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Location: Orlando FL
Great video. I really appreciate the work the Japanese put into their woodworking.
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I don’t often have patience to watch a YouTube video for very long but this could have been 2 or 3 times longer and I wouldn’t have gotten tired of watching it. Thanks for posting this.
"When I nod my head, hit it." - M. Howard.
"I think you should learn how to use hand tools before you even touch a power tool." - Sam Maloof
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This is a wonderful video, to my mind well worth the time watching it. That is, if you're needing/wanting inspiration to do better work...- Howard
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I've been hooked on Japanese woodworking and timberframe channels.
I somehow doubt the average Japanese home build involves this much craftsmanship, timber quality and detail.
But maybe I'm wrong.
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Location: Naperville, IL
It's not a house, it's a piece of art. Too bad all that beautiful carpentry work is covered up at the end.
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Location: Orlando, Florida
The upside is these houses last a LONG time. The downside is they are made out of wood, and wood is vulnerable to fire. When I was a kid (4th-6th grade), I lived at Misawa Air Base in northern Japan. We had a major earthquake when I lived there that damaged a lot of the homes on base. Base housing looked a lot like Western building practices. The Japanese homes off base mostly all survived the earthquake (8.2 on the Richter scale), but the earthquake broke a natural gas line and started a major fire than consumed wood homes in a matter of minutes. The fire destroyed 2 or 3 city blocks before it was controlled. It pretty much leveled that area. Now, this was in the late 60's, so I'm sure there are new codes that mitigate fire damage. I wonder if covering up those timbers had more to do with fire prevention and building codes than aesthetics.
Still Learning,
Allan Hill