Amazing Connect No Screw With Japanese Woodworking Joints Skills, Making Tensegrity Wood Structure
Amazing Connect No Screw With Japanese Woodworking Joints Skills, Making Tensegrity Wood Structure
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Reminds me of the dragon thrones joints
🤍👍
Amazing work done there. The precision is insane. Japanese joinery is just outstanding.
これは日本じゃないよ
A note to anyone wanting to achieve accuracy in joinery. Don't ever use a standard pencil no matter how sharp, and never those horrible fat carpenters pencils. Get a modern .7mm or .5mm auto pencil. Then always work to the outside of that line when cutting. I have 40 years of experience and this is the number 1 tip I will give you. Fat pencil lines are a disaster. Always leave an area to clean away with a chisel and you will achieve some amazing accuracy. One further tip. You can buy a powder that locksmiths use as a lubricant for locks its called graphite. If you apply it to one face it's like dark pencil powdered lead and it will show you when assembling the joints the high spots that need removal. It's cheating but it's an inside tip.
That pencil tip is exactly what I needed, I was wondering why my fine mitres were not working out. That makes complete sense. Been using the big fat pencils
lol bs
Dentists do the equivalent of the graphite trick. They don't consider it "cheating".
I've seen a video of a gunsmith that uses graphite when machining parts to check the fit.
Locksmith here, graphite power has so many usages that you would never think off unless you see people doing the odd tips on videos lol
I’ve seen Japanese carpenters working on a house before. Not a single metal fastener in sight; not even glue! They design all the joints to just slot together neatly and securely and before you know it, you have a beautiful Japanese style IKEA house!
do you like it ?
Yes! It’s beautifully elegant. It gives the impression of a long architectural tradition that perhaps began millennia; if not tens of millennia ago.
Beautiful and a good lesson that one doesn’t need tens of thousands of dollars worth of work benches and exotic equipment to produce beautiful joinery!
@@ShawnWitty Chuckle, relax Shawn, I’m just kidding … sort of. I just finished watching a lengthy video about the nuances of carpentry benches the models of which are breathtakingly beautiful, surprisingly complex and frigging expensive - and are apparently essential to the craft - I’m 73 and find myself wondering how I ever built anything on my work benches. Now I didn’t ever say I have anything against workbenches, I’ve used one since I was in my teens crafting dashboards for cars, and I don’t have anything against the individual who built a workbench worth thousands of dollars. My point is *such workbenches are not necessary.* The amount of beautiful clear maple and exotic hardwoods that went into that bench I saw was really quite incredible but it is not a necessary expense for any woodworker. Ergo, as an illustration, H Carpenter’s workbench was nothing like those expensive workbenches yet he turns out very lovely timber joinery. Now, H Carpenter usually demonstrates hand tools but also uses power tools to great effect, albeit power tools that are about as far from exotic equipment as one could want. You seem perplexed by the word exotic … Lordy … KZhead is littered with it and at one level it means more than is needed. At this point, let’s separate commercial production equipment, custom cabinet and furniture making and the home based amateur work. The first two use the best equipment they can justify to remain competitive - they don’t count here. The custom cabinet / furniture maker will probably do much more hand work simply because his/her customers want and demand it to be done that way. However, in his videos, H Carpenter demonstrates what can be done with a rickety bench, a hand saw, chisels, c clamps, a rudimentary leg vice and a mallet. To be honest I think this is closer to where beginners should start their woodworking journey, not with Festool, thousand dollar routers, CNC machines, etc. The more esoteric the machinery the further away one is from actually understanding wood. Indeed, my response is partly personal … for example, I cut thousands of dovetails with a Leigh Dovetail Jig, but it wasn’t until I began to hand cut dovetails that I really began to understand them. So, Shawn Witty, “that’s my story and I’m sticking to it.”
You just need tens of thousands of hours of practice or experience!
@@chuckw4680 Or tens of thousands of dollars to buy furniture made with no power tools!
You clearly don't NEED to, but this video sort of proves why all that fancy equipment is used by professionals in the first place
@@alanmonteros6432 ????????????? It’s used by professionals to make money.
Man you Japanese people are masterpiece in woodworking. I really love and admire your skills
❤❤❤
いや、多分タイとか中国とかベトナムの人じゃないかな?
@xxxKAWAUSOxxx I think the carpenter is from Vietnam.
Yep, definitely Viet Nam based on the bag design and the view
They are all Chinese mortise and tenon joints
The Master Craftsman created a unique joint, immaculately, strongly, very accurately, using only basic, but essential hand & measuring tools, which many people don’t know. That’s what separates top professionals from amateurs.
♥
Once again another satisfying result. You are truly a master Mr. H
amazing, I remember what was my father's daily work... He was a carpenter.
Aah, that sound. Chisel, wood and hammer!
Absolutely amazing. This goes way beyond our tongue and groove.
True but it wouldn't work for many places TAG is used like joining floor boards or roofing panel OSB together.
It´s such an incredible pleasure to see this man at work - he is nearly an artist, not only a carpenter!
That is what craftsmanship is about
Thanks for showing us how the joint fit right away
Hello Japan, great work, you have much to be proud of!!! from Michigan, USA.
Another beautifully made joint 👍
Absolutely amazing what a craftsman. Lovely to watch an artist at work👍and all done by hand
Молодец вьетнамец😊
Amazing ❤😊
You my friend are an absolute genius. Stunning joinery
Wow!! Done completely by hand, a true master at work!! Great job, I really appreciate hard work.
I'm trying to improve my woodworking skills hopefully someday I'll be able to do work like this
Very skilled workmanship..
Definitely an elegant solution.
That man is truly a craftsman, I’d have a hard time with that if I used power tools, by hand NOT A CHANCE. I wish I had skills like that
Beautiful masterpiece. Skillfully handcrafted joinery. Your creation is amazing. I enjoyed your work.
Nice joinery work
Love the Dusty Lumber impression
I am in awe at the excellence of the skill and artistry displayed here!
thanks you
Papi c'est toi le meilleur
Japanese are by far the best woodworkers in the world
yes♥
Gorgeous but expensive. By the time he drew the lines, Western workers would have already bolted the two pieces together. I wish we would all take more time out of our lives to build more traditionally and bring back the art of woodworking.
VERY IMPRESSIVE SKILLS GOOD JOB MASTER 👍 GREETINGS FROM CALIFORNIA , U S.A PEACE ✌️🙏 !!!!
CALIFORNIA , U S.A ♥ love it
Japanese woodworking joints are truly mesmerizing! 🌟 Making wood structures look so effortless and beautiful!
One could almost see the sun go down while he was using the hand saw 😂 Great craftmanship!
😂
Amazing woodworking skill!
Man I am so glad screws were invented, otherwise I'd never use wood.
True craftsman....amazing to watch🪚🔨
*Wonderful job, like it if you love wood.*
Very accurate and attractive. I do wonder a bit about the strength of the joint. The side extensions of the male half of the joint are short grain and would break off quite easily.
Thought the same thing, and the more precise the fitting the more things like expansion could cause it to break.
Same here. It probably would be stronger if the lower part of the cross had the shape of d dovetail.
Great;.watching you work
Absolutely fantastic what a skill to have
That was impressive!!! Do you think Leigh will be coming out with a new dovetail jig attachment to do this joint?
That was a wonderful thing to watch such skills
Amazing work 👏👏👏👏
I figured that kind of structure would be fine for smaller furniture, but would it be structurally sound, especially when it's part of a structure that's bearing a lot of weight? A lot of the pressure is going to put on that small neck that holding the two pieces together.
Yup. There's no need to make that neck so narrow. The only reason it's made like that is so it looks nice for this video.
This is a beautiful joint, and the woodworker demonstrates fantastic crafstmanship and skills, but this has nothing to do with tensegrity.
Fantastic & thank you for sharing!
what a skill. 👍
Your SKILLS are AMAZING! Thank you for SHARING!
Im guilty of wanting to use electronic tools but only because i started late and I'm never going to be the greatest.. but using hand tools is definitely great practice
♥
Outstanding craftsmanship bowsaw chisel mallet no fancy machinery 👍
Замечательный мастер. Такая точность в работе. Считай "на колене". Да ещё и съемка без "воды". Класс! Класс! Класс!
All right
Ace Ventura: "Like a glove!"
♥
@@HCarpenterhow do you start learning to make Japanese woodworking joints?
Superb
this man is The Wood Bender!
And that's true hand woodworking
I bet he shaves every morning with those same chisles they are so sharp. Absolutely amazing control of his hand tools
WOW! Amazing!
yeah
My husband’s family built all their buildings like this except the last one, in which small wooden pegs were used. That’s because the teenage boys in the family didn’t have enough skills yet to do it like this. That was in 1947.
Beautiful workmanship sir. Ill be watching more of your content for sure. Cheers from Canada my friend!
Thank you for sharing your knowledge, it's very instructive ! From France, Merci !
Úžasný spoj, geniálne.
Beautiful! 👏🏽👍🏽
This makes my head explode. 🤯
👍💓!!!
I could spend a summer on an Amish farm . 😊
Amazing work
Gratitude
Notice the specialist wide chisels used to clear the extra tapered spaces in the square leg part of this joint. I WISH I was one tenth as skilled as this guy.
But how does it fit so extremely well at every single point and angle?!
Enjoy wood joinery but the standard methods aren't unnecessarily intricate enough for you? Well, this is your video.
I love his smile.
Wow, lovely. Thank you so much.
absolutely magnificent
And you can tell he made his own saw handle two and knows how to work that blade you don't see much like this done anymore anywhere without our machinery very impressive he could definitely make some Fine Furniture
Amazing yes. But sometimes modern engineers have use through bolts in older buildings for safety.
I can't believe he's hand sawing this
Master of the craft
amazing techniques! greetings from Argentina
amazing work.
Great😊
I hope this guy makes good money, because working at that pace I would be out of a job lol. It's beautiful don't get me wrong, but these days labor is all about speed of production.
That's absolutely gorgeous! What a beautifully crafted precision joint! Excellent work! 👍🏼👍🏼
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Super excellent
Those joints survive earthquakes time after time the Japanese are levels above the rest of the world. 🙏🇬🇧🇬🇧🙏 New sub
Question: I know this is all quality hard wood but will prolonged moisture/humid environments cause cracking?
Excellent work friend!!
На столбе желательно делать полноценную площадку для горизонтальной балки, а то вся нагрузки приходится на крестовину
Seems like a lot of time to build something. But worth it
Japanese carpenter ethos: "Relax. We got time. One joint at a time...
Gives me euphoria watching this video
Maybe that would link up better, but are screws and “L” joints faster and as effective? I imagine it’s a matter of what resources one has on hand. Time,money, machinery, metal for screws. This is very skilled and inventive. I like it
Japanese culture has a thing where if a building gets destroyed or damaged, if it is rebuilt using the same methods that were originally used for it, it is basically the exact same building. So there are specialty shops that still use these methods specifically for the use on historical structures. Japan has, historically, not had access to very much metal and what they did have had to be more heavily refined to be usable compared to most other parts of the world, so methods like this were developed for building making.
For want of a nail, an art was born.@@Dunsparce206
Faster and cheaper, yes. But not as earthquake resistant.
Those would be considerably weaker, but this is a decorative joint, it won't be as strong as a big dovetail or pegged mortise and tennon, and either of those are much faster and easier to cut. They won't look as good, but often strength and speed are more important, which is why you can find mortise and tennon joinery in thousands of timber framed barns all across America but probably won't find a single one of these even though each of those barns will have dozens of joints.
What kind of wood are you using?
It probably takes a full day just to work on that single joint, but it will last for centuries.
Was this necessary? No, Did it look cool? Absolutely
Even with your lifetime of improving your skills as a craftsman I believe (as a machinist) that you spend time comparing and custom fitting the wood that is not shown. While wood does have some give that allow you to do a final press fit, those almost air-tight seems are much closer than you can cut with a pencil or pen drawn line. There is also a chance (very good chance) that I have NO IDEA what I am talking about. Well done and thank you for the video.
コメントの皆んなが、彼を日本人だと思っている😂 彼は東南アジアの人だよ。
やっぱ西洋から見れば違いがワカランのだろうな(´・ω・`)動画主も『日本の木工技術はAmazing』て言われて『yes』とか言っちゃってるもんな
Amazing work! 👍
Looks good but the "wings" on the cross shape will break easily as the wood grain is in wrong direction and very short. This join will snap under leverage. Very beutiful though. Good decoration for something that doesnt need much strength👍