Best Woodworking YouTube Channels...

[member=66597]Mario Turcot[/member]

I checked it out and liked it very much. Much better then the Festool Live no wooooooooos or yea babys or 3 stooges imitations which I find to be extremely annoying but he has some good info on that channel
 
jobsworth said:
[member=66597]Mario Turcot[/member]

I checked it out and liked it very much. Much better then the Festool Live no wooooooooos or yea babys or 3 stooges imitations which I find to be extremely annoying but he has some good info on that channel

I feel the same about the Festool live. However he is an energic guy with a lot of knowledge.
 
Bob D. said:
"If you are into metal working check out Alec Steele"

Also TOT (This Old Tony) is a good machining and metalworking channel.

Here are a couple more related to metalworking:

mrpete222 (over 1200 YT videos)

Blondihacks

Joe Pieczynski
 
Just recently 'found' Stavros Gakos' channel... primarily 'cordless' hand tool work, actually *making* and rebuilding old fashioned wood-bodied planes.  Amazing work.


Sent from my SM-P610 using Tapatalk

 
I’ve been subscribed to this channel for a few weeks now, and there’s something about the complex simplicity of this craftsman’s work. The WAY he work..
There’s no fancy tools in sight either.. but I find I’m drawn into watching, learning.

DIY Creation Woodworking
=share
 
Is it ok to recommend your own channel?

My channel, Carmonius Finsnickeri, is mainly about jigs and way of working. As example I invented the Festool Domino jig for small parts that was appreciated on this forum, have a lot of router jigs as well on youtube. Idea with the channel is not to post frequently just for the sake of it, so tired of seeing all "The Ultimate...crosscut sled, flattening jig...etc" with some fancy intro just to find out it's pretty much the same design as in 100 other films on youtube.

So, I might be off for a few months or even over a year as this time (much due to other reasons) but when I upload it should be something new. Jigs are always new, I might upload way of work videos and there it's a bit more difficult to decide what's new.

Anyway, I think my latest jig, "The Superjig" might be worth watching (as well as my router jig play list) if you're interested in jigs or woodworking as a whole. It's a super accurate box joint/tenon jig on steroids and not like all the others. I call it a gamechanger and I think it is.

3 parts, each around 20 mins.




 
Ola, I just saw the first video of 3..

It’s amazing! I’m finding time to watch the two last ones, and the first once again..
Incredibly done  [smile]
 
[member=71478]FestitaMakool[/member] Thanks! [smile]

It's in part 3 it really comes to live showing at least some of it's potential but part 1 and 2 was needed to explain the basics. I'm still amazed myself by the results I get from the Superjig.
 
That's really well done!  Really appreciated all three videos and walking through your thinking on how you worked out the details!

Great work!
 
MadeByRaphael


His videos are a mix of creative makeovers of old furniture along with some new work from baltic birch.
 
Kingpost and Bradshaw are some of my top favorites, there is also a young lady in the Lake District of the UK called "Country Wood Girl". She does some nice stuff too, including the occasional lathe project.
 
[member=71921]Ola C[/member]

ive book marked and watch it for a while now very good
 
Lately, the YouTube algorithm has been throwing quite a few Korean woodworkers into my feed. The most recent channel I've been watching is WOODBRO.

The video production and projects aren't quite as refined as what you'd find on a channel like Squarerule, but I like some of their design aesthetics and I've been able to glean numerous tips from the videos.
 
Another Korean woodworker found his way into my feed. He calls himself the Amateur Woodworker. His videos are mostly him woodworking with background music and occasional Korean/English subtitles.

Projects include desks, chairs, trays, and jigs with a mixture of power and hand tools.

Relevant to FOG, here's a Systainer toolbox designed to hold sandpaper:
 
This woodworker doesn't have many videos but the quality of her projects and editing is rapidly improving. Her recent white oak table build looks really nice.


 
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