I love Norm Abram, but I absolutely hate the trend of video producers to use AI voice-overs. Every time the voice said "asterisk New Yankee Workshop asterisk" my ears heard fingernails on a chalkboard.
@1811bruce2 ай бұрын
Agree!
@neilteeter96002 ай бұрын
This man changed the direction of my life. In the late 80's, I was in the hospitality management industry. Watching the New Yankee Workshop, I was inspired to take up woodworking. His method of breaking down the complex nature of furniture into easily understandable task, I started buying tools and never looked back. I spent almost 20 years building a life of custom cabinetry and furniture and I still do it on a part time basis. It has been some of the most important memories of my life. Thank you , Norm, for the life you have given me.
@chadanderson27982 ай бұрын
I used to watch New Yankee workshop and the Woodrights shop on Saturdays all through my childhood. I look back on the days in the eightees and I wish I could live those Saturday mornings all over again. RIP Norm! U were one of a kind and no one will ever be able to fill your shoes. What an awesome legacy.
@pjdambra2 ай бұрын
Norm was my idol as a woodworker. I must have watched every NYW a dozen times. I still love seeing him and the NYW along with This Old House. I still wear my plaid shirts daily. Love You Norm. The Best Teaching Woodworker Ever. He's a National Treasure. He Deserves the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
@billdemarce17892 ай бұрын
Built many of Norms projects. I built the gazebo for a Catholic church a year ago.
@jamespulaski3507Ай бұрын
I grew up in Massachusetts and his show left an impact on me. I wish I could go back to those days. Thanks Norm.
@skeeter197140Ай бұрын
I used to love watching Asterisk This Old House Asterisk. And I learned a lot from watching Asterisk This Old House Asterisk. I liked The New Yankee Workshop, but it didn't help me as much as Asterisk This Old House Asterisk did for learning about all the different trade work. Anyone out there wanting to pick up some nice tricks of the trade, definitely give Asterisk This Old House Asterisk a try!
@DalHarpJrАй бұрын
I'm almost 53 years old, and I've been watching This Old House since the Bob Villa and Bob Riley days, when I was a young head. Then I remember Norm Abram making his debut with the aforementioned cast members! I still watch them all whenever the shows are on. Now that I stream shows on Peacock, I can watch This Old House all day on its dedicated channel.
@denveradams49092 ай бұрын
I loved to watch The New Yankee Workshop and also This Old House. Norm's skill and mild mannerisms made him a joy to watch and learn from.
@GRIMRPR6942Ай бұрын
Between Norm, Bob Vila, and Steve Thomas, my young adulthood was complete! Such incredible carpenters and ambassadors for the craft.
@deankay44342 ай бұрын
Norm will forever be in my heart when I cut or smell fresh cut wood! Thank kindly for sharing your experience and wisdom! DK, Omaha.
@johnthompson53702 ай бұрын
Woodworking had been my hobby for over 45 years. I the beginning I just sort of winged it making very simple stools and whatnot. When i discovered NYW in the late 80's my interest took off. I took on more complex project and really fell in love with the hobby. I owe all to Norm. He's an exceptional personality. Thank you Norm from the bottom of my heart.
@C.W.NewmanАй бұрын
A great and informative video to show if you stick to your dreams , anything is possible . In the last year of woodshop we all had a project to do . I ran one piece of pine with the end grain showing . I received my only F in 4 years of woodworking . One summer I went back to my high school woodworking teacher . I told him , i just got hired to apprentice for a Cabinet Maker''s position ..He replied What , you have to be kidding me ! I said no , if you hadn't given me that F , I don't think I would've stuck to my dreams . A bit later on , I had my own business , and built all the kitchens for all 5 of my homes . In closing , Never give up !
@denisemurray4122 ай бұрын
In college the girls would have repair issues in their dorm rooms. Calls to the maintenance department meant long delays. After a while the girls knew I had my own tool box and started calling me instead. Freshman year I got fussed at a lot by the maintenance department. After my sophomore year the maintenance department started telling the girls what room I was staying in. The only thing I never could repair was a faucet drip in a girlfriend's sink. (I didn't have a pipe wrench.) I took a measuring cup and timed how long it took to fill the cup. Called maintenance. You know, they were there in half an hour? Years of watching Norm and This Old House were much loved and absorbed. Thank you, sir.
@MrRemerickАй бұрын
He was a Man's Man I never missed a showing. Will wear my red plaid shirt this week...
@billdemarce17892 ай бұрын
I love Norm. He and Tom are the best of the best. Rest in peace Roger
@1960fusion2 ай бұрын
Russ Morash and Norm introduced a generation to the joys of woodworking...thank you gentleman for the hours of true entertainment throughout the years...miss The New Yankee Workshop, often duplicated, but never equaled! RIP Russ!
@erikipedia10 күн бұрын
asterisk This Old House asterisk.
@BillyHenry-fk1qg2 ай бұрын
He began to become famous on this Old House thank God his own show the Yankee workshop he was an expert at everything he did carpentry
@sethshade31212 ай бұрын
I grew up watching The New Yankee workshop with my grandfather and still do wood working from time to time.
@jerryhosford4557Ай бұрын
I loved watching NYW and This old House all the time. Norm was not only a master carpenter, but he was a brilliant teacher.
@williamgibb55572 ай бұрын
Norm took several summer vacations in Scullville, NJ. I lived in Ocean City,NJ . Only about 10 miles away. I was once asked if I was him. I entered a like-look contest at Woodworkers Warehouse and came in 2 place. The beard , flannel shirt and general build did it. I bought many items at Woodworkers Warehouse for my own hobby woodworking business. I loved woodworking from my courses in Ocean City High School. Loved his show more then This Old House when Bob Villa was host. He left, and the show got better. Still enjoy woodworking as a hobby building for friends and family and myself . I'm 72. From Dennistownship, NJ. Norm is a great teacher and tv friend.
@randyjones22042 ай бұрын
Loved this video of Norm Abram and his life. I've been a follower since 1990 and have been inspired . Thanks very woodworking Norm
@MAGA-micАй бұрын
I recently completed a carpentry project. It's said that you learn from your mistakes. I learned a lot doing that project.
@PaulBrannan-mb8wv2 ай бұрын
Norm was a master at joinery the old methods and some new "biscuit " joints. A true joy to watching the show for many years
@joehenderson57302 ай бұрын
Without a doubt Norm is the king of woodworkers and the greatest of teachers for his ability to explain and show how easy you can do complicated things easily in understandable terms.
@richfabian65342 ай бұрын
I loved watching a lot of his shows of the New Yankee Workshop and This Old House and always wished I could copy his woodworking skills, Thanks Norm you have been a Great Teacher
@allen353152 ай бұрын
New Yankee Workshop was must viewing
@donmarek7001Ай бұрын
Years ago, his show would come after the Woodright's Shop with Roy Underhill. It was fun watching the contrast between woodworking with hand tools versus Abrams where he could build a wooden space shuttle for launch if he wanted to.
@NielsCGАй бұрын
Norm Abram is my Teacher, I've learned from the best watching his shows
@paulkuba67542 ай бұрын
Norm meant alot to me and my father .It was the 2 shows Toh/Nyw that we really had in common. My father wasn't into sports at all. But when norm was on, you could hear a pin drop. He gave me a way to have something in common with my dad. We often said lets try that on the next room. We did all the remodeling in family homes with cousins aunts and uncles. My first job doing remodeling was taking nails out of old lumber and straighten them out, just to hear they had plenty of nails already. To sweeping up sawdust. I still laugh about it too this day. THANKS NORM ...
@RissaFirecat2 ай бұрын
I loved this show! He is an amazing woodworker.
@Manfromron2 ай бұрын
Extraordinary coverage of the heartbreaking tragedy.
@rayjos0424Ай бұрын
It was amazing the number and quality of the machines he had access to! I used to always comment about how no tool was ever used twice! I always thought that if i had the tools he had, I could build anything he built, too! ! His tools and shed and all available to him must have cost in excess of 1 million dollars.
@larrycrain5650Ай бұрын
I taped many of his original shows so I could re- watch and learn. I built most of the stuff in my home from cabinets to interior doors. Thanks Norm.
@jimfeaster48372 ай бұрын
One of the greatest😊 I have always enjoyed made my life better Number 1 inspiration
@lindapatan2 ай бұрын
I have built or supervised the building of five dozen of his Adirondack chairs. It was a perfect project for my junior high school students.
@innsanewayne2 ай бұрын
I remember, and none more important than these, safety glasses. Every show that was said.
@maxwebster7572Ай бұрын
Back in the day we used to record these episodes on a Beta or VHS recorder. The top loader recorders were the thing to have.
@Liz-gn5us2 ай бұрын
I remember him as as a young mom and wanting my own home which I never lived in. My daughter was born. 1980
@wpbrighamАй бұрын
Grew up watching these guys, amazing things they did
@sandrafleck92142 ай бұрын
Enjoyed watching him on This Old House since I was quite young.
@NebukedNezzerАй бұрын
I and the whole country loved Norm
@campshortclip2 ай бұрын
When people like Norm quit building houses. Houses became throwaway junk in homebuilder communities.
@goochi55442 ай бұрын
I love this man. I learned so much from him.
@Redeye59782 ай бұрын
Norm was and is a inspiration for myself and numerous Carpenter's watching TOH and NYW gave many of us the I can do that kick in the butt that pushed me now 48 years and countless Cabinet and trim and more projects. Thanks Norm
@dawnwagoner83072 ай бұрын
He also worked with This Old House . I never miss an episode and watched the very beginning
@scottmcintosh2988Ай бұрын
The cedar shingles lesson from Norm double the first two rows of cedar shakes then the next nine rows get a little more to the weather until it is 3 1/2 to 4 1/2 inches to the weather ! As I was 150 feet from the Atlantic Ocean on three sides in Nova Scotia South West tip my mile of oceanfront ! Thanks Norm !!!
@gregfulks41192 ай бұрын
We own a prototype of a chimney cabinet he built. It wasn't the one from the show. Norm made a prototype of all his projects to prove the concept. Ours is made of pine. The drywall screws all show. The hinges are mismatched. Just some of the things that make it unique.
@markbird1965Ай бұрын
Norm was a consumate professional with a workshop that was the envy of every tradesman.
@James-x7e5uАй бұрын
I used to watch every episode of This Old House Then I bought an old house and realized I wasn't Norm Abraham
@wegmandanАй бұрын
I enjoyed Yankee workshop show
@kenhelmers2603Ай бұрын
I bought so many of his plans. I miss this guy
@maxwebster7572Ай бұрын
I truly miss Norm and Bob Vila together. The show was never the same IMHO.
@JeffMatthews-f8dАй бұрын
What can you say about Norm Abram that hasn't already been said. I started watching Norm on This Old House and then right on into the New Yankee Workshop. I've watched every episode multiple times and the NYW I had every episode taped on VHS, remember that? Seriously though Norm is the Master, I love his Attention to detail and his absolute devotion to doing it right the first time. Norms easy going style of teaching and his method of explaining every step from start to completion is Outstanding. Needless to say I've learned so much from Norm over the years and I would love nothing more than to be able to tell him that face to face. To be able to express how much I respect and admire him and to Thank him for his knowledge and Wisdom through the years. It's so funny, I feel like I already know him even though we've never met. I have been wanting to meet Norm since both of us had dark hair and beards but Unfortunately have never been able to do it. Well were both quite a bit older now and the hair and beard have gone grey! But were both retired now so maybe, If the good Lord allows I'll still get my Chance to meet a Hero. Thank you so much Norm for being the Man that you are. God Bless you Brother and I wish you many many Happy years of good Health and making big piles of saw dust. Jeff M
@charliebrushwood90192 ай бұрын
the John Wayne of wood working for sure
@richardshumate3712Ай бұрын
I grew up learning from men just like Norm,
@Fruitaholics-xq5hvАй бұрын
Just an average dude that was lucky enough to be born near Boston (where PBS would put the money to produce NYWorkshop) and stumble into a show that would make him a household name. As a kid and young adult, I loved Norm's shows and what I was learning from them. As a professional woodworker with decades of experience, mostly earned through mistakes, I watch NYW now and there are a lot of cringy moments and mistakes where you can tell Norm is actually just a knowledgeable amateur and is winging it/muddling through. But in all fairness, it's easy to forget there was no www to look things up on. That's a lot of what made his shows so valuable - where else are you gonna learn about the trades? Those goons are smart enough to keep it in the union/family - now all the secrets are loose on KZbin! LOL - what a different world! Thanks Norm, still love you, mistakes, crazy Boston accent, warts and all!
@dman00442 ай бұрын
I have bought plans for projects from New Yankee Workshop. Table/clap cart, router table.
@gkvogt2 ай бұрын
I always thought that a short bio of Norm's high school shop teacher would be worth watching.
@HHH-nv9xb2 ай бұрын
Amoung, the best of the best talents are college dropouts. There is no shame in it. Silicon valley is full of these people.
@Liz-gn5us2 ай бұрын
Never saw. That show. I enjoyed. To see his skills ❤❤❤
@davidasimkosr46412 ай бұрын
RIP Norm...
@bigjoe24582 ай бұрын
Are his furniture plans still available ?
@charlesroberts29062 ай бұрын
Best
@margegeneverra5594Ай бұрын
How to turn $100 worth of wood into a $500 piece of furniture, using $10,000 worth of tools.
@davekoz82842 ай бұрын
Did he pass on ?
@dh20322 ай бұрын
feel like RIP, but as you say, no little menschen of it, may a morning of show never made anymore, when group z listers seleberties in a island some and do not much else,
@HotRodRodney252 ай бұрын
RIP
@garyv21962 ай бұрын
*
@Conan_Obrien2 ай бұрын
lmao
@mazerat4q22 ай бұрын
Well all you need is 10 million dollars worth of tools, and a 6 million dollar building. I like to see what he can do with a 79 dollar circular saw. I built my house with a 79 dollar skill saw. Comon people. I got a 79$ skill saw a 99$ MIG welder a 139$ table saw and a 59$ router wtf. The paratroopers at Normandy in 1944 only had their helmet to protect them
@hjgreenwood21882 ай бұрын
A
@kennethcolbert29212 ай бұрын
If people had all the tools he had most could do the same thing.