Category: Film
Film Friday – Some Foot-Stomping Music
A little Bluesy foot stomping to get things started. A cigar box guitar, mouth harp and a Farmer Footdrum make a person want to do a little busking. It is a rocking tune that really cranks up about halfway in.
A sweet cover of a sad song. I really like this lady’s voice and I have stripped the audio from this YouTube video and put it on my iPhone in a playlist
A little song set where I am originally from. I have fished in and swam in the Sabine River, saw my first aligator in its waters, BBQed on its banks, drank beer with my toes in its water, canoed a few back channels, and once even bow-fished there for carp and alligator gar.
Film Friday – The Potter’s Wheel – 4/25/2014
Film Friday – Paddle Triple Feature – 4/18/2014
Canoe Paddle Maker
Hand Crafted from Jam Jar Films on Vimeo.
A Cherry Paddle
My Paddle – Luke Gibson from Luke Gibson on Vimeo.
Hawaiian Paddle Maker
Film Friday – Shoes – March 21, 2014
Bespoke Boots:
George’s Boots from farmrun on Vimeo.
A Family shoe business:
E Vogel {Custom Boots and Shoes} from Davide Luciano on Vimeo.
Danner Boots:
Crafting Higher Standards Trailer from Haven Anderson on Vimeo.
Resoling:
Recrafting: Crafting Higher Standards from Haven Anderson on Vimeo.
Film Friday – Chair making – March 7, 2014
This is a long one, but really detailed…
The Sterling Historical Society presents PeterGalbert from Robert McKay Jones on Vimeo.
Film Friday – Book related Double-Feature – Feb. 28, 2014
Film Friday – Guitar Build Double Feature – 12-27-13
Film Friday – The Art of the Tsuba – 12/20/2013
Art. Plain and simple. The skill shown in the following is amazing!
Film Friday – Japanese farm house love story
Minka from Birdling Films on Vimeo.
Film Friday – Making Salt
Not something I would have thought about other wise…
Letting Salt Just Be Salt: Amagansett Sea Salt Co. from SkeeterNYC on Vimeo.
Film Friday – Treadle Lathe
I hate this guy… That hate is mostly born of jealousy. I wish I had his tools, his shop, his free-time and his skill at making complex wood joints. I still hate him though.
Film Friday – Metalwork Double Feature
A Seattle Bike builder:
The Builder – Max Kullaway from Loaded Pictures on Vimeo.
High speed, extreme magnification of metal being cut on a lathe:
Film Friday – Fine Leather Craft
Film Friday – Beekeeping and honey
Ames Farm Honey from The Perennial Plate on Vimeo.
Film Friday – Farm Lathe
The Wood Turner from Elliott Forge on Vimeo.
Film Friday – Waiting Out Winter
I feel exactly like this: keeping busy, waiting on the rain to stop and the sun to come.
WAITING OUT WINTER from Andrew David Watson on Vimeo.
Film Friday – 2/8/13
The video below is a profile of three craftsmen using their hands to make beautiful things. Enjoy.
Handmade from Ryan Buller on Vimeo.
Film Friday -Skills that I wish I had
My lathe and my personal skill set are not up to this task… I was duly impressed!!
Making of a Shade from Soren Berger on Vimeo.
Film Friday – White Noise
Awesome snowboarding flick!! Long and so worth it.
WHITE NOISE – FULL Movie from TimeLine Films on Vimeo.
Film Friday – Glass Sign Artist
Film Friday – 1st Double Feature
Dirftwood. Boards washed up on the beach in a storm. Below is a film in which two guys take a section of lumber found on the Oregon coast and turn it all into functional one-of-a-kind surfboard. Building something both useful and beautiful from reclaimed wood is a thing to aspire to.
Experiment No. 3 – Scrap Surf from Shwood Eyewear on Vimeo.
Jack Daniel’s is the only distillery in the US that still makes its own wooden barrels. Although the process is automated, the production of the coopered tubs that make the aging and mellowing of this fine Tennessee Bourbon possible is mesmerizing to watch.
The Birth of a Barrel from Travis Robertson on Vimeo.
Film Friday – Rope Swing
A swimming hole is just a muddy ditch or a murky pond until one adds a rope swing! A quality strand of rope hung high in a tree makes for hours and days of fun and cements summer memories that last a lifetime. In the film below, a group of friends goes about 5 steps beyond the traditional. I WANT one of my own…
Mike Wilson 99 Foot Rope Swing Quadruple Backflip from Shreddy Times on Vimeo.
Film Friday – Indomitable Spirit & Craft
This guy makes every excuse I have ever had or thought of for why I can’t do something complete and utter BS. Indomitable sprit found here:
Film Friday – A strait-razor shave
I do love a strait-razor shave and I try to have one every year on my birthday. It makes me feel pampered and clean and is something worth savoring and enjoying. I have a couple of my own razors (one VERY nice Sweeney Todd-ish feather of silver and steel), a strop, conditioner, etc…, but doing it yourself is just not the same: There is no hot towel, no inappropriate politically-incorrect barber shoppe banter, no scalp massage, and a complete lack of aftershave. Nope, every grown man should treat himself to a strait-razor shave now and then.
Film Friday – From Tree to Violin
The sound of a violin playing causes an almost visceral reaction in anyone within listening distance. It can take you back to a perfect evening with someone remarkable, move you to tears thinking of the long dead, put a smile on your face, start your feet tapping, remind you of a street corner in a small European city, or fill your eyes with the smoke of a long forgotten tiny bar in the Texas Hill Country.
I have an amazing leather-bound book that was my grandfathers. It is a mostly English (a little German) treatise on building a violin and was published in 1889. There are maybe 20 full-sized patterns in it that have been removed, traced, and returned. I have no idea if my grandfather was the tracer or if he ever attempted or built the violin outlined in the book. It could have been a Bucket-List project for him, but I know he touched it and at the very least thumbed through it and looked at it sitting on the shelf that I found it on in his workshop when I was 8. Now it is on my Bucket-List.
Film Friday – Wooden Clogs?!?
I am not a big clog wearer… But I can appreciate the work that goes into crafting them. Althuough some of the work is done by machine, it is not like the shoes are being cut to the 1/1000th of an inch on a 21st Century HAAS CNC machine. The makers of this type of footwear are using old iron to rough the shoes out and then hand fitting and finishing them. These are built for wear and use and not for souvenirs to hang in an Amsterdam tourist shop. If you take a day trip out from Amsterdam/Rotterdam into the fields and villages, you will still see these on people’s feet. The same holds true with parts of Spain and France – especially with older rural residents.
Film Friday – MAD Lathe Skills!
Watching this video took away every excuse I have ever had on why my projects don’t tun our like I want them: “My Lathe is old,” “My Chisels aren’t right,” “I need a new jig,” I don’t have quality oak/maple/mahogany/black palm/koa to work with,” “The tool rest I use is crap”… Nope, I now know that every one of those phrases was complete and utter ego-protecting crap. Watch what this Moroccan craftsman does with a medieval bow lathe, a skew chisel, cast off wood, and his toes(!!). I am humbled.