Start with cast off pallets for your wood. It's a bit of effort but well worth it. I have lots of cast off plywood as well. Plenty to build what you see him show you times 10. You're a city slicker. I live out in the great Pacific Northwest in the woods. I'm surrounded by sawmills. I have my choice of wood and I can go get their cast offs and offcuts. Lots of it has been sitting outside. I know I'm going to have to set up drying racks for it. That's fine, I have temperature/ humidity controlled environment for my plant drying/curing room. Aka the downstairs bathroom.
Edit: But the best source of incredible fine wood is Craigslist. Dining room sets people give them away. Please take this heavy beautiful wood away. I bought a couple of them when I first moved here 3 years ago but they were way too big for my house. So now I have enormous slabs of beautiful maple to cut to fit to whatever I want. Looking at Craigslist, I have my assortment of woods to pick and choose from if I just want to go get some old style, dining room and china closet sets. The reason for my edit is I just moved a table downstairs in multiple pieces, each of them weighing almost as much as me. Railroad trestle legs to hold it up that weigh about 80 lb of pop.
Temu/Amazon order 90% of the hardware for about a hundred bucks. Always do your initial shopping on Amazon, and then double check for what's on temu equivalent, and then see the incredible assortment of all the jigs available for almost no money. Basically, the Amazon stuff is a very limited subset of the temu stuff and it's a far less quality and far higher price.
The tracks are very expensive on Amazon, as is a whole bunch of jigs that avoid building what he builds by hand for fun. But they are incredibly cheap on Temu. Willing to wait 5 days? Yep? Then it's 1/10 the price for pretty much everything.
I've got an incredible amount of ball bearings and various energy transfer rollers and trays and trays of hardware that will fit together pretty much everything he shows.
I've got years and years of variety of tool purchases. I've got a drill press with a serious vice. I've got at least a dozen drills, half of them corded and half of them cordless and several of them very high end. Lots and lots of batteries sitting in the chargers rotated through. I've got a couple of drivers that kick ass. I've got several circular saws of various sizes with a whole bunch of blades, I never trust the ones that come with them. I've got a standing 11-in wide planing machine That I plan on turning it into a real jointer. Real floor standing circular saw in plastic cabinet, I.e the contractor special. I've got rollers that you place on both sides of anything you want to feed through so I can use long wood pushing through evenly without worrying about it drooping on either side when using any of the floor standing devices. I've got a serious high end electric hand planer as well as variety of simple raw hand devices. Lots and lots of clamps. A variety of types. 90° corner clamps out the wazoo. I love the Dremel bench vise clamp. It grips and spins and positions at pretty much all directions. I want something about five times as large for big pieces. I'll make that. Multiple jigsaws including top of the line brush. I love that thing. Top of the line Dremel along with pretty much every bit made for it and the very long extension arm that allows you to hold it like a pencil with the actual spinning device at a distance plus the router holder for it. I've just started the list. I really did have fun prepping for this moment. Supposed industrial old Craftsman router. I love wandering used stores to find the old heavy routers. I have one about 15 minutes from me that seems to have a constant supply of new stuff just for me. That is the basis for the table of the moment but will grow from there. A very nice track / peg table but it's not that big. It will fit in the freezer compartment of the refrigerator when it is on its back and be the small portion of the workspace.
I'm perfectly willing to go out and visit the habitat for humanity stores and clear out whatever tools I feel like. They're very inexpensive and they're very happy to sell them to me.
Okay, I think we have a different viewpoint on how I value my time and what I'm doing versus any investment I put in to building the infrastructure. I'm having a hell of a time and it's cheap.
And yes, I really enjoyed that video and probably a hundred or so others that I've watched from him. Now that I've got the basis for the dust collection and the fans showing up on Monday, I can rewatch them in the workshop as I'm building stuff. I like to pause and reverse and just freeze frame and then spend 10 minutes doing whatever he did in 30 seconds and then move on. At the end I get another tool out of it and another skill.
He occasionally insists on doing stuff by hand I know I have a different tool for. He will choose certain things that I consider incredibly dangerous that I will not do like taking apart a washing machine for the motor because that motor is not designed for continuous usage. But I'll take his design where he did that on a different video and I will substitute in a bench grinder motor.
I consider him an education in Japanese style and sensibility. They have a woodworking culture. I really like it. But I'm not going to adhere to it like when I see him measure things and then mark it up and then position a drill and drill it versus me putting on a clamping rolling ruler with the positioning hole that aligns where I want to drill and immediately drill. Sure it's fun to watch him do it. I'm not going to do that. And I'm not going to build that device myself, I'm going to buy it. For about 20 bucks for the really expensive large one with many holes in it that aligns in both 90 and variable degrees and has a crossbar to go parallel with an edge or the top of a drawer. Perfect drawer and cabinet hardware alignment. As well as anything else when I'm trying to drill anything anywhere.
Edit: But the best source of incredible fine wood is Craigslist. Dining room sets people give them away. Please take this heavy beautiful wood away. I bought a couple of them when I first moved here 3 years ago but they were way too big for my house. So now I have enormous slabs of beautiful maple to cut to fit to whatever I want. Looking at Craigslist, I have my assortment of woods to pick and choose from if I just want to go get some old style, dining room and china closet sets. The reason for my edit is I just moved a table downstairs in multiple pieces, each of them weighing almost as much as me. Railroad trestle legs to hold it up that weigh about 80 lb of pop.
Temu/Amazon order 90% of the hardware for about a hundred bucks. Always do your initial shopping on Amazon, and then double check for what's on temu equivalent, and then see the incredible assortment of all the jigs available for almost no money. Basically, the Amazon stuff is a very limited subset of the temu stuff and it's a far less quality and far higher price.
The tracks are very expensive on Amazon, as is a whole bunch of jigs that avoid building what he builds by hand for fun. But they are incredibly cheap on Temu. Willing to wait 5 days? Yep? Then it's 1/10 the price for pretty much everything.
I've got an incredible amount of ball bearings and various energy transfer rollers and trays and trays of hardware that will fit together pretty much everything he shows.
I've got years and years of variety of tool purchases. I've got a drill press with a serious vice. I've got at least a dozen drills, half of them corded and half of them cordless and several of them very high end. Lots and lots of batteries sitting in the chargers rotated through. I've got a couple of drivers that kick ass. I've got several circular saws of various sizes with a whole bunch of blades, I never trust the ones that come with them. I've got a standing 11-in wide planing machine That I plan on turning it into a real jointer. Real floor standing circular saw in plastic cabinet, I.e the contractor special. I've got rollers that you place on both sides of anything you want to feed through so I can use long wood pushing through evenly without worrying about it drooping on either side when using any of the floor standing devices. I've got a serious high end electric hand planer as well as variety of simple raw hand devices. Lots and lots of clamps. A variety of types. 90° corner clamps out the wazoo. I love the Dremel bench vise clamp. It grips and spins and positions at pretty much all directions. I want something about five times as large for big pieces. I'll make that. Multiple jigsaws including top of the line brush. I love that thing. Top of the line Dremel along with pretty much every bit made for it and the very long extension arm that allows you to hold it like a pencil with the actual spinning device at a distance plus the router holder for it. I've just started the list. I really did have fun prepping for this moment. Supposed industrial old Craftsman router. I love wandering used stores to find the old heavy routers. I have one about 15 minutes from me that seems to have a constant supply of new stuff just for me. That is the basis for the table of the moment but will grow from there. A very nice track / peg table but it's not that big. It will fit in the freezer compartment of the refrigerator when it is on its back and be the small portion of the workspace.
I'm perfectly willing to go out and visit the habitat for humanity stores and clear out whatever tools I feel like. They're very inexpensive and they're very happy to sell them to me.
Okay, I think we have a different viewpoint on how I value my time and what I'm doing versus any investment I put in to building the infrastructure. I'm having a hell of a time and it's cheap.
And yes, I really enjoyed that video and probably a hundred or so others that I've watched from him. Now that I've got the basis for the dust collection and the fans showing up on Monday, I can rewatch them in the workshop as I'm building stuff. I like to pause and reverse and just freeze frame and then spend 10 minutes doing whatever he did in 30 seconds and then move on. At the end I get another tool out of it and another skill.
He occasionally insists on doing stuff by hand I know I have a different tool for. He will choose certain things that I consider incredibly dangerous that I will not do like taking apart a washing machine for the motor because that motor is not designed for continuous usage. But I'll take his design where he did that on a different video and I will substitute in a bench grinder motor.
I consider him an education in Japanese style and sensibility. They have a woodworking culture. I really like it. But I'm not going to adhere to it like when I see him measure things and then mark it up and then position a drill and drill it versus me putting on a clamping rolling ruler with the positioning hole that aligns where I want to drill and immediately drill. Sure it's fun to watch him do it. I'm not going to do that. And I'm not going to build that device myself, I'm going to buy it. For about 20 bucks for the really expensive large one with many holes in it that aligns in both 90 and variable degrees and has a crossbar to go parallel with an edge or the top of a drawer. Perfect drawer and cabinet hardware alignment. As well as anything else when I'm trying to drill anything anywhere.