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Video Archives - Page 3 of 3 - The Year of Mud

Natual Building Video Review: Mud, Hands, A House

By Resources, Video, Media

I recently had the fortunate opportunity to check out Mud, Hands, A House (or El Barro, Las Manos, La Casa, its original Spanish title), a great natural building documentary provided to me by the kind Max of Firespeaking.com.

It’s an educational, how-to focused natural building documentary with a wealth of instructional segments, led by Jorge Belanko, an engaging master natural builder based in Patagonia, Argentina.

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Amazing Traditional Carpentry and Timber Framing Website

By Resources, Video, Hand Tools, Wabi-sabi Kitchen

I was very fortunate to recently catch wind of Carpenters from Europe and Beyond, an incredibly valuable traditional carpentry resource from France’s Ministry of Culture. The website is host to a wealth of information about the history of carpentry, the people who honed the craft, and videos of modern day traditional carpenters continuing to work by hand, especially in the timber framing tradition.

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Making This Soccer Ball Required More Technology Than Building My House

By Uncategorized

This post might seem a little random, but I stumbled across this video and was floored by how complicated the manufacturing process for this simple soccer ball (sorry, football for the rest of the world) is. The amount of technology, machinery, computers, and undoubtedly, energy going on here is HUGE.

Remember that this is a mere football. A ball. Filled with air.

Then imagine how complex the manufacturing process is for other seemingly everyday objects.

I watched this and had to think about my house, made mostly out of sand and clay, which was built almost entirely by hand. The level of technology in my whole house seems to pale in comparison! (Ok, so there are some materials in the house [windows, the EPDM] that are probably quite complex to manufacture, but still…)

Oh industry…

Reciprocal roof video: removing the charlie stick, the final step

By Video, Reciprocal Roof

Here is the only video footage that I had captured of the second reciprocal roof frame construction. This is the final step, after removing the support braces from the ‘charlie stick’ (or temporary post): knocking charlie out of its support position.

As you might be able to see, the roof did not drop at all, since the construction was very tight. We actually had to pry the last rafter into position, which pretty much guaranteed that the frame would not settle once the charlie stick was removed.

Here’s the video clip (be prepared to tilt your head!):

Reciprocal roof video: removing the charlie stick

By Video, Reciprocal Roof

By sheer chance, I found this YouTube video in which several builders remove the ‘charlie stick’, or temporary support for a reciprocal roof frame. It looks like it is perhaps Tony Wrench’s account, but unfortunately he has no other videos about the building process. But this is indeed helpful! It gives me clues about the construction process:

– The charlie stick does not seem to be buried at all, which makes me think that they simply braced it (making it easier to remove later)

– The whole structure does settle once the post is removed, but not much, so the pitch is indeed “what you get”

– The top of the rafters look to be left untrimmed to their final size, which I assume gives the builder some wiggle room

Meka’s cob cottage video

By Video

Here’s a little video showing off a gorgeously designed cob cottage interior by Meka in southern Oregon. Beautiful curves, built-in shelves and furniture, and a wild staircase design are the highlights.

Cob building video

By Resources, Video

Here’s a great little video (apparently a teaser for a documentary that’s been in the making) about cob design and building, “The House as Living Sculpture”. It has a lot of nice footage of cob homes and the construction process. Check it out:

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=abYZLmPwgwQ]