ENCurtis

ENCurtis

I make things because it makes me happy.

I wish I knew this sooner

I wish I knew this sooner

It's been a whirlwind

It's been a whirlwind

Пікірлер

  • @rm4305
    @rm4305Сағат бұрын

    Genious bro , subcribed

  • @uluahunta1
    @uluahunta16 сағат бұрын

    What other oils would work with your mixture

  • @blt981
    @blt9819 сағат бұрын

    Cool tnx

  • @RuneCarverLLC
    @RuneCarverLLC17 сағат бұрын

    😳🤔😬💁 Yelp.... there is a LOT of elitist bs going on in this community, that's why I watch this channel to hear all sides in one go! 😳😵‍💫🙈🤣🤣🤣 Thank you for another well informed video and excellent explanation on the differences and similarities! 👍👍👍

  • @jimmcnett
    @jimmcnettКүн бұрын

    Look so good.

  • @argylemanni280
    @argylemanni280Күн бұрын

    I'm speechless. A video on cutting dovetails where dovetails are cut while the camera is rolling... and not a single cut is actually shown. People truly get the audience they deserve.

  • @jimmcnett
    @jimmcnettКүн бұрын

    That looks really good. You always are stretching your reach. It is very inspiring.

  • @jamesforrister2699
    @jamesforrister2699Күн бұрын

    Love coming across channels like yours! Beautiful cabinet. Great work!

  • @Sasquatch7.62
    @Sasquatch7.62Күн бұрын

    Id like to know what country these tools are MADE IN, example... is it made in china? Made in vietnam? We should know the country of origin when doing reviews.

  • @Mollison1209
    @Mollison12092 күн бұрын

    Great energy. I like your motivation to learn and do much more... The world is a better place with your dedication and committment. Thank you.

  • @cotandiet6096
    @cotandiet60962 күн бұрын

    Thank you so much for sharing.

  • @ChristIsLord229
    @ChristIsLord2292 күн бұрын

    Ff7 is a great game. But im in love with Ffvi. Best musical score ever.

  • @jimrosson6702
    @jimrosson67023 күн бұрын

    Another absolutely great video always look forward to each and every video so helpful and informative. Thanks for sharing as always.

  • @danathomas7870
    @danathomas78703 күн бұрын

    Good advice!!!!

  • @ericb547
    @ericb5473 күн бұрын

    I was literally just in my shop today thinking this very same thing. I want my space to inspire me, not just be a boring box. Thanks for the inspiration!

  • @Harleydane
    @Harleydane3 күн бұрын

    Love your posts, I find myself looking forward to end of week to see if there will be a new video. Must also say if I’m feeling really frustrated with a current project, that I can always get some motivation from watching on of your videos . Now for the negative, my only complaint is having to wait up to 2 weeks for new episodes and wish they were a bit longer, I know you have patreon now but being on a fixed income I can’t really swing it yet. Anyways keep it up love the channel .

  • @youzhou2946
    @youzhou29463 күн бұрын

    if it is the same thickness, glue and flush with each other, why not just glue a few boards together? I thought frame and panel construction is to reduce the weight while still maintaining most of the strength and also have a few floating board for seasonal movement?

  • @merikatools568
    @merikatools5683 күн бұрын

    Someone told me guys who use Harvey table saws touch other guys weiners and kick puppies

  • @ABNestor
    @ABNestor3 күн бұрын

    Best ad read ever! But now I want to know what "Comparative Religion" is.

  • @DennisL-ch1fx
    @DennisL-ch1fx3 күн бұрын

    Can I add a 4th coat of the 1st finish if I sanded some spots during the first and second coats?

  • @twandieltjes1359
    @twandieltjes13593 күн бұрын

    I did a glue up of a picture frame with miters last week. I should had seen this video with the brownpaper trick before. In my country, I don’t know brown paper. Is it something special? Which type of glue did you used for gluing the blocks? Thanks for sharing !

  • @twandieltjes1359
    @twandieltjes13593 күн бұрын

    This is a great joint I will try soon. I need to make some tools cabinets for myself so a great moment to try it. So what you are saying, this joint is strong enough to use it also for the bodem to the styles. I’ll give it a try

  • @twandieltjes1359
    @twandieltjes13593 күн бұрын

    Beautiful technik and explained!

  • @VietTran-xl2ms
    @VietTran-xl2ms3 күн бұрын

    Use the rounded arch on the hand router, not the straight edge of the router guard. This will completely eliminate accidental slip or jams of the straight edge which results in a messed up router line if you are trying to make straight cuts with a reference edge. No matter how the router happens to roll on the rounded arch side, the router line will always stay perfectly straight.

  • @tinkmarshino
    @tinkmarshino3 күн бұрын

    She-lac!

  • @blairtree
    @blairtree3 күн бұрын

    IN California I am not finding turpentine. Do you think Painters Solvent would be an ok substitute ?

  • @kingofcastlechaos
    @kingofcastlechaos3 күн бұрын

    Having been in this industry over 40 yrs, I have seen a lot of "elite" people and their opinions regarding tools and techniques. If they spout off in my shop I take them over to the tool cabinet and have them ask the tools what they think. They always say "Are you crazy?" and I explain that every tool in that cabinet has MANY MORE YEARS of experience than they have and I value the tool's opinion much more than any of their time wasting elite talk. I have had enough apprentices to have heard every possible argument ad nauseum. Love seeing the new artist makers bunch doing their thing on YT. I am an old dog but always learning new tricks.

  • @twcmaker
    @twcmaker3 күн бұрын

    Out of a number of channels I subscribe too. Yours is the only one I don't skip a minute. And, and I've heard that some people set the speed to x1.5. Some to x2 speed which is crazy. Anyhow your 'Average view duration' must be super long. Something I would like to get right without using music. Not easy. Have a wonderful day ❤️ Jamie

  • @rad608
    @rad6084 күн бұрын

    All kinds of things work! Don't be some kind of elitist shithead! And shave off that Iranian beard! LOL

  • @ninjasownpirates
    @ninjasownpirates4 күн бұрын

    My one contribution to those who don't want to wait for the beeswax to dissolve into the turp/oil but also are afraid of having it all near an open flame or hot surface needed for a double boiler. Get a sous vide cooker! 1) they're just great to have for cooking, but you can melt even solid beeswax at 140-150F (the liberon is a mix of beeswax and turpentine, the wax i use is similar but mineral spirits). It's still technically above the flash point so not riskless, but far less risky without a ignition source present. All you have to do is throw all three things in a CANNING jar, put it in your bath and set the cooker to 150. I think you could get away with leaving it until the wax dissolves fully, but every 15-20F I crack the jar open to relieve the pressure since there is likely a large volume of air inside. It's probably much safer to leave it closed, since opening the jar would let out some of the vapors which could in theory be ignited by a spark of some kind. Anyways once the wax is fully dissolved, just take it out and it will solidify at room temperature. My mix of Turp/Watco danish oil/Furniture Clinic Beeswax Polish came out perfectly at the crossroads of liquid and solid. It's technically solid, but just the heat from your fingers will melt it which I find is perfect. Maybe it will be an issue in the summer though? I used pint size jars to make about 300mL, but if I did it differently I'd go with jars that are shorter and/or wider as it's hard to reach in the larger jar easily. Ball's "elite wide mouth half-pint" jar looks like the perfect dimensions, but they don't have the graduation on the side for easy mixing...

  • @CallMeMabie
    @CallMeMabie4 күн бұрын

    Long time fan, first time commenter. This is a great video as always but I just wanted to compliment you on the shirt choices you often make. They're just so darn cool sometimes.

  • @calebplumleeoutdoors
    @calebplumleeoutdoors4 күн бұрын

    Slurping coffee obnoxiously within the first min? Wtf. Lost me and I'm sur many others forever... can we PLEASE STOP this horrific KZread coffee sucking trend already?!

  • @cdnbean
    @cdnbean4 күн бұрын

    THANK YOU for showing different ways to do the same-ish thing - ALSO love showing of errors and how to fix (lord knows I need to know how all the different ways... ) Cheers!

  • @NelsonFerguson-os8ut
    @NelsonFerguson-os8ut4 күн бұрын

    This is how you turn something really simple out of something what would likely be very hard. Reminds me about Woody Hyezmar’s Woodworking Bible which is being given away and can try go’ogling, but I’m not so sure, have a good one!

  • @guillermo7777
    @guillermo77775 күн бұрын

    Nice work, but what about that space i was tough you must leave in a floating door panel, so it’s was all not necessary? After all this years of getting the math right in the cabinet doors, it was a waist of time? Dang it, well forget about them from now on, nice content

  • @ROOKTABULA
    @ROOKTABULA5 күн бұрын

    So could you do this on a large surface like a 4 x 8 foot table or does the "wax" step make this a no go?

  • @calebplumleeoutdoors
    @calebplumleeoutdoors5 күн бұрын

    Yeah, people suggesting that something should cost (or be valued) more just because it was done by hand are nuts. If the end result is identical, there is no reason to belittle people using modern tools. They better be gathering their own rocks to chip into blades to cut down trees with...and they better be gathering those rocks on foot, with moccasins made from animals they collected with their own bare hands before they start judging someone for using power tools. That argument gets real ridiculous real fast. ... telling people their dovetails aren't legit if they used a router... while chiseling wood they bough online lol

  • @glockgrouptherapy
    @glockgrouptherapy5 күн бұрын

    "You don't need it!" Thanks Eric. The wife heard that and now I can't buy it.

  • @andreashagendorf8454
    @andreashagendorf84545 күн бұрын

    Criteria No.2 is kinda useless and not intended to be even with LN or Veritas.

  • @norm_olsen
    @norm_olsen5 күн бұрын

    This is what it's all about! Some brief explanations at the beginning, then a demonstration (or two) showcasing the different approaches, and a great end result! Keep making videos like this, as it is easy to digest and very informative! On a side note, I noticed a trend in your videos.. "Words are hard!" You should make some merch that capitalizes on this! Imaging a shirt with your name on the front, and on the back, the slogan "Wood is hard... words are harder!" lol In either case, I thoroughly enjoy your videos and this channel! Absolutely golden!

  • @214rwoz
    @214rwoz5 күн бұрын

    I don't know if you see this comment, it doesn't matter, I just needed to watch this again, it's one of my favorite tails of wood and workmanship. Thanks for all your time and effort. 1in7

  • @hoseinbebany
    @hoseinbebany5 күн бұрын

    This video should not be more than 5 minutes

  • @southernjoes8372
    @southernjoes83725 күн бұрын

    Excellent work. Great job of explaining the techniques and processes

  • @petercorney3125
    @petercorney31255 күн бұрын

    The milling music 👌🏼

  • @sitgesvillaapartmentneilsc7924
    @sitgesvillaapartmentneilsc79245 күн бұрын

    Many thanks for the recipes for the waxing that you do it's very interesting to see new types of finishes one thing. I'm not sure about though is on the final wax that you apply where you remove most of what you put on in the very final part of the video do you ever go back and lost the wood a few days later once that wax has penetrated more into the wood and perhaps evaporated some of the turpentine. I'm just wondering if it requires a final gentle buffing or is that literally it and you don't go back and visit it again?

  • @tiarnedwards2339
    @tiarnedwards23396 күн бұрын

    Hi Erik, my partner loves the monster mug you are always drinking from, where did you buy it/who made it? Keen to help her track down its source 😊 Thanks!

  • @AABlindSquirrel
    @AABlindSquirrel6 күн бұрын

    You skipped right over the mitered mortise and tenon joint! By far my favorite joint for jewelry box lids.

  • @doneubanks2665
    @doneubanks26656 күн бұрын

    Do you have any plans available for your workstation surface + clamps? That looked incredibly useful and I didn't see them in any of your ShaperHub projects. Thanks for the great intro videos!

  • @codyboudreau2838
    @codyboudreau28386 күн бұрын

    Km17

  • @colleenscorfield3505
    @colleenscorfield35056 күн бұрын

    As ever superb skill and interaction, mistakes are part of life and should never be hidden that's the beauty of "hand made by humans" which adds soul to a piece.