Thank you so much for sharing this! The skill required to so casually shape each piece to the millimetre required is truly a joy to watch. And the long plane used to shape the edges was an epiphany! It's probably just me but it had not occurred to me to turn the plane up and stabilise it, on an angle to allow for the blade, then bring the plank to the plane, not the plane to the plank, as it were. I'm making myself some tailoring and pressing tools lat the moment using the my mini and 30mm kanna for much of the work, but making edges and the smaller pieces would definitely benefit from a larger kanna mounted as in this video, as a kind of "bench kanna" - hang on - omg is the kanna "dai" the same "dai" as "surface"? Is this how they were originally used? Oh this is going to be a rabbit hole! 😂😂 Sorry, I'll stop rabbitting on (note the resistance not to use the rabbet pun that is sitting right there 😅😂) Thanks again!
@ronvoluted7 ай бұрын
This was fun to read- always nice seeing people geek out over woodworking haha
@twcmaker8 ай бұрын
Why has this video not blown up. Crazy. Anyhow that was beautiful to watch and very well edited. Thank you. Looks like the Wood is Cedar. Do you know if it was Cedar?
@nathanjones91052 жыл бұрын
Man that was wicked and really peaceful to watch.. The attention to detail phenomenal.. And dare I ask?? How much would one of these pieces of beauty cost?? Cheers
@ronvoluted7 ай бұрын
Looks like Japanese Tools Australia have them on sale at $550