That one at 0:39 is insane. Both a straight and corner joint. Unbelievable craftsmanship
@stevejung64703 ай бұрын
Nail hammer can do the same thing
@eldermillennial83303 ай бұрын
@@stevejung6470 One reason this was developed was to save iron for other uses, particularly weapons.
@Kaisolostudio3 ай бұрын
@@stevejung6470no where near as beautiful haha
@BossOfAllTrades3 ай бұрын
@@Kaisolostudioalso more prone to rust insects and rot
@paulpankrushev81073 ай бұрын
@@BossOfAllTrades which one are you talking about? Sashimono or nails?
@BagLikesBackpacks14 күн бұрын
"Lego was made in 1932" People in 1931:
@alex.l573212 күн бұрын
Gunpla
@cetchup_main12 күн бұрын
LOL
@DarkStar9052_TFG-Fan10 күн бұрын
LOL×100
@yacinekadri911010 күн бұрын
Meet the nips
@fore41385 күн бұрын
LOL×10000
@davidlevine1697Ай бұрын
as a former member of the Carpenters and Joiners Union, i am blown away by this craftsmanship.
@TheGreyAreaBetween11 күн бұрын
As a layman who has some basic woodworking knowledge and skill, I am also blown away by this, especially those more intricate pieces that look somehow impossible. It’s a beautiful work of art.
@triplettt3v228 күн бұрын
As a KZfaq watcher with zero skills in craftsmanship, this is really beautiful technique
@andreworr43076 күн бұрын
Me too, and I agree,different class
@andreworr43076 күн бұрын
As a joiner(carpenter) myself I can honestly say this is top level craftsmanship,beautiful and skillful
@timothymercer35263 ай бұрын
I am blown away at the intricacies of the woodwork such attention to detail!!!
@safuwanfauzi50142 ай бұрын
Most east asian and southeast asian like chinese, japanese, korean, malays, indonesian, thai, burmese dont used nail, look at Myammar royal palace mandalay complex, dont used nail, indonesian sumatra 'istana besar pagaruyung' dont used nail, even with used brick or stone wooden part dont used nail, like japanese castle, thai temple and thai palace like grand palace bangkok, etc.. any in indonesia, cambodia, malaysia temple dont used mortar. cham malays/champa temple in southern vietnam,indonesian in java, bali and sumatra used red brick by rubbing until brick joined
@AnthonyAnthony-tk4ye2 ай бұрын
CNC milling technology is amazing…😂😂
@dr_drac_ula2 ай бұрын
Just Legos Man.
@equinox26552 ай бұрын
You’d also be blown away if you built a house with this
@nuggetella2 ай бұрын
@@safuwanfauzi5014Agh, than cam tek screws & tek guns...
@privateinvestigator86073 ай бұрын
This is definitely art.
@michaeladams29593 ай бұрын
It's called patience, something American woodworkers know nothing about.
@yanyanz30113 ай бұрын
This wood joint is called Sunmao. Japanese copied it from ancient china.
@Pluto13363 ай бұрын
What does being American have to do with this video @@michaeladams2959
@jimboh.26543 ай бұрын
@@yanyanz3011it's called sashimono, meaning wood joints without nails or glue
@namedless3 ай бұрын
@@michaeladams2959 Ay ay dont blame america Blame europe
Probably we can’t, it can’t be made into automata, making furniture of these is just not appealing to the capitalist interest, and we are firmly into capitalism nowadays, if you want to go against it you’ll need to pay a lot, which no everyday ordinary can do it, thus it can’t expand and remain in our society. It’s sad and fked up, even people says these antiques got destroyed in mao’s era, yet I doubt it can remain in the society we are living now, since no one is spending on it.
@user-pg2nl9cf7s15 күн бұрын
🎉
@SetuwoKecik13 күн бұрын
Not without Japanese wants to have kids to ensures this technique got passed to future generations.
@user-iy5kr6th5i11 күн бұрын
알빠노? 를 존나 길게 설명하네
@xxy-jx8wk10 күн бұрын
its important,its belong China
@dyscraiova12 күн бұрын
We have a similar method in Romania called the dovetail
@alexadamson99592 ай бұрын
As someone who learned carpentry in college for 2 years I can confidently say, this is unbelievably amazing to me.
@marinaatkin15812 ай бұрын
Same. Taking the kerf into account and still getting such precise fits is incredible. Lots of time and patience goes into this.
@absentia61642 ай бұрын
That's because you studied carpentry and not joinery.
@alexadamson99592 ай бұрын
@@absentia6164 joinery and carpentry. It was the same course.
@xomnionProgrammingAndChess2 ай бұрын
Damn my dream hobbies are coding and carpentry respect 💪💪
@accidentalhappy_272 ай бұрын
My dad and hubby are carpenters as well, and they do something similar to this called “dovetail joints”
@The_engineering_potato2 ай бұрын
I wood work, and I’m not the best but I’m pretty good, however this is absolutely insane, I’m guessing most don’t use any power tools and that is even more baffling. Mad respect to these people, just as much art as woodworking.
@turtlesrprettycool33792 ай бұрын
I’m pretty sure now they do use saws to cut the wood
@ConManCone2 ай бұрын
a saw isnt a power tool lol only ones powered by electricity are
@turtlesrprettycool33792 ай бұрын
@@ConManCone yes it’s a saw that uses electricity
@The_engineering_potato2 ай бұрын
A table saw, miter saw, chain saw, etc are power tools. A hand saw uses your HAND to power it, a hand saw is not a power tool, if it uses electricity to power it then it is a power tool. If some use power tools ok, but there are obviously some in the video that do not.
@turtlesrprettycool33792 ай бұрын
@@The_engineering_potato yes that’s what I meant
@hadeelo8029Ай бұрын
This is insane!! I can't imagine the amount of intelligence and patience it takes to learn this!
@sharonmaxson9777Ай бұрын
Love this. Incredible craftsmanship.
@robofalke94923 ай бұрын
You didn't explain wy it is more durable than other stuff, so il do it It is more durable becouse its wood on wood so its the same material that means in summer it will expand the same % as tze other part of the connection and stays in perfect shape, but if you have a connection whit wood and nails, the wood expands more when it gets hot in summer than the nail and will eventualy get lose
@herrweiss25803 ай бұрын
If you don’t want loose joints then buy Japanese; thanks!
@Elfrast3 ай бұрын
Wouldn't doing joinery with different woods make it so one will expand more than the other, therefore affecting some strength?
@robofalke94923 ай бұрын
@@Elfrast yes thats correct but they normaly use the same wood
@billyboy1er3 ай бұрын
Wood expansion is one aspect yes, but it still can't be avoided when wood grain is 90 degrees to each other. More importantly not using nails avoid rust and rot from attacking the wood even after decades, and also allows for more flexible joints that can accomodate exansion/contraction as well as earthquakes.
@HIMSTRAIGHT3 ай бұрын
Thanks for passing that along.
@danieldevito6380Ай бұрын
Not too long ago, they took down a building in Japan that was hundreds of years old and was put together without using even a single nail or fastener.
@BertoBluntsAKABluntedBeats819210 күн бұрын
i remembered that.. its crazy architecture
@Spractral10 күн бұрын
@@BertoBluntsAKABluntedBeats8192name of it?
@minghaohu74879 күн бұрын
it is said in china that the architecture of tang dynasty has to be seen in japan and this is the reason they are basically the same buildings just that one is built in japan and one in china however japan did a much better job than china to preserve these buildings
@BigTwig8589 күн бұрын
We have that here…. It’s called a timber frame
@wiseland50527 күн бұрын
w8, who uses fasteners in making building?
@myravillanueva8602Ай бұрын
Amazing! These are all manual carvings with a keen eyes; steady hands and well planned designs... plus super sharp tools!
@Stop1warАй бұрын
Japanese and Chinese and Koreans are God gifted people. Respect from Afghanistan
@hpcreations628325 күн бұрын
❤
@doburoku678122 күн бұрын
What Korean have? I miss the details
@Josuke8Man22 күн бұрын
All Asia use this
@laysmaxx57892 күн бұрын
Every country has gifted people
@trikooo2 ай бұрын
crazy thing is that some traditional houses in japan are held up by this and are doing pretty well
@langcao35442 ай бұрын
Ancient china also did this, it's insane how good they hold up
@___idk2 ай бұрын
...
@rift76092 ай бұрын
If I remember correctly these are actually much more durable than just nails, though idk if some construction techniques or something are better
@nyaslle23492 ай бұрын
@@rift7609I’m from Japan but you’re quite right. It stands easily over 100 and some to nearly 500 years
@ahnnyung2 ай бұрын
Koreans do this, too 😂
@WSOJ33 ай бұрын
Hold on a second. This is classical Chinese wood work. The technique was brought over to Japan. Known as “mortise and tenon” joints in the West, or “sunmao” (榫卯) in China, the technique was first discovered in China dating back as far as 7000 years ago. It was later brought to Japan where the technique flourished in the 12th century. At the pentacle of mortise and tenon joints woodwork is the Chinese Imperial Palace (aka the Forbidden City). Next time you visit, make sure you look up at the ceiling/roof of the buildings. The complex has one of the most sophisticated seismic damper mechanism ever made, constructed entirely out of mortise and tenon woodwork joints.
@yuetlongtam27872 ай бұрын
fr its Chinese
@user-es7cz8ib5w2 ай бұрын
right
@convection202 ай бұрын
Woodwork : 😐 Woodwork, Japan : 😱😱😱
@Elisabeth-gm3cb2 ай бұрын
Thank you! I was literally searching for that comment.
@vi-sl2lv2 ай бұрын
Classic Japan being credited for chinese culture
@REN-sz8if20 күн бұрын
日本人として誇らしいぜ⭐︎
@SchneiderCheung18 күн бұрын
I think you are proud to be a thief 😅
@REN-sz8if17 күн бұрын
@@SchneiderCheung I am a thief!!!!!!
@vivianli769912 күн бұрын
But it’s from China originally 😂
@REN-sz8if11 күн бұрын
@@vivianli7699 Reary?
@vivianli769911 күн бұрын
@@REN-sz8if ? what do you mean?
@darriandaz778413 күн бұрын
To think they use their hands and tools and not a single machine. Makes it more fascinating!
@mikeshahan1960Ай бұрын
One of the things I love so much about the Japanese is this blending of art, craftsmanship and utility.
@user-bn6qy8xo2nАй бұрын
This is Chinese traditional skill. Stupid
@BoxingLegends2024Ай бұрын
yea but all that time & effort & aint nobody paying all that money for the pieces just a bunch of people lying & bs how they will buy it but dont
@Obi-WanKannabisАй бұрын
Thats the literal definition of crafts. Other countries have it too. Japan didnt invent that shit lmao.
@queenwonyoungtheitgirlАй бұрын
@@Obi-WanKannabisjapan just do it way better i guess..
@DordordАй бұрын
Except this is Chinese technology
@evelyngam2 ай бұрын
This made me emotional. My grandpa was a carpenter and quite the perfectionist. He passed away years ago. It would have been so cool to show this to him, I know he would have loved to see this level of craftsmanship
@davidmathews25992 ай бұрын
God Bless Your Grandfather 🙏
@evelyngam2 ай бұрын
@@davidmathews2599 thank you for your thoughtfulness and kindness 💛
@TheFunnyDictator2 ай бұрын
What happened to him?
@evelyngam2 ай бұрын
@@TheFunnyDictator does your OCD also make you rude and tactless or is that something you do intentionally?
@evelyngam2 ай бұрын
@@TheFunnyDictator does your OCD make you rude and tactless too or is that something you do intentionally?
@sanchaitabanerjee5796Ай бұрын
The same techniques are being used since aeons in India, to make doors and windows, every door n window and table etc in our house are made like these without using a single nail.
@Superfoodcookie22 күн бұрын
Yes but it's a lot more famous in Japanese due to them still having old buildings after hundred of years and still standing. Historically every country had this one way or another. It's what country did it thr best/devote actual buildings to it. Which Japan was best for not India
@himanshukuanr783213 күн бұрын
@@Superfoodcookie Japan is Earthquake prone region..So, they had to stick to this Technique..along with looking for innovative ways for this technique... As for India..These interlocking methods were used for making not only Wooden Architectures but also Stone Temples and Palaces.. They still use these Techniques For Building Furnitures and Sepical Stone Temples for Deities..
@@GG-zq3zk I am Chinese. The old houses of my family were also built using this technique. These beautiful artworks symbolize our great East Asia! We need to make East Asia great Again!
@e29bu40Ай бұрын
@@landscaperdr2928 But they made it from a copy that was even better than the Chinese technology, and they continued to do so, maintaining the historic technology, which is a Japanese cultural technology, even though it did not originate in the country of origin.
@deplo42021 күн бұрын
@@XiaoxiangElephant耐震構造になってるからこっちのほうが頑丈よ😊
@user-bh5bs1wo6u18 күн бұрын
@@GG-zq3zk倒産したけど、他の会社が存続させる為吸収合併したんだっけ?
@JoeCarrington-os8zn3 ай бұрын
I thought I was a craftsman until I discovered Japanese woodworking and joinery, particularly sashimono. Sashimono is craftsmanship on a whole nother level
@lucyhellbroke2 ай бұрын
Yep. It kinda puts even the most old school and exceptional of dovetailing joins to shame.
@17dollaranimations2 ай бұрын
Puzzle piece craft it your self edition
@Batman_FOR_GOTHAM2 ай бұрын
3D Printer:
@user-xq4tf4dl1k2 ай бұрын
this is not from Japan, original came from China. In 507 AD in China, there was a great architect called Lu Ban, this buckle is his invention, in ancient China Tang Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Ming Dynasty, a large number of Japanese scholars and architects came to China to study.
@eggcluck2 ай бұрын
It is not unique to Japan, for example Anglo Saxons use a similar joint in chair making. The Japanese learned it from knowledge exchange with China.
@preachielilbit37004 күн бұрын
Very brilliant! This should have been taught in schools!
@autumn_kitten6 күн бұрын
WHY IS THIS SO SATISFYING
@mochamatcha32 ай бұрын
Same thing in old Chinese architecture, it’s amazing how it can be so stable without any glue, nails or screws
@LUIS-ox1bvАй бұрын
Absolutely correct. And amazing to see structures built in this manner, still standing for centuries, despite seismic activity.
@852AKongАй бұрын
Originally Chinese actually. Well adopted by Japan and Korea. You can get toys like that too, such as the Kong Ming Suo (a lock toy)
@Nobody-iy6tm24 күн бұрын
If is true that Chinese carpenters came to Japan around 7th century in order to build Tempels. But : 1) there were carpenters in Japan, and Japanese Shinto-Shrine existed at 7th century. 2) lots of sophisticated joints have been developed in Japan, and 金剛組 exist since the time. As we can see that Japanese sword, 日本刀, has extremely high quality, there exists technique in Japanese 宮大工, which is unique in Japan.
@zfwang689024 күн бұрын
i can tell you 100 percent it is from china, the pronunciation is same like in china, we call it 榫卯@@Nobody-iy6tm
@anniemeridian27024 күн бұрын
@@Nobody-iy6tmJapanese sent monks and democrats to China during the Sui dynasty and brought the technology back home, I did not see any conflict with that.
@jchen436523 күн бұрын
@@Nobody-iy6tm 你对木匠和工艺的区别似乎不理解?
@chuge297723 күн бұрын
At least the quality is much better than the original. lol
@BruceNewhouse5 күн бұрын
The designer’ brains operate in a different dimension than most.
wide or long lumber? it cant be created exactly but it gan be adapted with multiple conjoined pieces
@hassanqureshi773Ай бұрын
Sasageyo
@leoniemelodie7Ай бұрын
Loved the story ♡
@user-xn7ku2db7xАй бұрын
ドイツにもこういった土木技術はあったよね。日本もそれを真似て現在は発展したんだよ。
@JaneEvans-yw6nu8 сағат бұрын
Such craftsmanship should be applauded ❤
@christmassnow346510 күн бұрын
And achieving all of this with traditional tools is what makes that work even greater. Years ago, I have given-up my attempt at cutting at a straight angle without mechanical assistance, yet I see many craftsmen doing all kinds of precision cuts without effort. It makes me feel like a toddler trying to operate a nuclear reactor.
My Grandfathers house is made like this. Over 300 years old and been through countless earthquakes. It flexes and built with no nails.
@SugarzAz55515 күн бұрын
Wow thats mind blowing and amazing.They don't need even glue or screw for attaching and joining them.
@Isnane2 ай бұрын
I know a guy who is a timber framer. Its a similar concept. Wooden pegs and specific cuts and joints are used intead of nails to hold up giant structures. It is a very time consuming and skillfull process. Its pretty impressive work, which makes me like this video even more. Mad respect to anyone who does sashimono. The effort and skills needed to do something like this are insane.
@ecyaj12892 ай бұрын
Witch
@kgunitkeese172 ай бұрын
While the process is definitely time consuming, I think what matters most is the end result. Not only do you get a beautiful design, but also a very sturdy structure. Hard work for high quality will always have my respect.
@cristianmicu2 ай бұрын
the quality of wood and steel tools to do that never crossed your mind, only the long work and skills needed
@marcochimio2 ай бұрын
@@cristianmicuYou had a choice how you brought up that otherwise good point. Unfortunately, you chose to be a dick, too.
@aurorabubbles1852 ай бұрын
He meant "which", typo , I assume.@@ecyaj1289
@chantoto9344Ай бұрын
This ancient construction technique was ancient China in origin, not Japan. In ancient of Tang Dynasty, it was introduced to Japan and Korea, and then became popular there. Actually, this ancient technique is not only focus on furniture, and also used it ancient architecture in ancient China. Until to now, some artisan is still used it for furniture or tiny toys. The ancient technique is named in “Tenon and Mortise”(榫卯),and it was deigned and created by the ancient artisan - LuBan (507BC).
@user-is5ct1nk1uАй бұрын
Nobody cares about the truth.
@itsZLIXhereАй бұрын
@@user-is5ct1nk1uSounds cruelty but yes, literally no one cares about the truth.
@internet_polymathАй бұрын
tbf Japanese craftsmen definitely took the Chinese technique to a much higher level of skill and detail
@becats1019Ай бұрын
中国人は手を抜く 日本の職人は手を抜かない
@CcooCo-xf3hiАй бұрын
明明是中国的,视频居然说是日本的,大无语
@jessamynspain146610 күн бұрын
Sorta like dovetailing but obviously much more complicated. Amazing and beautiful!
@LucasMoore8811 күн бұрын
Bring this to the US!! That is absolutely amazing and beautiful!❤
@ilikecreeper3312 ай бұрын
Fun fact: This actually originated in China, but it was spread to japan and eventually spread to the whole world and people thought it originated there Edit: My experiment was right. No matter what you comment, how good it is, how funny it is, it's not gonna go viral. But as long as it includes some sort of politics or wrong shit, its going fucking viral as shit and people will actually see it and make it go viral (or get attention idk). Literally 20 minutes after this comment was posted there are already ~7 replies, while normally it goes unnoticed for forever. The way you get viral nowadays is to say sth wrong and let people critisize the shit out of it and get views that way. I don't care if you believ this or not, like it or not, it's getting me views and replies, that's how it works now. Thanks to the people pointing me out and those who stayed CALM and LOGICAL about it.
@Nagaimba2 ай бұрын
Fun fact it didn't spread anywhere. It's technies for people who didn't had nails. Period. If u have nails = it's better to use them both durability wise and work load wise. And no. if Something being used worldwide hundreds of years ago with decades between them didn't mean "spread". They literally invented them in their own countries. because there was no INTERNET TO SHARE YOUR "INVENTION" So this one originates from Japan. Not China. Japanese people didn't google it. Nobody tweeted at them. Japanese invented it. And only did it because most people didn't have accses to iron. And you are spreading shit.
@stevencher99682 ай бұрын
Lu Pan is the master craftsman and designer.This is only the most basic from his invention
@Mwoods22722 ай бұрын
That's what the Japanese do, take something and perfect it. Woodwork, Cars, Electronics.
@karahafu2 ай бұрын
technically, sashimono was invented from chinese woodworking in japan.
@356bbc82 ай бұрын
China was founded 73 years ago, but Japanese fingerprints have been made since the Heian period. The origin of Japanese fingerprints was brought from Tang Dynasty by Japanese envoys during the Nara period (710-794). Chinese people equate various countries in the past with China today, but in reality they are different countries.
@The_Citron_72 ай бұрын
This is actually a ancient Chinese technique, they use to build the rims of houses out of only wood and it would hold up quite well too(it’s not Japanese, it’s chinese, but Japanese still use this some times cuz they got earthquakes)
@daniflorin53502 ай бұрын
shill
@stevencher99682 ай бұрын
@@daniflorin5350 He's merely stating a fact, what's your agenda? These master craftsmanship comes from Chinese originator called Lu Pan.
@markmccoy93022 ай бұрын
You,re right. Love to watch Grandpa Amu...Chinese.
@solo_va54922 ай бұрын
@@daniflorin5350 thing japanese:😮 Thing any other asian country: 😐
@denissim962 ай бұрын
Ya SHABI CCP
@Cons2911Ай бұрын
Please please please..these should be kept alive for generations to come..man, got to love the passion of these people, not just these..you have the katanas too.. and I saw a lengthy video of a man (he is also Japanese I think) making shoes by hand and it was sooo intricate, it was beautiful.. probably very expensive but still
@yaniargirov539912 күн бұрын
this is one of the coolest things ive ever seen in my life
@user-qs5rf4oj8q2 ай бұрын
大切にしたい技術ですね
@nanimitennenАй бұрын
でも、今の家とかは指物ないよね
@justg4898Ай бұрын
As a carpenter trainee, I can attest to how hard it is to make perfect wood joints...mine are above average, considering I only started recently, but I wouldn't even dream of achieving such precision...it would be so nice to master this technique to be able to.
@dan_kuroto_Ай бұрын
韓国紀元の技術ですけどね😅
@user-zf6yc8lk1uАй бұрын
THIS IS KOREA TECH, NOT JAPS
@user-wm8dt9xk4sАй бұрын
@@dan_kuroto_要らんその補足
@jetblack68503 ай бұрын
It's not only Japanese. Alot of other Asian countries used that kind of wood working technique.
@yanyanz30113 ай бұрын
This wood joint is called Sunmao. Japanese copied it from ancient china.
@pintubhavana3 ай бұрын
And also india.this technology was specially used in Indian shipbuilding.huge ships were built using this same technology that the ancient ships could carry huge loads and usually lasted for more than 100 years.the British destroyed the Indian shipb uilding.
@elemenopi553 ай бұрын
@@yanyanz3011 and now China copies everything from luxury brand clothing and handbags to cars.
@paulroman48703 ай бұрын
they copied
@snarecat34413 ай бұрын
All over the world too
@evanistrans-dimentional209210 күн бұрын
Interesting it takes years to learn when my late father who never went to Japan, did woodworking as a hobby and was making things like this for me as a kid in the 70's and 80's.
@jancie20210 күн бұрын
Your father's exceptional talent does not diminish the skill and craftsmanship of these woodworkers.
@dimitrifalowski12 күн бұрын
It's like Japanese Calligraphy (Shodo), its not just about writing, it's about pouring your soul and passion into Art or Construction through meditation
@user-zu4rd3ho4m2 ай бұрын
木同士で作ると湿気とかで馴染み合って頑丈になるんだっけ?凄いよね
@lazylavender2952 ай бұрын
Hello :]
@squarestar3262 ай бұрын
Which wood, do u know? Cypress?
@user-kf9uk8sr1l2 ай бұрын
腐らないようにするためだっけ?
@user-zu4rd3ho4m2 ай бұрын
@@user-kf9uk8sr1l 金属が錆びたらそこからなんか腐りそうですもんね🤔
@user-zu4rd3ho4m2 ай бұрын
@@squarestar326 日本では、檜、楠、杉がよく使われるみたいです!
@Inufan20052 ай бұрын
The way it just slides together is just pleasing.
@Kironewastaken9 күн бұрын
forget asmr, this is the most satisfying thing I've seen all year
@annecohen8927Ай бұрын
This is combined precision with science, math and artistry.
@greggross88563 ай бұрын
Temples and other traditional structures built in this way have stood for hundreds of years and survived thousands of earthquakes. This is next-level carpentry. MAD skills! #Respect
@user-xq4tf4dl1k2 ай бұрын
this is not from Japan, original came from China. In 507 AD in China, there was a great architect called Lu Ban, this buckle is his invention, in ancient China Tang Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Ming Dynasty, a large number of Japanese scholars and architects came to China to study.
@eggcluck2 ай бұрын
They have not, they have had been rebuilt and replaced over time.
@Kelberi3 ай бұрын
embarrassingly these are invented in China and passed on to Japan during the Tang dynasty.
@yanyanz30113 ай бұрын
That's correct, This wood joint is called Sunmao. Japanese copied it from ancient china.
@joeljohnson33793 ай бұрын
Now look at China. They got Walmart shelves loaded with a bunch of junk.
@zmara52302 ай бұрын
Then everything from architecture to common ramen is from China. You faiIed to preserve it so we claim it today.
@xxpark35962 ай бұрын
Chinese engineers would be hired since B.C. to participate in the construction projects of the kingdoms in Korean Peninsula, and after the technology spread there, Korean engineers took part in Japanese architecture. For example, "Shitennoji," a famous Japanese temple, was constructed in 578 by three Baekje engineers(reference, Nihonsyoki) They also built the famous temple, "Horyuji" and established a construction company called "Gongogumi" for 1,400 years.
@xxpark35962 ай бұрын
Your ancestors developed great cultural skills and spread them to neighboring countries. That is a good thing, but if you devalue another country's use of that culture as nothing more than replication, you will not be able to gain the dignity and respect that the former Chinese dynasties received from neighboring countries. It is a little mean to ask them to repay their kindness in the past.
@paulcampbell9618Ай бұрын
That applies to every form in there cultures. From tea ceremony to wood working
@BadThrusher12 күн бұрын
such a tiny country, small people yet they have a huge impact in global perception of hardwork and ingenuity
@chosenjuan31282 ай бұрын
Actually Japan acquired this technique from China. And China is also not the only one who invented it. Similar technique has been developed in elsewhere such as Europe and their stave church. Ancient China built enormous wooden constructions like temples and giant towers using this technique. And what unique to China is there's a technical treatise in Song Dynasty called "菅造法式” comprehensively and scientifically demonstrated their wood building technology.
@Re-xh4ox2 ай бұрын
Okay? They just showed Japanese way
@chosenjuan31282 ай бұрын
@@Re-xh4ox it’s like you saying the Newton's first law in Japanese way, there’s no such thing
@user-ol3xf7gd1dАй бұрын
@@Re-xh4ox Japan invented Japanese English, so English is Japanese?
@R-TrainExpress3 ай бұрын
Similar building techniques were done with a lot of early gothic era churches in Germany. Amazing how this stuff is built
@DangerRanger_2 ай бұрын
In Germany we have similar but way less artistic techniques. I would say it's like the beginner-level of Japanese woodworking. (Tho these are still quiet strong joints)
@benzness2 ай бұрын
@@DangerRanger_not Japanese, just asian in general
@sailingadventurer2 ай бұрын
@@benzness India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Saudis doesn't have such wood workings and they are also in Asia. Instead they have beautiful stone carvings
@user-ie9lm4lp4k Yes, Chinese are also amazing artists. Incredible workmanship. Thanks for the information.
@user-ic5ok6dr2f11 күн бұрын
Mortise and tenon structure, ancient Chinese buildings with wood, brick and tile as the main building materials, wooden frame structure as the main structural mode, by the column, beam, purlin and other main components built, the joints between each component to mortise and tenon and tenon match, forming a flexible frame. Mortise and tenon (mortise and tenon) is a kind of concave-convex joint used on two wooden parts. The convex part is called a tenon (or tenon); The concave part is called the tenon (or mortise, mortise), and the tenon and the tenon bite together to play a connecting role. This is the main structure of ancient Chinese buildings, furniture and other wooden instruments. The mortise and tenon structure is a combination of tenon and tenon, a clever combination of more and less, high and low, long and short between wood pieces, which can effectively limit the twisting of wood pieces in all directions. The most basic mortise and tenon structure consists of two components, one of which is inserted into the mortise of the other, so that the two components are connected and fixed. The part of the tenon that extends into the mortise is called the tongue, and the rest is called the shoulder. Mortise and tenon construction Mortise and tenon structure is widely used in architecture, but also widely used in furniture, reflecting the close relationship between furniture and architecture. After the mortise and tenon structure is applied to the building, although each component is relatively thin, it can withstand huge pressure as a whole. This structure is not the strength of the individual, but the combination and support of each other, this structure has become the future architecture and Chinese style
@alistairblaire60012 ай бұрын
Woodworkers all over the planet admire Japanese joinery.
@user-ic5ok6dr2f11 күн бұрын
Mortise and tenon structure, ancient Chinese buildings with wood, brick and tile as the main building materials, wooden frame structure as the main structural mode, by the column, beam, purlin and other main components built, the joints between each component to mortise and tenon and tenon match, forming a flexible frame. Mortise and tenon (mortise and tenon) is a kind of concave-convex joint used on two wooden parts. The convex part is called a tenon (or tenon); The concave part is called the tenon (or mortise, mortise), and the tenon and the tenon bite together to play a connecting role. This is the main structure of ancient Chinese buildings, furniture and other wooden instruments. The mortise and tenon structure is a combination of tenon and tenon, a clever combination of more and less, high and low, long and short between wood pieces, which can effectively limit the twisting of wood pieces in all directions. The most basic mortise and tenon structure consists of two components, one of which is inserted into the mortise of the other, so that the two components are connected and fixed. The part of the tenon that extends into the mortise is called the tongue, and the rest is called the shoulder. Mortise and tenon construction Mortise and tenon structure is widely used in architecture, but also widely used in furniture, reflecting the close relationship between furniture and architecture. After the mortise and tenon structure is applied to the building, although each component is relatively thin, it can withstand huge pressure as a whole. This structure is not the strength of the individual, but the combination and support of each other, this structure has become the future architecture and Chinese style
@moxxiloquita204811 күн бұрын
Wow this is beautiful craftsmanship!! That one at 0:16 is just insane!!
@Gnome_Dome110 күн бұрын
“My neighbor is so annoying!” *unbuilds house angrily*
@user-yk9vo4cs3x2 ай бұрын
Beautiful workmanship.
@AEChronicler13 күн бұрын
As someone with poor spatial reasoning, I can only wish to understand skills like this. I just find them enjoyable to watch.
@byronjones5505Ай бұрын
I've seen it on some furniture and couldn't find a nailed or screws couldn't believe it!! I thought I've been going blind until the seller explained how this was made. I called Bull the Wood Word was tomuch detail work with a whole lot of attention to detail. Unbelievable!! Thanks
@pjpororo323Ай бұрын
I hope there are many who are willing to take up this craft. Need to preserve and carry on !
@bryancoyne96922 ай бұрын
I've been working with wood for over 30 years and this type of wood working is just pure amazing very strong beautiful all same time
@user-mg2ei7cr3b4 күн бұрын
Who make this is a complete JENIOUS
@user-sz8hn9ex9qАй бұрын
The tea cabinets and other crafts that the Japanese brought back from China 1,300 years ago were Karaki Sashimono, from which various styles were born in Japan. However, in the first place, the technique of building joinery called wood framing was established 23,000 years ago during the Jomon period.
@hazelmint667113 күн бұрын
23,000 years ago.?? That's crazy!
@VitoSu18Ай бұрын
The video presents Chinese mortise and tenon woodworking construction techniques, which were later transmitted to Japan and applied.
@TheDemonHimself20 күн бұрын
Here we go😅
@RazerPlaysRoblox17 күн бұрын
China ❌ Japan ✅
@user-ep5kk5xf2x17 күн бұрын
很明显你是正确的,不过日本以前就是中国的藩属国,有这些技术确实正常
@mochikokinako17 күн бұрын
CCP fantasy
@samiulislam439716 күн бұрын
With coronavirus i assume 😂
@Carl_BradshawАй бұрын
These woodwork techniques are Chinese in origin. Being historically the hub in East Asia, Chinese had influenced many neighboring Asian cultures extensively.
@rollingthunderinho13 күн бұрын
No one cares CCP bot the Japanese mastered it
@thedruski853 күн бұрын
Such an elegant art. It's truly beautiful.
@manipunation29 күн бұрын
This is incredible!! I have sometimes contemplated, could there possibly be a way to build the stone foundation of a house, by precisely cutting the stones in such a way that they were all locked together so that you didn't need to use any cement or such to keep them anchored in place.
And all done by hand!! That precision is amazing! Not to mention the simple beauty. ❤️❤️❤️
@beccahmar2747Ай бұрын
Of course this should be highly esteemed and preserved. Such skill of art!❤
@sambudryuАй бұрын
This technique was vastly used in the East Asia, originating from China. It may vary in places, but was very commonly used not only in Japan, but also in China, Korea, India, etc. Also, though it may come from a different origin, there were similar construction techniques in Europe too. Just trying to say these techniques aren't native nor original for Japan. A lot of these stuff can be seen all over the world, and especially in Korea, where these techniques were really put into hand and mastered, then were passed on to Japan. But it is unique that Japan still uses and polishes these techniques to the modern days, thanks to them being vulnerable against frequent earthquakes. Wooden buildings noticeably withstand better against earthquakes, and because of that nature, Japanese have really mastered this technique and is probably in the best position right now.
@daoshiiLiuАй бұрын
yes
@harisankar1932Ай бұрын
You mentioned India here comes the racist comments
@LUIS-ox1bvАй бұрын
Correct. In China furniture, such as tables, chairs, and chests, were created in this fashion. Even temples and palaces were constructed, using these methods,which never saw a single nail.
@flaminmongrel6955Ай бұрын
@@harisankar1932 true, for some reason whenever someone mentions the word, there is a special form of racism which is very dumb as well since Indian is even less heterogeneous than europe.
@sambudryuАй бұрын
@@harisankar1932 Honesly, I don't like nor like seeing people spilling racism around, but there are a lot of Indians who say everything they have is superior compared to others and just makes people want to be 'that guy'. You know what they say, ultranationalism is just as toxic as racism.
@petruspegram245921 күн бұрын
ENGINEERING at it's highest defined level. Sashimono
@minxue15013 ай бұрын
This was imported from Tang dynasty, ancient China.
@abhishekpas2 ай бұрын
Imported from India to China.
@jacku83042 ай бұрын
@@abhishekpasThere is no traditions of India using all sorts of furniture. The Chinese for hundreds of years have their meals on proper chairs and tables for their meals. Today many Indians still seat on floor using their fingers for their meals. Many centuries old Chinese furniture can be found in world's museums. But not from India.
@abhishekpas2 ай бұрын
@@jacku8304 we have tradition to eat on small table called as pidha made from wooden. Still it is in use. We still in villages make furniture with a locking system. It's widely prevalent even today.
@jacku83042 ай бұрын
@@abhishekpasSmall simple low table but no chairs. Simple locking system but not the mind taxing sophisticated joinery of East Asia.
@Yotakunpepe2 ай бұрын
So where is the tradition or culture of Tang dynasty in current China? Current Chinese construction technique seems fragile.
It‘s a traditional woodworking technique not only in Japan but also whole world
@gardenstate23510 күн бұрын
This have always been the way of woodworking and constructwo thousands of years. And this method is still used in the US as well.
@user-sy1jr9rt1yАй бұрын
木組み。日本の伝統技術です。宮大工は本当にすごい。
@user-K.JАй бұрын
中国からの技術です
@user-ve8vf7jl5sАй бұрын
@@user-K.Jって事は大元はインドか
@user-kk6mr5hv1rАй бұрын
中国の物は中国の物、お前等の物は俺の物😂
@user-K.JАй бұрын
@@user-ve8vf7jl5s 何で?
@canberrabob8064Ай бұрын
@@user-K.J日本で派生した独特なものです。
@mindyourbusinessmotherfuck375723 күн бұрын
Craftsmanship like none I've ever seen. Incredible work.
@ericvigen3 ай бұрын
Asian (Chinese, Japanese, Korean, ...) are fantastic in manufacturing, literally. 👌👏
@cececox63992 ай бұрын
Ahahaha china. .. the place with tofu dreg construction and who produce absolute crap.... Look up what's happening with the three gorges dam. It IS going to collapse. It's just WHEN. And they KNOW it'll kill tens of MILLIONS in just hours. It's almost collapsed in every rainy season since 2020. They produce the cheapest crappiest version of everything else. They don't innovate or build anything with skill. Their aircraft carriers are splitting apart and can't even leave dock. And their "space" program is windows 98 level graphics. And their getting most of their rocket ideas and solutions from all the data that space X makes public and all the camera views of the rocket in flight. I kinda wish Elon would make less things public 😂 but hey they'll screw it up like everything else. ☠️🤡☠️🤦♀️🙅🤷♀️🤣
@36jack192 ай бұрын
Indians?
@Ba_rock0bama2 ай бұрын
@@36jack19 Nope, Edit : No need to be angry at me the comment is clearly talking about "EAST ASIA" that's why I said nope 🙄
@cjfool54892 ай бұрын
@@Ba_rock0bama you know nothing bro 😂😂
@k1ng_baa2 ай бұрын
nope@@36jack19
@bubblesT-qz2rh12 күн бұрын
It's also called dovetail in English it's in the old furniture
@Javidfarali198010 күн бұрын
Such beautiful craftsmanship. A true work of art. If I had the funds I would have my home built with sashimoto style
@robertpage32162 ай бұрын
Great inspiration and great craftsmanship .
@TheFunnyDictator2 ай бұрын
What's the inspiration you mention, man?
@mannysabir13392 ай бұрын
No one should call themselves a master carpenter till they can do that.
@chalnervassor9430Ай бұрын
Then like 2 thousand people worldwide are master carpenters because is top tier stuff.
@haowu3818Ай бұрын
我想知道和榫卯结构有差别吗
@hazardeurАй бұрын
@@chalnervassor9430hence the "master"
@shivamarya5225Ай бұрын
Most can do that, it's the thinking and coming up with designs that wont break or come off that's the hard part
@icebox1954Ай бұрын
@@chalnervassor9430 I learned this in a carpenter course for beginners. It's nothing special. It was required to complete the course and I did it quite easily.
@time.52820 күн бұрын
And I perform this level of craftsmanship everyday and I didn't even know😮
@MTXSHO9732vV8SHOАй бұрын
As practical as it is beautiful, that's why every culture's philosophy is important to consider.
@brysonmartin33903 ай бұрын
I wonder if you could do similar with different forms of metals like aluminum and steel to make joints that are as strong as a weld without having the weak points of a weld like the surrounding material being compromised from an arc mark
@YoutubeStupidBullshit3 ай бұрын
They do, the metal ones don't have visible edges in most of them. This has been done with stone as well.
@RayLeejr3 ай бұрын
Absolutely they can!
@stevengordon32713 ай бұрын
Bet you could do the same with 3d printed plastic.
@shaktigg3 ай бұрын
Type ramappa temple or 1000 pilalr temple , With stones the whole magnificent temple is made with this 3d jigsaw method
@zeroxzxrd2 ай бұрын
It called “sun mao”(Mortise and tenon) from ancient China more than 7000 years ago
@user-oy1tm9ln2hАй бұрын
サンマオで作った建築物が中国に残ってたら見てみたい。王が代わる度に破壊する国だから無理か。
@levin36Ай бұрын
@@user-oy1tm9ln2h wutai mountain, foguang temple.almost existing for 1200 years.
@foto2115 күн бұрын
The modern age feels a million miles away from this on too many levels.
@jacobpugpoirier335019 күн бұрын
I remember doing this in sophomore woodworking class, It was awesome