Thank you for making these videos! I have always wanted to try carpentry like this but it is hard to find practical information, especially because my Japanese is pretty basic.
@_yomogiya3 жыл бұрын
I'm glad you found it useful. My English skills are not very good at all, thanks to DeepL. I am happy to share it with you in this way. Thank you.
@ГеоргийСавватеев-щ9и7 ай бұрын
Спасибо вам, очень познавательное видео! Всегда интересовал японский инструмент, столярное дело. Очень интересно и своеобразно. Вы помогаете понять эту своеобразность! Спасибо!
Amazing. What carpentry schools do you recomend in japan? Which schoold did you attend?
@_yomogiya2 жыл бұрын
I went to a state-run vocational training school. What do you think of the school, is it short term? Or about 2 years?
@argeancomics32912 жыл бұрын
@@_yomogiya 2 year would be nice
@_yomogiya2 жыл бұрын
@@argeancomics3291 Schools are located all over Japan, but the problem is language. This school seems to have foreign students, so it might be good. www.oct.ac.jp/campuslife/foreigner
Is that a tataki nomi? Looks smaller than a timber framing chisel.
@_yomogiya3 жыл бұрын
hi,That's not tataki nomi.That 's ooire nomi. I do not use a tataki nomi. ooire nomi is sufficient.that can be used with hardwood. If I need more length, I use chisel tuki nomi.
@leslievasquez1362 жыл бұрын
@@_yomogiya which ooire nomi do you suggest from the websites provided more specifically which sizes? Thanks for the videos they are helpful
@_yomogiya2 жыл бұрын
@@leslievasquez136 We recommend sizes 9, 28, and 42. I think you can make most things with these.
@leslievasquez1362 жыл бұрын
@@_yomogiya thanks and would you mind recommending a few from the websites if possible?
@_yomogiya2 жыл бұрын
@@leslievasquez136 It's expensive, but I think it's a good idea. noborihamono.shop/shopdetail/000000000318/ct13/page1/order/ Cheap is the way to go. amzn.to/3fvbk4s amzn.to/3rm0tzo amzn.to/3rmdtF8