crosscut saw, then demonstrates the full refurbishment of two basket-cases. He also gives a comprehensive guide to what angles work well for different sawing applications.

It's a real 'one-stop-shop' for saw filing.
 
The Wood Whisperer (Marc Spagnuolo) has lots of very good videos on YouTube


I also find the Wood Whisperer a superb site with some excellent and very informative video's and articles. One of my favourite sites in fact.


A YouTube search for Lie Nielsen brings up some very good video's on choosing hand planes and what each different model is suited for. They also do some excellent sharpening video's on plane iron's and chisels.


Some of the Paul Seller's video's are very informative and helpful.


Workshop Heaven has some very good ones on sharpening chisels and saws.
 
+1 for Andy Lovelock's 2 hour saw sharpening video - best and clearest by a long way.

Among the many that I thought worth bookmarking are these:

Old school hide glue veneering, without fuss or bluster, by Barry Lorimer - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=inyVp5r73_Y

(He also has a refeshingly down to earth approach to making dovetailed drawers, part by hand, part by bandsaw http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4SKZNHS3Jrg)

I like this video from T J McDermott on how to carve letters: http://www.finewoodworking.com/how-to/video/letter-carving-basics.aspx as it shows clearly how to mark out, how to carve the serifs, and then how to carve the main lines.

And of course, no collection of woodwork video links is complete without Roy Underhill - who has now notched up 33 years of making inspirational, instructional TV programmes! There are 110 full length programmes to choose from at this link http://video.unctv.org/program/woodwrights-shop/

There is a useful but incomplete episode guide here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_The_Woodwright's_Shop_episodes but for down to earth usefulness, my favourites include those demonstrating useful hand tool techniques in furniture making such as:

Simple sash making http://video.unctv.org/video/2178721004/ and
A pine corner cupboard http://video.unctv.org/video/1427712879/.

But he's also good for simple projects, suitable as presents, easily made from small amounts of materials:

The eleven grooved box http://video.unctv.org/video/2263884494/
The Roubo Bookstand http://video.unctv.org/video/2172468729/
The dovetailed grease pot http://video.unctv.org/video/1425807116/


and of course, his enthusiastic intro to the Barnes 4½ treadle metalworking lathe, which inspired me to get my own - http://video.unctv.org/video/2296983856/
 
Kalimna":3mfcje1t said:
Could you, perhaps, narrow the field a little? For instance, there are one or two excellent luthiery utubes I know of, but they may not be of interest to anyone outside of acoustic guitar building.

Excellent idea, though.

Cheers,
Adam

I for one would love to have a link to the luthiery videos.
 
Thank you AndyT - that's exactly the kind of post I was hoping for. - I agree Matthias's work can be very good, but it's mostly "I made this; to do this" not "HOW I made this.." - it's the HOW part I'm mostly interested in.

Some techniques many of you will consider as so "matter of fact as not be worth mentioning", But I'm sort of hoping for a fairly comprehensive list of what Americans call 101's.
 
This chaps a Brit and is good for beginners. He certainly goes into immense detail on the "how" and he's a bit of a camera buff so his photography and indeed all production values are excellent. The only snag is he's a complete Festool nut. So if you like Festool then he's your man but he does do some other stuff. He would annoy the hell out of any professional chippy because though useful for a noob, his methods would cost a staggering amount of time for the seasoned.

http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCYwsgA-ZhDGHUCb4YFG00xQ
 
I've remembered another source of videos I'd like to recommend - Richard Maguire. Richard makes really good benches as a business, with his partner Helen, so is naturally enthusiastic about the sort of hand tool woodwork you might do on a bench. They are promising a lot more videos now that they have moved to more spacious premises, where they will also be setting up a wonderful collection of belt driven machinery they rescued from Kent (full story here.)

I think their first video was this - http://www.theenglishwoodworker.com/?p=519 "Making shavings" - in which Richard makes a little box. There is no commentary on this, but you get to see proper planing techniques in action.

There are two videos on making a small pine cupboard - http://www.theenglishwoodworker.com/?p=1734 and http://www.theenglishwoodworker.com/?p=1800. These cover lots of basics - cutting to size, shooting, planing, making rebates, pegging, making a face frame, stock orientation etc. In these, Richard is getting better at explaining what he is doing, without going on too much.

This short video homes in on how to cut rebates quickly - http://www.theenglishwoodworker.com/?p=1776 and this one shows a brilliant way to hold wood on the bench, using a simple stick: http://www.theenglishwoodworker.com/?p=1434 while this one shows you how to clench nails http://www.theenglishwoodworker.com/?p=1904

I think these videos are good at showing a down to earth approach. You can see that Richard was taught by his father, not from books, and most videos will include some clever technique that won't be already familiar. Well worth following their blog and subscribing to their YouTube channel.
 
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