Making A Treasure Chest Ottoman / Blanket Box (part 1 of 2)
Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль
Part 2: • Making A Treasure Ches...
Woodwork video. In this video I make an ottoman in the style of a treasure chest / blanket box using sapele, pine and a piece of oak veneered plywood.
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Looking great Keith as always. Great video chap
Awesome project. Again is proven that you do not need a big shop with tons of fancy tools to make nice things out of wood. Skills are far more important. More difficult to obtain but you are doing a great job. Thanks for sharing and inspiring. Thousand thumbs up here and 1 official one.
Love the design and really appreciate how well you explain each step in the build - so helpful for beginners like myself. great editing too. thanks!
OOFT!! Lots more colour, brighter and sharper. Another very enjoyable upload. Thanks.
Clear instructions very nice zoom at 2:38. It has helped me a lot to see and make the carcass for a curio for my kitchen.
Shiver me timbers that's a fine chest you're building! Can't wait for part 2. 👍🏼
Mate that's soo good. Can't wait to see part 2
Very interesting project and well explained. Looking forward to part two. Thanks for sharing!
really nice design and build. looking forward to part 2
looking forward to part 2 great work
My favorite builds are chests, I usually get fancy and order a skeleton key lock for the lid from amazon. Little known fact about blackbeard, his kitteh was as equally feared as he was, aaarrrggh! Love your work.
Another great job and it gave me some inspiration to make one for my house 🖒
Great video as always.. Keep it up. You have been giving me some great ideas.
so far that looks really good I can't wait to see how it looks finished the thumbnail kind of gives it away but still can't wait to see what it looks like finished. sapele wood to work with. good stuff look fwd to pt 2 man! keep em. comn
Nicely done. An Ottoman is a footstool.
Love the videos!
Very nice build mate . I like using waxes too I find however if you give the project a couple of coats of shellac .the wax goes on like a dream and simple to buff to a nice lustre .
Looks great. Seems like you have the patience necessary for this kind of work :)
muito bom, parabéns!!!!!
For the first cut on your miter saw, that you had to do with a hand saw, you could have made the second cut first... shortening the long board into a length you could cut on the miter. Just a thought for your next project!
Really good work, and I appreciate your explanation of the project. And of course you use reclaimed materials, which is cool. I'm not to keen on your multi part videos though. Do what ya gotta do though . . . I'll keep watching and liking.
Beautiful
That sapele cut on the bandsaw is quite impressive. I've been comparing the cuts of different bandsaws with the record power demonstration video. Theirs seems to breeze through everything but is £100 more than the others for the 12" and £200 more for the 14"! On their demonstration vids they use a 3/8" 6TPI blade. On another vid they recommend using that blade as a general purpose blade and just leave it in there! Thanks for highlighting which vids to watch, it's been very helpful!
@RagnBoneBrown
7 жыл бұрын
+Richard Hawkins in my experience 3 or 4 tpi is good as an all purpose, I wouldn't go higher personally as the teeth clog up and the blade starts to drift when re sawing. I've not had good experiences with record power tools but maybe that's a personal thing. Would definitely recommend tuffsaw for buying blades though they make a big difference in quality of cut and they last ages too
@richardhawkins2647
7 жыл бұрын
Which type of blade did you go for? When I looked it was a bit confusing. I'd heard good things said about thinner kerf blades.
@RagnBoneBrown
7 жыл бұрын
+Richard Hawkins mine is a 3 tpi blade I think 12mm wide not sure how thick it is though. It does great for re sawing and manages curves ok although I do have to make relief cuts when cutting curves as it's quite wide
Good build, I would only add that when panelling dry fit first, then if you need one piece a different size, that one should go in the middle, you may have done this but I did not notice it, I enjoyed the shed build and stayed for more.
Nice! Looking forward to the other video. Tell Eddie hi for me lol.
More great stuff mate! Hope the finger is ok as well....
My dad used to say "you've got to bleed to succeed".. There is a lot of truth in that. Glad it was just a nick.
Excelente proyecto. Podrian subtitularlo al español. Gracias. Saludos desde Rep. Argentina!!!
Here in Texas we've never heard of Sapelli. It's a cute sounding name, so I've started calling my dog Sapelli! Haha
@RagnBoneBrown
6 жыл бұрын
Makes a great name 👍
Great video. I seldom enjoy watching an entire video through, but this was great. I'm going to make a blanket chest in a similar fashion soon. Could you tell us what the dimensions for the hardwood was originally. It looked about 2" thick, and about how long? Thanks!
You from up north? Great project, quite a technical way of constructing a chest I like it
It's a beautiful wood to work with. Was yours a little "smelly" when it was cut?
Looks awesome! Are you concerned with wood movement with solid pine cladding?
@RagnBoneBrown
7 жыл бұрын
+Christopher Allen not really the wood is already very dry and if it does shrink and crack it'll add to the authentic rustic treasure chest vibe
everyone does the crates or toy chest with a small curve want to see someone do one with a steep or harsh angle
Hey man the thinner bandsaw blades are for cuts that turn if your just cutting straight cuts to mill wood get a thicker blade
Paused video at 5 min jus to suggest a dowl to reinforce the joints. If they get knocked could be broke. Jus a suggestion. Good video
Hi just a thought why did you square up the wood on the table saw and not the jointer/planer
it looks like your out feed table is a bit higher than the table saw and the pieces stop into its edge. maybe a round over or a chamfer on that edge might help
perfekt
Good
at 2:47 there appears fresh blood and a homemade bandage on your left pinky finger. What happened? The bandages got smaller through the rest of the video so no stitches?
@More-Space-In-Ear
7 жыл бұрын
Marc H Phelps teach me for writing slow, you got in first! LOL
@RagnBoneBrown
7 жыл бұрын
+Marc H Phelps haha I just nipped it with a chisel and couldn't be bothered to go and get a plaster so I used kitchen roll and sellotape so I could carry on with the job!
9:15 RTJ 😎
👍🏻👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
What happened to the pinky hahah. I saw the tape and the way you help some stuff avoiding contact.
mmm good show ,i have around the same space as you and do similar projects ...watch your channel all the time ,yerr keep it up bro
So, at what stage of cutting of the second mitre on the base (Sapele) as you offered it up on the tape did you cut your finger??…I couldn't see any blood on the wood or surrounding area though the "tape" plaster didn't last long LOL
@RagnBoneBrown
7 жыл бұрын
+Marc haha I just nipped it with a chisel and couldn't be bothered to go and get a plaster so I used kitchen roll and sellotape so I could carry on with the job!
@More-Space-In-Ear
7 жыл бұрын
Rag 'n' Bone Brown This is why I like your videos, everything built with blood, sweat and the odd tear! LOL Looking forward to part 2, the finished box looks stunning 👍🏼😊
How are you coping with the bandsaw? I bought the same one last year but mine couldn't pull the skin off a rice pudding... great vid though 👍
@RagnBoneBrown
7 жыл бұрын
+Jamie Ollivant the blade that came with the saw was total rubbish, dulled very quickly. since putting on a blade ordered from tuffsaws website (1/2" 3-4 tpi blade) it has been fantastic! Made all the difference and worth spending a bit more on a quality blade
@pgtips4240
7 жыл бұрын
Rag 'n' Bone Brown - I was actually going to ask you what the new blade was and was so glad to see it posted in this comment. Btw, I've watched loads of channels about woodwork across a very wide range of workshops but your channel has become my personal favourite (and I never patronise people, i genuinely mean what I say!). I am learning so much from you. I'm terrible for over complicating things that don't need it but you just seem to get in there and get the job done with great results. And last but certainly not least you are British!! Not that I have any issues with americans but just so nice to see someone from my home land sharing their skills with the world. Can't wait to see part 2. 😊👍
@RagnBoneBrown
7 жыл бұрын
+Paul Gilfeather thank you!
Excellent build. Your performance is very wooden though.
Use the Sawdust for smoking fish or meat
You mentioned Sketchup...is that free to download software?
@RagnBoneBrown
5 жыл бұрын
There’s a free online version for non business users
Nice build as always. Do you have patreon?
@koensonck9700
7 жыл бұрын
Rag 'n' Bone Brown just joined the ranks of your patrons. May many follow.
@RagnBoneBrown
7 жыл бұрын
Thank you SO MUCH Koen! I really appreciate it
Do you have plans for this?
@RagnBoneBrown
5 жыл бұрын
No sorry
Odd construction, never seen something built from the outside in. Nice box though.
Are you still using the b350?
@RagnBoneBrown
7 жыл бұрын
+ben kattenhorn yes
@benkattenhorn1481
7 жыл бұрын
Rag 'n' Bone Brown would you recommend it as a first band saw ?
@RagnBoneBrown
7 жыл бұрын
+ben kattenhorn I would, I'm very happy with it
ok you are going to have some cladding inside, but still, why make all the joints on the frame so embarassingly weak? why not do that slab more justice?
@RagnBoneBrown
3 жыл бұрын
It's still doing fine. Plenty strong enough structurally with the cladding so I don't see what your issue is
U not got a dust collector for ur planer thickness mate
@RagnBoneBrown
7 жыл бұрын
+danny barrow I've just got two 30l shop vacs and I don't think either would cope with that amount of shavings
Sapelli is not forgiving. I burned down my dealt table saw motor when I rip some of this gorgeous wood.
2:21 Don't mug yourself nice
could you be nice and share the plans?
@RagnBoneBrown
7 жыл бұрын
+rusty Shackleferd (mirrored eyes) if I've still got them I'll tidy them up and put them up... I'll check in the next couple of days
@General_reader
7 жыл бұрын
...
Very nice chest and build,,, I understand this is a modern version of a post chest [''stolpekiste'' in Norwegian], a design that dates back to the viking era and often used to store grain. mm.dimu.no/image/02S1EQTHu9?dimension=800x800
Gluing end grain is a waste of time - no strength. You should have cut mortise and tenon joints or other structural joints. The end product might look good for a short while, but then it will come apart.
@RagnBoneBrown
5 жыл бұрын
I don’t think you watched the whole video!