Your endeavour to educate the beginners is highly appreciated.
Absolutely brilliant! I have great respect for the art of carpentry. I've always nurtured a 'secret' desire to learn some carpentry skills and have my very own little workshop, but being a lady sometimes means that people might not take you seriously if you try to step into this very male dominated world of construction. You are a GREAT teacher! Very inspiring! ๐๐๐๐
I learned more in 12 minutes than I have in most of my life
I'm a 68yr old retired RN. You won't find me sitting and knotting. I want to do woodworking! I can't find local woodworking classes. I just found this and I'm excited about it. Very informative. Thank you, so much!
Dude I'm way behind on alot of things in life but with this video I feel like I'm getting finaly somewhere, thank you man.
I don't know if you found your calling in life, but if you were my HS shop teacher, I would have never missed a class. I find your videos informative, and both the pace and duration effective. Subscribed and marked for notifications. Thanks for the videos!
As a carpenter apprentice I find this very useful! It's almost like learning another language with all of the terminology. Thanks for this, brother!
Superb presentation.I am a retired accounting professional trying to learn basic woodworking.My tool shop is growing and took delivery of a mitre saw yesterday.Oil painting and carpentry are my current hobbies . Hope to start pottery soon.Have been a jack of all trades all my life.In painting I am approaching the professional threshold now.Best wishes from India ๐ฎ๐ณ.
Hi, wow, I can't say thank you enough for these training videos!! As a disabled, senior recently widowed woman, I am having to learn how to do all repairs and everything else by myself. I have no one to teach me either. So, these videos are going to help me repair things like my bathroom floor that is falling in, my roof that is seriously leaking in my dining room along with the damage it has caused to the ceiling. My 5 acres of property and my home need a lot of repairs and work that I can't afford, therefore I have to figure out how to do everything myself. My husband was trying before he was killed, but, as a Vietnam Veteran, agent orange had left him with a lot of problems and he couldn't do what he needed. So, again, many thanks!!
I'm speechless at the amount of clarity this video (and your others) have given me. I've been interested in woodworking before and have read up on it as well as watched various videos but it has been mostly confusing to me, making me apprehensive about attempting much of what I've learned beyond hammering in a piece of trim...until now. There was literally a sequence of, let's call them "mental domino clicks", where I suddenly understood certain concepts and most things just fell into place. I'm posting on this video but have watched so many others and am just in awe of just how much I didn't know that I didn't know. Thank you for the patience and simplicity in explaining and helping me understand. I think I may have a new interest in making this a hobby!!
This was such high-value information without the BS. Thanks! ๐
Thanks for this basic run down of terminology. It helps asking for help or advice, whether in the store or doing a project. I'm a reasonably competent DIY female. Among women that's a plus. But among men, my credibility is damaged by limitation in terminology. If I make one mistake in the name of anything (e.g., "pusher" instead of "push block"), I see the shared roll of eyes among DIY men who are really no more skilled than myself (on occasion, less). But in an instant, it's like my ignorance of terminology is extrapolated to the rest of my work, and suddenly I'm an outsider, and a project liability. As an example, when my father died, two of the in-laws stripped the garage of his tools before I got home that evening - including MY TOOLS! - because "you don't even know what the tools are called'. It was decided I was unworthy to have them because everybody knows tools belong with men. The good news is having come from Biology and pre-med, I love the languages of terminology. Law, medicine, physics, automotive, carpentry, plumbing ... you name it, the more words the better! They all have their language, and even if I can't fluently SPEAK the language, it's a tremendous thing to 'follow along' easily when it's being discussed in a store, during instruction, a tutorial video, or just asking a specific question to get a specific answer. Interestingly, when people can't make out what their doctor said, I can explain it in layman terms without embarrassing anyone. Not so a woman with bad tool and woodcraft terminology. It's evidently a dead giveaway our brains must be made of cotton wool and sawdust. :D
Thank you. Iโm a 34 year old woman with NO experience with any of this. Iโve been a pretty girly girl for most of my life. Lol. But I own a house and Iโm becoming interested in building/fixing things myself. Thereโs no classes around here and Iโd probably feel super out of place at one anyway. Lol. Hesitant to get started on anything without learning about terms, tools and how to use them safely, basic concepts, etc. this is the perfect start so thanks!
Great style of comms, no unnecessary music or gimmicks, clear & concise with excellent on-topc information - I always learn and retain a lot from this presenter.
Iโm 15 and Iโm slowly getting into carpentry. Thanks for the tips and terminology!
I have a lot of tools - but no workspace. I live in a two-story "townhouse", with all the rooms occupied. I've no garage or cellar, and during much of the time here in south Florida, it's too hot/humid/mosquito-annoying to use my workbench in my patio. Many of my tools are hand-me-downs from dad and grandpa, which I treasure. No tools of mine are loaned out because I've learned that they come back dirty/broken/misused. I treasure my tools and treat them with respect so that they will always be ready to work properly for me. No tool is put down without something like an Amazon plastic bag underrneath it, to protect it and keep it clean, AND - just yesterday I received a FLEX brand combo Oscillating-Multitool for which I hope to have many uses in my endeavor to make occasional household repairs. MANY THANKS FOR YOUR TUTELAGE!!
I love this. I didn't think I would like woodworking, but the quality of the video made it so easy to listen and understand!! thanks for putting out, a well explained, to the point video!! I think this just started my woodworking journey!!
Probably the most informative and interesting woodworking video i've ever watched on youtube! Thank you so much. Excited for part 2.
Thank you! I've been doing basement concrete forming for the past 3 years to learn how to build my own house. Moving onto carpentry in maybe a year or 2 and this has been a great introduction to comprehending this new and exciting field for me.
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