Finally Saying Goodbye to 40-year-old Condensing Windows! [Carpenter’s Home Renovation Part 3]
Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль
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The Chickens From 40 Years Ago Have Come Home to Roost… [Carpenter’s Home Renovation Part 2]
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Hello! I’m Shoyan.
I have been working as a carpenter in Japan for 50 years and am a licensed architect and technician.
I would like to share my work, knowledge, etc., regarding Japanese carpentry.
I hope you enjoy my videos!
#Craftsmanship #WoodWorking #JapaneseCraftsmanship #Carpenter #JapaneseCarpenter #JapaneseSkill #JapaneseCarpenterShoyan #DIY
#DIYwoodworking #JapaneseArchitecture #Architecture #Renovation #WindowFrame
Пікірлер: 85
It's a little sad, to me, to see that large window go. Can't wait to see what you do with all the extra wall.
I'm really enjoying the upgrade and you tell us the history behind your house, by the time you've finished it's going to be very nice. Many thanks for shareing this with us.
When he said ‘that’s a wrap for now’ i laughed
Those single pane windows definitely had to go. Modern double or triple glazed windows are so nice and provide additional sound dampening.
I really like that little battery circular saw, it's a great tool in the manner you use it.
@2:14 Thor Shoyan!!!! The Demolishing Avenger!!!
I hope this is helpful to the translator. When something is 'level' vertically it is 'plumb' because the old tool the 'plumb bob' will always point directly down according to gravity. The term level is great for horizontal levelness :) but i think 'plumb' was the word that you were strugggling to explain during the door install :) love the content! please keep sharing!
@biancadolphin7966
Күн бұрын
just to add to that... plumb (in english) comes from the french word plombe which means lead (the metal). as it would have been a lead weight that was used to make the heavy weight at the end of the string. it's also where our english word plumber comes from, plombier in french, meaning lead-worker.
If this house is anything to go by after years watching him building new home the this one will look amazing when finished.
Konnichiwa! Terve from Finland! Me and my Pappa and Mamma likes to watch Shoyans projects! This is epic! Manufacture and de-manufacture! The house that… … well not Jack but the house that I built… it is a wonderful process… my Father was working in this area housebuilding for 50 years or so… retired now… so then we took care of the woods… 13 hectares of forrest cut by chainsaws and one snowmobile with a sled… with my Pappa! ❤️ He will be 80 years old now in November 2024 and Mamma 75 years old! It is nice to see stuff still works. Cheers, folks! As we say in Finnish: Hyvää Juhannusta! Happy Midsummer! Glad Midsommar! Swedish is my mothertongue. Like a Moomintroll! … there is definitely a connection there! 😎 Have a good one! 🙂
3:36 I am sure that anyone who has ever swung a hammer during the tear-down portion of the renovation, cheered out loud YEAH when you swung that big hammer and down came the door frame!!! 😆🤣😂😁😊 Nice!
great work, as usual. Very interesting about the kitchen window as here in Canada, there is almost always a window in the kitchen, often several as the kitchen often faces the back yard and people want to see out while working in the kitchen.
Love the renovations of things you have built when you had less experience and the explanation of what's going to be better 👍
@mrjellow
8 күн бұрын
I agree with your comment!
2:11 The moment for the slightly heavier tool, when you seriously need to replace the part in time, even with the danger to hurt something^^
It's amazing seeing the concrete and crawlspace be that clean after so many years. That would be full of dust, dirt and debris in a western house.
As I think you know, the main source of condensation was not the heat, but the propane stove. When propane burns, it becomes carbon dioxide and water in the form of steam. A vent hood above the stove might be helpful in reducing condensation, as well as smoke and the small amount of toxic gas such stoves produce.
a master of his trade, thank you
Nice job Carpenter San !!! 👍👏👏💪 Using that big hammer to demolish, you look´s like Thor!!🤣🤣
3:33 I love that HUGE HAMMER
Much changes as time goes by, I built my home 30+ years ago and find things that I would do differently every time I do repairs. New products and experience changes how we build. I very much like the new door, but I don't think I would like the small windows in a kitchen, it seems like it would get hot and stuffy during the summer without having good air flow. Thank you for sharing and have a wonderful week.
I love your giant mallet!
Now that it has been a few videos. I completely forget theat the voice over is AI generated! You have gotten it working very well to share your content in your voice but speaking a language you dont know! Very cool! I love the videos and they just seem even more relatable and enjoyable! Keep it up!
Beatiful craftsmanship as usual! Thanks for sharing this project on KZread!
Excellent work! Doors like those used to be common with interior doors in the us; called "pocket doors", but fell out of fashion in the late 70s. I always liked them.
I only have some furniture making and woodworking knowledge. Thanks for teaching me carpentry 🙇🏻🙇🏻
Shoyan-san, you do excellent work. I enjoy the history you tell us of your construction.
This is great information. We are about to renovate the kitchen of our kominka (こみんか) - ありがとう for all your videos.
Now that’s what you call a real hammer❤
Love the sliding exterior door !!! Seems easier than opening a door outward. Personally, I like a large kitchen window.
Grat work in all your Videos !
Amazing work. Seems a shame to lose that big bay window but will be interesting to see the end result.
Always enjoy watching your work!
A master, thank you.
Beautiful video. Thank you for this and showing your knowledge. Much appreciated from British Columbia
Excellent work as always... a joy to see someone who cares for his tools and knows how to use them!!
It’s a bit sad seeing Shoyan rip his house up. The Reno should be great. Happy wife, happy life.,! 😉👍
I love watching you work, because it shows that you built well (even on a very tight budget) all those years ago. So many houses where I live, you couldn't do this without demolishing the whole building, because they're nothing but plywood, OSB, and 100X48mm vertical studs and joists. Very cheap, and with hollow bones.
It is interesting that in Japan, now, the want to view your garden from the kitchen is not as important. Personally I like to be able to see nature, but then I sat in an office for a long time, and looking at nature around me is better than the interior of a cabinets and wood.
Your workmanship is amazing. Thank you for this video.
Oh it is coming along so nicely, I'll bet the end result will look amazing. Can't wait to see more. Thank you for taking us all along with these nice little journeys with you Shoyan-san.
I think the new improvements will make for a very wonderful kitchen, Shoyan San! I can't wait to see it as a finished room!
When you compare America to Japan, Japan usually has the smaller piece of the discussion, except for your demolition hammer!
When I was much younger, my dad built a garage. He covered the plywood with a foil product. I think it also had asphalt on one side. This was in the 1960's. It was probably a new product.
Bay windows are very practical for a space point of view but aluminium bay windows are terrible from a hear point of view. The cold from outside is transferred and with the heat inside you get terrible condensation. I build insulated bay windows and there is no condensation at all.
Shoyan san you were having far too much fun using that big hammer to remove the old door and window frames. I hope this Japanese is correct! しょやんさん、大きなハンマーを使って古いドアや窓枠を外すのがすごく楽しそうでしたね。
love the big mallet you use :D
Thank you for showing your work. Love the new style door.
such a well built house. thanks for sharing.
Great video its nice seeing this progress! Its good to see that you are renovating your old house!
Always interesting to see the different construction methods in Japan compared to the U.S.
beautiful work.
This series is so cool.
Nice, detailed, and consistent.
That's one big step getting into the kitchen from the outside.
「今日はこれで終わりです。」:D "That's a wrap for today.." :D
Great video. I think I need a huge wooden hammer. Just have to convince my wife! 😊
I think we should all chip in and get Shoyan a Sawzall - it would have made quick work of this demo. :)
Possibly this is a dumb question, but, is the younger gentleman in the video a family member or apprentice? I believe he has been in several other videos as well. As always, excellent video. Thank you for sharing your journeys with us.
I always thought it was a good idea to install the floor last. That way you don't damage it when you are doing the rest of the construction. 床は最後に設置するのが良いといつも思っていました。そうすれば、残りの工事をするときに損傷することはありません
Always a pleasure to watch a real craftsman!
@kayreid9788
8 күн бұрын
i do like to look at your work you are great in wood working.
now that was a hammer/mallet!!
Another wonderful video - a question if anyone knows. I noticed the measuring tape and the square having what looks like some other unit of measurement from metric. I think I can see metric (mm) but there is larger units that look like inches. May I ask what if I'm not mistaken the other measuring unit if it isn't SI?
👍👍👍
Any kitchen needs a window , otherwise it's like a jail
do builders not use ear, eye and dust protection in Japan?
Please wear a mask when cutting concrete!
I hope mama makes your favorite dinner.
@2:17 You can always solve stubborn problems with a bigger hammer! 😉😉😉
SHOYAN'S HANDs must be made of steel....do you ever wear gloves when wrecking stuff????
Big windows in kitchen Good Little window Bad
what is that green tool used with water seal membrane?
6:47 よし、お前は帝国の巻尺を使って俺の現実を壊した
@3:37 Benji ditch?
This video goes against everything that I believe in. And everything that I believe in is that: "if it ain't broke, don't fix it".
That was some cheap building materials back then.
be nice to be able to disable the english text...
For the first time, I don’t agree at all with Shoyan design. 1 - There’s the raised floor in the kitchen but the door frame goes below the height of the floor. Very bizarre and not convenient. 2- The window is really to small. Personnally I would have kept the floor of the kitchen at ground level. Install vapor barrier /plywwod / Schluter type heated floor / then tiles.
英語ペラペラでワロタ! AIすごいな
おや?吹替の声が変わったのでは?😅
Must have been a miserable home to live in without any insulation and leaky single-pane windows
Honestly, consider just doing your voices with subs, much better!!
Mister it is not save to us an angle grinder like that. PLEASE us the protective metal case