This job is WAY TOO SCARY! Just run away

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[Music] [Music] well guys i don't think i can fix this one it's too far gone i guess we'll just put it on the burn pile and uh move on to the next piece just kidding i can fix it but it is really bad i told you it was really bad it's really bad look at this poor thing i can't even stand up it's on the on the surgery table laying down here with every piece of it falling apart let me show you some details let's start from the bottom we've got one good leg here we've got another good leg here two's good two out of four doesn't work we've got this leg missing a cheek block here just completely gone and it's definitely been repaired really badly we've got a big crack with glue squeezed out everywhere we've got a giant screw and we've got another giant screw and more cracks so that leg is needing so much help and then we can shift over to the other leg and this leg is completely broken off we've got the big nail which is original sticking through the side no one screwed it together so believe it or not this leg is in better shape than the other one so we've got it here and it's broken we can glue that one together it still has its cheek blocks that they formed into the foot so we'll copy that for the other leg so that's good now for some pretty terrible veneer work uh basically the entire drawer is losing its veneer this one seems to be okay probably loose somewhere but it's all there so that's nice if you can just see the difference there so not really sure if i'm going to repair or replace kind of deciding that still as i go and then on the top here we've got veneer lifting all on this edge and missing here on the bottom and then as well on the top we've got big pieces missing all along the top here all chipped and gone they're nowhere to be found so i mean there's not really a good way to repair such a large amount of missing veneers so we'll probably have to replace and i might be able to i'm trying to think can i steal veneer from one to make one good and then replace just one part still figuring that out in my head so the top here um around the rounded top it's splitting off there's pieces missing and it's breaking everywhere so that needs some help and the other side as well we've got a big chunk missing on the ground over [Music] and that needs to be replaced we've got missing carvings here that are gone and the finish is not in the worst condition but it's gonna need a refinish after all these repairs so inside we're not doing too bad we're just gonna clean this up keep it as it is um we are putting an entire new back panel on if you can see there it's like a masonite board that someone's put on at some point so that's not original we need to get that all off but in terms of the rest of the piece the inside looks really great and um really cute little porcelain knobs here not sure if they're original i do have a bag of a handle and some veneer we'll see how that fits and where it fits but this one's a oh there goes another piece this one's a monster so first things first let's take it apart get everything taken off and start repairing forever after growing up in my dad's restoration shop and learning everything he knows i'm continuing on with the business in my own shop and after 25 years i can truly say i love this job and i just have to share it with you whether it's a priceless 300 year old hand carved piece of history or just an ordinary table or dresser i pour my heart into each and every piece a customer brings me i'm trena and this is john's furniture repair [Applause] [Music] [Music] do [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] okay so i've got all the hardware up the drawers and uh i've got a little repaired on the cubby holes going on just a little tear out from taking it off and guess what i found got a piece of the leg in this bag of goodies so that makes my life a lot easier if it's right there let's see if the other piece is in here too yes it is okay winner winner chicken dinner is this the p maybe this isn't the piece that looks a little different oh well it's still a lot easier oh no here it is there so we've got that whole leg piece here that i can glue back on so that is awesome alrighty so i've been scraping all the glue off of everything and i've got it all clean and as i presume the fit's not great you can see just on this piece alone we've got quite a big gap there it comes together and it's there but it's not nice and close fit so this is not a good candidate for carpenter's glue carpenter's glue looks works really great when you have a nice lamination with no gaps in between nice flat surfaces together so um a couple of these pieces do fit nicely together so what i'm gonna be doing is gluing this leg in stages the feet fit nicely back on and a couple of these pieces like i've got six or seven pieces here that need to be glued together and then glued back on so it's gonna be kind of like a multi-stage glue up so first thing i'm gonna do actually is glue up some of these smaller pieces together so that when i go to glue it back on the leg it's not 16 little pieces that i'm trying to squish together in one spot and i'm going to use white glue to do the leg and some of the little bit easier pieces that still fit really nicely so there's one little piece here that fits perfect right there and then we'll use our um epoxy for these really um bad fitting areas okay so these two pieces right here fit together pretty good but not awesome so i'll leave that for epoxy and this i'm just gonna put a little bit of pressure on there for a second these are tough glue ups because you've got rounded um edges everywhere not a lot of clamping space it can help to clamp a straight board onto the whole leg so that you can at least clamp onto something um but i i presume that when someone tried to fix this before they didn't have enough clamps so they didn't know how to get the right pressure in the right spots so they just kind of slid around and didn't stay where they were supposed to stay okay so that's good i'm gonna turn it this way and there is a piece here that sits pretty nicely on here but again not perfect so i'm gonna leave those for epoxy and then this one for sure is for epoxy but this piece here fits really nicely on to this one so i'm going to glue this up now confusing these little things good and just make sure to keep the glue off of surfaces that i still have to glue other blocks to because although glue scraping is so much fun i think that's enough for one day okay so i've got the legs in various stages of being glued up and i thought i would tackle this veneer and i've decided to remove this whole section here i have a piece of veneer that looks like it might be a nice match to this so i'm going to replace this whole piece and use this veneer if i can get it off nicely to repair the drawer and some of the top that has the pieces missing so now it's a battle of me getting it off i mean it's pretty much off already but i'm just gonna be really carefully um trying to get my putty knife and things underneath here to see if i can get this loose and i can use water and heat but first i'm just going to try to see if it's going to pop off easy with a putty knife it is stuck in the middle and i don't want to break it because i need to use this section for the drawer so i want to really carefully see if i can get it to come nicely for me it is feeling pretty stiff in the middle so i'm going to um flare it open here and i'm going to run some water down i'm gonna shoot some heat into there being careful not to scorch the veneer [Applause] just to see if i can ask it to remove itself [Music] exactly what i don't want this stuff is very dry and brittle okay so that's not gonna work um i am going to get my iron on here with some moisture and see if i can loosen all this area try to get it to soften up a little bit more [Music] [Music] so [Music] okay so we got all that veneer off in mostly one piece you say two pieces three pieces three pieces isn't bad i mean there was a natural seam in the middle so i'll take my wins now here's a pet peeve of mine something i cannot stand this has been refinished before and um this isn't the original color it was a darker color which i think would look better on the piece um but anyways besides that someone got a hold of power tools because you know when details are difficult to get stripper into and clean up people always turn to power tools and it really bothers me when i find stuff like this you see all this choppy scraped pieces of stuff just ground right out probably a dremel i do not like dremels very much they're not useful in a whole bunch of situations um especially when they get when people get their hands on them to do stuff like this and they just tear up the wood and the detail especially the corners you know someone just really went to town trying to get probably a very simple finish off of a detailed area this is why we use chemical stripper just because we're not looking to mechanically scrape and destroy profiles and wood surfaces and a lot of times power tools are just way too aggressive when you can just use um a stripper there's even non-chemical strippers now that are pretty good qcs is one that i should try anyways this is you know they accidentally missed so they got a big hole here and then a hole here where they started it's just a mess everywhere and uh it really bothers you because it's almost destroyed the piece i'm glad that there's not evidence of it in more places that i've found yet that is but this area for sure i'm going to need to straighten out so the only thing i can really do is either scrape this down deeper so i can get more of a flat surface and and fix that which is quite difficult and time consuming or fill it and strip it and then do a bunch of fill work and then do some touch ups so and then a lot of sanding after that too for the filler so i'll probably do a bit of both um i'll try to scrape it as as flat as i can and then i'll definitely probably have some fill to do and then we'll just have to deal with that in the finishing stages to get it nice and flat just makes the piece look really cheap and i don't know really takes that sophistication off of it and a lot of the things that the maker did on this piece are really nice and really sophisticated and i want to bring that back to the piece and yeah so we've got our pieces of veneer here that i've gotten off in fairly good shape so i'm thinking of cutting strips of it here and doing some pretty um serious splices in so i'm thinking probably like this whole section take off and put a new piece um and then maybe from this section on remove all of this veneer and put a whole new section on if i can get that much out of it we'll see and this is the other stuff i have here it's got that flecking um that i'm going to use on the face and hopefully i have enough to put on to the front again after we do all this other work so i'm going to strip this down and work on this and get it looking a little bit better and see where we're at [Music] so [Music] so [Music] do [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Music] okay so just got this guy out of clamps i hammer when i hammer veneer um i usually end up clamping it just because it can pop a little bit overnight and then you just have to come back with a hot iron and straighten it out a little bit but if you give it a night under clamps if you can get good pressure everywhere you usually don't have those issues to deal with but obviously we need to do some trim work and it looks really good i like how the grain lined up and the seam is almost perfect just a little tiny gap right there i get my head of the way that looks good so i'm happy with that we have actually legs that are together did all of the epoxy on the big pieces that were not fitting well and the legs have both of their cheeks on so i just need a good clean up and a sand but they are together and fully one piece and i'm thinking about starting this um drawer front today so i've got it taped off here and this is the section that i'm gonna save because most of it is intact here so i'm gonna be replacing a strip on the end here and all of this basically so i'm gonna work on peeling that off i did leave some water sitting in it overnight um just to get it moisturized again so when i go in with the heat it expands a little bit easier but um yeah i took the drawer bottom off yesterday because it's gonna need a full clean up and it's pretty smelly so we're gonna get that all cleaned up and stripped and sealed now i wanted to take this whole drawer apart because there is a broken piece along the side here that we're gonna have to re-glue but these joints are super tight and these little um it's like an l with a groove kind of like a dovetail but not the same idea as a dovetail but you have to slide it out of the whole surface and it just does not want to move and these can break pretty quickly so i'm just going to leave it alone and leave it together and clean it up and repair it while it's on here so i'm gonna get some heat going and see if i can get this veneer off so the veneer i will put back is this piece that we took off of the front and i've got it taped together here so i need to steal pretty much this whole entire piece for this section here and i might have to replace this with new stuff or i might be able to get that section out of this area here but i'm going to take the main section out of this part and hopefully get it to lay down nicely on there so first things first peel this veneer off and get it ready for fitting a new piece okay so i'm just gonna cut right beside this tape so that my veneer breaks right where i want it to when i'm peeling it off and this section i'm not going to be super super careful with i meant to get my heat gun just because i'm not using this for anything so it was amazing how the veneer is falling off everywhere but just really stuck in some places [Applause] we can just scrape up all the old glue and whatever new glue has been stuck on here [Laughter] and that's ready for new veneer so i'll just get the other side off and then we'll look at what we can figure out [Music] good time [Music] [Music] [Music] okay so glue is hot [Music] my little crack pot there and it's uh the old brown glue is high glue essentially but they've added something to shelf stable it um in essence it's not as strong as the high glue that you uh make yourself out of the pebbles and i've done that before when i'm doing like a whole tabletop but this is pretty comparable and it tacks up pretty uh similarly to the high glue if it's heated so i use it even when it's not heated um because it does have a little bit of a liquid and you only need to heat this a little bit but it helps with the initial tack up if you heat it up and it is pretty strong it definitely does a good job for veneer but i think that the original high glue that you make from the pellets is a little bit stronger still but this is good for this so i'm just going to spread a layer on both this and the back of the veneer and i'm doing the hammering method of applying the veneer so even though i do put it in in weights or clamps overnight um you wouldn't even need to you just there's always like a little bubble or something especially on a rounded part that you need to deal with and this is loose too here so we'll have to work with that but i want to get this on first firstly i was just trying to get as much use out of the old veneers because they're really nice and thick okay so this is going to be a tough glue up just because it is on a curve and sometimes it helps to leave it sit for a little bit okay so now i can just hammer and hammering venue veneers just squeezing out all that excess glue and pushing the glue up into the grain of the wood and because this is old veneer that i'm reusing it won't soak up a whole lot because it's already been done once but it'll still work out nicely there'll be a couple of little chips here and i need to add a strip here afterwards but we're getting the majority of use from this antique veneer okay so on this side i have a piece and then i also need a strip that i need to add here so i'm just going to get this glued up okay i'm gonna let that tack up for about half an hour and then we'll come back with the iron and work it a little bit get this tape off there you can see where we're carving along that edge just trying to cut it off with the grain it's a really tough in some areas to not let it split like right where this edge comes here it kind of wants to grab and take pieces so i'll just have to be really careful while i'm trimming all of this to not have that happen but that'll take me a good hour here [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] okay so now that these are stripped and generally glued together um there's still not a lot of strength in these repairs because the fit was bad and they're all kind of right here which is the stress point of the cabinet so we need to add back some long grain into this piece to give it some strength so with that we're going to use dowels so basically across every break and every area that needs some extra strength we're gonna run a nice dowel right through and i'm gonna try to do it so i can hide them across this break here i can hide it from the back and put a dowel right through this whole section but here's the other thing i need to bring this strength down as well into the leg so i'm going to be coming down from the top here at an angle into the meat of this leg to try to get that strength back right there to carry it these little pieces i'm not going to do because they're glued and supported from the back and they're not really part of the strength of the leg but if you see here both legs have this stress point as right where the glue joint ends here that lamination line is wanting to let go so i do have to re-glue this part here too as well but i'm also going to put some dowels coming through here just to give it some strength back so both legs pretty much need that done and they fit pretty good i just put them on just to make sure that this dimension didn't change as we doing all these glue ups and so that's good i just need to now add some extra strength so i'm going to use probably at least a 3 8 to half inch dowel whatever fits best you want to leave it enough meat in the leg but also enough of a dowel to make some strength so i'll use a hardwood oak dowel and we'll give these guys some extra help to keep these breaks back together okay so i'm gonna use a half inch maple dowel i don't have oak so i'm just gonna use a maple dowel and uh we'll start out with this guy coming right through here so i'm just going to clamp it to the workbench because it doesn't really sit in a vise very nicely and this was broke if you remember into three pieces so uh i want to go right in between the two pieces we glued together so right here in between these two and i don't want to come out the other side so i'm going to stop it there and just measure it and see how we are good so that will be number one which goes right through to right in between the break here to both sides right here so there'll be a straight grain running right through that section there just have to be really careful not to do too much of an interference fit when i put that dowel in so it doesn't break that apart again so that's good but now we need to bring that strength down into the leg so i'm going to take from this section now and i'm going to come right at an angle into this leg to pull this piece here which will be glued to this into this okay that's good almost came right through there but that was difficult because really didn't have a lot of clearance there so now we've got this coming this way and this way and our last piece that we need to do is the two dowels coming here so i'm going to put that back on the workbench [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] do [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] okay so the veneer is all down and i sanded the finish off of this just so we didn't add any moisture to the one million veneer repairs that we did there's a couple of fills uh the old veneer was not perfect but i'm really glad that we were able to use it and have that original veneer somewhere on the piece so if you remember there's a little suction here so i've got to cut that back out i just got the lock off on the inside here and i'm going to drill a couple of reference hole reference holes right through good and then i'll be able to turn that over right here and just kind of push the center through and then take my um scalpel knife and just carve away the extra last thing i need well not the last thing actually i still have to strip the inside of the drawer all the stuff in here is needing to be stripped off and also we need to repair this crack that's on the side here so i'm going to do that first because i'll get glue everywhere and i can just use the finish to protect it's pretty much the whole length of this side so i'm just going to split this joint and get some glue here and i would say using the high glue um the most important places to use that very nicely reversible glue would be in joints and things that should be reversible stuff that you don't ever want coming apart again um oftentimes i'll use the epoxy or a more permanent solution because i'm never expecting it to come apart again this little drawer has been through so many rounds of repairs for you know all the veneer work on the face and the side and the bottom coming off kind of uh getting the inside cleaned up like there's so many things to do on just one little piece that goes in a whole cabinet one of the reasons why i started making these videos was to help people understand just what goes into a proper restoration and why it might cost more than a restoration from somebody fixing stuff in their garage which there's nothing wrong with fixing things in your garage but just somebody who hasn't been trained professionally or had a lot of years of experience because a lot of these things just go missed in the diy world or they get repaired really properly improperly or just looked over and ignored so anyways uh that can sit over night we're on the long weekend here i got bored sitting in the house and i was like okay can i should i clean the house should i do some baking should i go outside no it's raining no i don't feel like baking no i don't feel like cleaning i'm gonna go to the shop so here i am working on the long weekend because i love my job [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] do [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] all right so over the weekend i glued this whole section down it was all lifted and cracked right here and everything was loose so i got that out of the clamps this morning and uh we've got a few pieces missing here one here this whole little strip here in this section i do have one piece that goes back here kind of like that which makes it very awkward to prepare but we'll put it back anyways and so we need to make a couple of strips for there and something like this and i want to inlay them i don't want to cut out a long strip because i don't want to glue over this curve as much as possible because it's tricky so first one i'm going to um i'm gonna cut right here it was sanded quite heavily to fade into this piece here so it's very thin so i'm going to um it's even you know this is still sticking over so it didn't have to be sanded that much so i'm gonna actually um take off right from this line here and take off all this really skinny stuff right here because it's i'm going to bring it right into this point because that'll be the best fade line and then i'll just kind of chip this off and i tried to pick a veneer with a with these flecking if you can kind of see here these little tiger flecking whatever you call them um these uh hard grains here that's what those are i don't have anything exactly like this but this will do it's what we used the same veneer that we used on the face okay so i've got all cleaned up here and i've decided um it'll be a nicer cleaner repair if we just do [Music] one big piece here so i'll use this piece on one of these repairs so i'm just going to need to make a little template first and i'll use some tracing for that kind of a really weird template but we'll just do our best here okay so i'll cut this out now i can glue it on right in that section that'll be perfect okay so i'm just going to use a little bit of high glue and it has to run this way i'm going to start at the skinny end that would break out if i started the other way and at the end i'm just gonna press it instead of pulling it two passes should do it there and then i'll get some [Music] new hot hide glue on there i'll pop those in okay now i can get this hinged down into its spot [Music] huh well we'll leave that and see how it works out so now for these guys i think i can probably use this piece in here right about there [Music] [Music] blue [Music] um you've got everything else taken care of and it's time to turn all of my attention to the cabinets and this veneer is still drying that we glued up this morning so i need to um re-fasten both of these they're loose and take care of some mold spores in here that just need to give a good wash with some methyl hydrate they're not active anymore but i just want to clean it up so i'm going to get these guys out of here to re-glue them in that's just gonna come out that's barely in there okay that's fine okay so i've just numbered these where they go and i'm gonna add some wood and plane them down again so they're brand new that one's not that bad this one has maybe a 16th of wood missing but i'll add this on and then plane it back down to the original height i'm going to sand this inside first with my dust collection sander uh festool has a great hepa collection system they really catch every spore but i'll also put a mask on while i'm doing this and then i'm gonna soak it down with the methyl [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] i'm just gonna seal this side inside uh the the alcohol is dried everything is smelling really good right now but i'm just gonna give it a seal because why not you know a lot of people um say that shellac is a good sealer which it is but a lot of the reasons it kills the smell of things inside cabinets is because it's an alcohol-based finish which is why [Music] it does such a good job at killing things and disinfecting things and then the shellac kind of seals it up it's actually quite a breathable finish so i like to do a pre-alcohol treatment on stuff like this just to really concentrate the alcohol let it dry don't wipe it off and uh then go with the shellac afterwards you get kind of a double alcohol treatment all right it is the next day and i've got these out of the clamps looking really good nice seam here i'm glad i did one whole piece so i just need to sand that out and this one here was pretty good missed a little bit of this we'll just put some putty in there and then this one i wanted to do in two sections but there ended up being a giant hole underneath the veneer here and when i was working around it it just kind of popped through so there was a void i don't know if it was from um this whole situation in here so i think i'm gonna put some uh epoxy putty in this hole just to support this whole area here um i don't know why there's a hole here and stuff missing so then i just decided to do one whole strip here which looks fine as well so i'm going to give this a little sand with 120 and um then i'm going to strip the side and finish carving these little nibs here that we put on for the little pieces that are missing on the carving here and yeah we can get to actually stripping this finish off [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] i'm just doing a dry fit on these legs and everything looks pretty good so i'm gonna epoxy these on because this is a pretty high stress point and it's already had a million breaks and you can see our dowels all in here um the leg is good and strong now but i want to make sure that this joint here gives it even extra strength so i'm going to use epoxy here and i'll use the west system and i've just got it mixed up here okay so there's the setup okay so i've got the clamps off this morning and the legs are nice and sturdy everything went on really well so now i need to clean up the back here i'm going to shave this down a little bit with my uh little sander and this one a little bit too down here and i'm gonna drill um a hole right through here into this piece to attach here just one and uh i will be putting a nail through this section here into the leg there so go officials the final figure today saying it sets a record for the conservatives reports the authors assess the nutritional content and does this a globally important thing and if so when did we lose it and i'm sure on her feet and almost there looking really great so now let's think about some color this wood is actually pretty colorful naturally let me just show you just wipe some alcohol across here and that's kind of the color that we want to stay with um but i do need to stain this because there's a lot of repairs and a lot of different tones and we have new veneer and we have a new back panel so i want to do a stain over everything but i'm going to keep it pretty much this color so um it's kind of tricky because the new wood the plywood and the new veneer that we have on the piece they're going to want to stain out pretty neutral and the rest of the old wood is going to have that really warm undertone i want to stain everything with this color which is special walnuts and this is a discontinued very thin color that i wish they didn't but i'm going to have to start on these pieces by making them orange first so i'm going to start them with old masters maple oops and this has got this color here which kind of brings it in the zone of the old oak color on the rest of it and then we'll put this over top so it'll be a two-stage process on all the new stuff and so i'm probably gonna do that first and then we'll just go over everything with the very thin stain so let's get some color rolling and see how everything looks [Music] do [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] okay so i'm gonna now that the cabinet is stained and drying for the day i'm gonna tackle all this really pretty victorian brass hardware and a couple of these locks were really badly rusted so i'm gonna put these guys in vinegar and let the vinegar do its thing and we'll scrub those up tomorrow and then uh these guys i'm gonna spray with the flitz instant brush brass polish i'll get you guys in closer here so you can see how it works just going to get it all pretty good this handle here i'm not sure if i'm going to use it would have been on the front we'll see it looks kind of big for the cabinet i'll just buff that polish off [Music] [Music] okay class to give it that final shine gorgeous this is really nice hardware there we go really really pretty really comes up [Music] [Music] so [Music] so the last piece of the hardware that we need to deal with are these little porcelain knobs with these ginormous screws that definitely are not original they are two different screws and they're just not meant for a showpiece so those will need to get rid of i've got a couple of antique brass pan head screws but they're not bolts so we're going to need to fill the holes on the drawers so i'm just going to use a square peg and that just helps to grab into the sides of [Music] the hole a little bit better i find because i want to screw these on to get them nice and tight i'm just going to force that down and then we'll just drill out a new hole in the center of that piece and that will be the new look so i am going to shine up this knob as well and clean the porcelains i'm just going to take this off again set that aside i'm gonna take both of these just got some crud on them from years they're really quite pretty little handles give them some soak in the crud cutter and then these guys i'm just gonna sand there's a little bit of damage on this one screw these are old screws so they're getting a second life so much more life to the clean porcelain and there is there was kind of something down there i think it was just dirt but anyways so that'll look really pretty with the little brass screw in the center and i'll patina that a little bit just so it's not super super shiny but i think that's a much nicer way to do this [Music] [Music] there she is looking totally put together and gorgeous welcome back to the living fine lady you are beautiful [Music] let's take a look at all of the repairs that we went through just to recap we got our little veneer patches here and here as well you can see in the sunshine this is one of them and over here we've got another did our little carvings the tips were missing as well this whole section here was missing and these two little tips as well i completely re-veneered this entire front and did quite a bit of work um trying to straighten these guys out and they still do have a little bit of that wave but it looks much better everything cleaned up on the inside as well lots of character still completely refinished the cubby hole and put some pretty new panhead brass screws on these little porcelain knobs and you can see our back panel back there nice oak instead of masonite and then we've got our drawers these were in rough shape if you remember all of the veneer was falling off this bottom one and isn't it um just a really cool thing that this veneer that's on this section and this section was up here so it is veneer that's supposed to be with this piece and we saved it and used a lot of it in repairs everywhere actually even on the top and look at that hardware shine gorgeous really really pretty stuff this is a higher end piece it would have been drawers refinished looking great and these legs oh my goodness they are looking beautiful you can see our 1 million repairs we've got our little one mounting screw down there doing their thing so yeah it looks really really good i'm so happy to bring this one back it's such a pretty little piece and in honor of my fellow equestrian and mechanic and all-around amazing woman i just want to dedicate this video to queen elizabeth she was an amazing woman and if you don't know much about her there's a lot of reasons i love her check it out so thank you so much for joining me on this resurrection video and i hope you enjoyed it as much as i did and if you did and you want to support this channel you can buy me a coffee the link is in the description below the video and i just really appreciate you guys uh and the community that that has grown so much over the last almost two years of this channel so thank you thank you thank you check out our other videos we've got plenty of resurrections and uh have a great day cheers [Music] you
Info
Channel: John's Furniture Repair
Views: 203,374
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: trena, john's furniture repair, thomas johnson, antique restoration, furniture, shop, workshop, tools, stripping, spraying, sanding, woodworking, mohawk, walnut stain, table, festool, tiktok, at restoration, dewalt, bleach
Id: prLxxTHYZQs
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 88min 31sec (5311 seconds)
Published: Sun Sep 11 2022
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