Dec 11, 2020 6:33 PM
blackzver
104227
2617
17
I suspect u might appreciate some nice old wood magic.
CaptainDogWasTheBestDog
Wow! I would love to see how they formed those joints!
SnepInTime
Crazy how nature do dat
bloahboy
Always upvote Slovenia
moboden
Wood I! Yes!
teknarQueen
Beautiful workmanship
Copenhagen2
Sorcery
MrSpookywasagoodboy2
Isn't it good Slovenian wood
Digbydoggonnit
Beautiful work
Bam906
He said wood magic ??
OKiluvUBuhBai
Dude that’s neat as fuck
bigboytaz
@trulli
trulli
I'm doing the best I can
fontana60
Impressive
ZeroVektor
Lesbian architecture: no nails, all tongue in groove.
harrison100012
I cannot see how this goes together
rednecksciencegeek
It's not put together like a dovetail joint. The logs are just stacked alternating from side to side.
petrolhead1987
Not quite, look closely. Each individual log contains at least two joins in it.
mnrelo
Hurts my head thinking how that comes together.
gracebee123
How old is this structure likely to be?
fencer1964
My First thought: “That’s rad.” My second thought: “It must get really fucking cold there if they need joins this tight.”
LovelyMover
This is impossible...Slovenia maybe a lie too
PetitChocolat
Like Finland
Dellevadova
Old school architecture amazes me.
PSYchr
Make's Mike Bowe look like a barnwood building hack.
16DollarMan
What kinda insane, drugged out, lumberjack thought of this magnificent bullshit?..
nonCanadianGoose
Imagine all the free time you’d have without TV or internet
rbudrick
One who destroyed mass quantities of vag on the reg.
CrewMan6
SteveIrwinIsMySpiritAnimal
This is incredible! Happen to know how old-ish?
Darjanator
Hard to tell. Some of those houses are centuries old, but some fall apart in decades.
femdyk350
How does the water run away from joints like that?
DerbyDad03
It doesn't run away. It stands there and stares in wonderment.
SaturnineCult
There shouldn't be water in there, you make roof on top of that.
JuliusPepperwoodFromChicago
darkclaw89
Gotta love Slovakia!
I see what u did there ?
UncleMeaty
Some new craftsmanship from Slovenia.
Puolitettupuolituttu
Draw me like one of those Italian art restoration projects.
mektel
Built in layers. Sliding joinery wouldn't work in this case.
innagaddavidababy
Thank you. I was thinking magic.
jhsuber
This makes more sense than the “boil the wood and compress it” method they used for that nail in the middle trick
Tierannix
Couldnt it also (although unlikely) be built by using diagonal sliding pieces?
That's what I'm thinking. The diagonals are perpendicular to the plane of the image.
If you want to build two free-standing walls first and then glide them together, sure, I guess. The fourth wall will be tricky though.
yermawsmaw
v
SidewalkWidflower
Nope, sorry, I don't get it. Please explain to a loghead?
JadeNB1729
Soak it in wood.
Ghlargh
These shapes cannot be slid in from the sides, but the individual logs can be stacked from the bottom up.
artdecoasfuck
These are stacked like life-sized Lincoln Logs with square-sides. The fancy/complex cuts where they notch-together are cool, but are (1/2)
HappyLookouuut
You very well may be correct, but I was thinking the “frilly” parts maybe served the purpose of limiting movement due to natural expansion/
simple in being essentially a frilly straight-down Lego connection rather than some crazy "impossible dovetail" type of joinery. Still (2/3)
some mad craftsmanship is probably involved in cutting that frilly Lego joint. (3/3)
User762436
How does that get built?
Thandruin
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodworking_joints
DogTaxEvader
That's exactly what this isn't (I think)
slamorama
Look close at the end grains. Each carving is one log. Easy to stack them vertically.
HeatproofNut
With your hands.
Beanyoneyk
YayItsMillerTime
Larirari
By builders
varrdak
One piece at a time.
frenchfry1
Magic my dude
angryscreechingnoise
the cuts are diagonal.
joshuartistry24
The joints are tapered
kookyabird
Stacked. These are separate logs put together, not two boards joined.
735824
Slowly and carefully by expert craftsmanship.
Librarybot
3D printing from seeds
ShiftingPattern
I think you maybe skipped a few steps between that and the finished product...
OwlBeReady
It would be done with a pre cut stencile the exact pattern does not matter as long as you use the same stencile each time.
CorneliusCornwall
Carefully
badatediting
welluhwhatdoyouwantmetosay
Like a log cabin with extra steps..
usernamemustbe4characterslonng
The old “how can we make this harder on ourselves”
rzlprnft
I think they used a material called wood
endyrr
One on top of the other from the ground up
PooPooInSpaghettiEveryoneUpsetti
Makes sense
bfreeze01
Sounds easier than one under the other roof down.
BeccaBeccaBoBecca
I think you’re right.
HiMyNamesCoop
By soaking the logs in wood first
PicassoCT
I see you have studied the wood identification books..
frontsightfocus
Krakencrotch
The legacy of @SHITTYBANANAS lives on.
meadmaker
The ancient ritual persists.
nikkinikorasu
scarloclorne
Yeah it’s built by stacking the joints.
AllysiaAiua
Ohhhhh, thanks. That's suddenly stupidly obvious
SmoeAhsolse
The seems are not eat to see at first glance. It may be that there's so much "visual noise" from the wood grain that we filter out them out.
NotTrollgasm
LordLEFTY
So you think you're a smartass dont you?! ...gotta give it to ya.
tonbeor
butt joint
BenderRodriguz1010
AisforApple
Is the joint shaped like this?
monstaguts
aye, it checks out cap'n.
DuckSick
You could 3d print Lincoln logs .... dude....
Borted
Thank you, that was hurting my brain.
driyon
If that's the case wouldn't it make more sense for the spikes/ flat edges to face the other direction.
Kapi23
They aren't perpendicular to each other, so you can slide them into position
iCoIIectDownVotes
Not quite, look closely. You have assumed that each join is an individual piece of wood, the pieces have multiple joins on them.
Not sure what you mean. The rings in the end grain show that each lap is a new log.
Never noticed that, I apologise. I was trying to look for dividing lines along the sides, and didn't even notice the rings.
This looks plausible. Thanks for taking the time and drawing it!
Cantstopdontstopwontstop
Guy. Did you, did you just make this??
Mittens0
Thank you! I was breaking my brains overhere trying to understand it
Roqinn
That's the way it appears in the pic. I can't see them sliding together. They would have had to have been placed 1 on top of the other.
TheLastNalbinder
Like Lincoln logs
Just like those!
Did you make this render just for the question? Bruh...
FisterMantastic
I honestly hope so.
It's just a screencap, but yeah. I do 3D stuff for a living so it's not as big an effort as it might seem.
IfWereStillAliveInTheMorningThenWellKnowWereNotDead
I fucking love this website
Marteocom
"not a big effort"... Dude... For me, typing this reply is a big effort...
DevinCastellucci
People are on different wavelengths and that's okay.
ddskafjlrkeig43perog
3dcurious here, which programs do you use?
For personal, I'm a Blender heretic, with PS and substance for textures. For work, it's a Maya pipeline.
cool, i've learning cinema4d, foking crazy program
Thank you for that image, it solved the problem my brain has been having with this for like a month. How did they cut it tho? Chisel??
Warchild1987
Sawmills as far back as the late 1700s (ish? I'm not an historian) would cut these joineries with end mill bits. Belt driven tools are old.
SpawnLegacy
3d printer probably.
89tulkas
Archaeologists have found some remarkably well preserved medieval Slovenian 3D printers.
CaptainDogWasTheBestDog
Wow! I would love to see how they formed those joints!
SnepInTime
Crazy how nature do dat
bloahboy
Always upvote Slovenia
moboden
Wood I! Yes!
teknarQueen
Beautiful workmanship
Copenhagen2
Sorcery
MrSpookywasagoodboy2
Isn't it good Slovenian wood
Digbydoggonnit
Beautiful work
Bam906
He said wood magic ??
OKiluvUBuhBai
Dude that’s neat as fuck
bigboytaz
@trulli
trulli
I'm doing the best I can
fontana60
Impressive
ZeroVektor
Lesbian architecture: no nails, all tongue in groove.
harrison100012
I cannot see how this goes together
rednecksciencegeek
It's not put together like a dovetail joint. The logs are just stacked alternating from side to side.
petrolhead1987
Not quite, look closely. Each individual log contains at least two joins in it.
mnrelo
Hurts my head thinking how that comes together.
gracebee123
How old is this structure likely to be?
fencer1964
My First thought: “That’s rad.” My second thought: “It must get really fucking cold there if they need joins this tight.”
LovelyMover
This is impossible...Slovenia maybe a lie too
PetitChocolat
LovelyMover
Like Finland
Dellevadova
Old school architecture amazes me.
PSYchr
Make's Mike Bowe look like a barnwood building hack.
16DollarMan
What kinda insane, drugged out, lumberjack thought of this magnificent bullshit?..
nonCanadianGoose
Imagine all the free time you’d have without TV or internet
rbudrick
One who destroyed mass quantities of vag on the reg.
CrewMan6
SteveIrwinIsMySpiritAnimal
This is incredible! Happen to know how old-ish?
Darjanator
Hard to tell. Some of those houses are centuries old, but some fall apart in decades.
femdyk350
How does the water run away from joints like that?
DerbyDad03
It doesn't run away. It stands there and stares in wonderment.
SaturnineCult
There shouldn't be water in there, you make roof on top of that.
JuliusPepperwoodFromChicago
darkclaw89
Gotta love Slovakia!
blackzver
I see what u did there ?
UncleMeaty
Some new craftsmanship from Slovenia.
Puolitettupuolituttu
Draw me like one of those Italian art restoration projects.
mektel
Built in layers. Sliding joinery wouldn't work in this case.
innagaddavidababy
Thank you. I was thinking magic.
jhsuber
This makes more sense than the “boil the wood and compress it” method they used for that nail in the middle trick
Tierannix
Couldnt it also (although unlikely) be built by using diagonal sliding pieces?
Darjanator
That's what I'm thinking. The diagonals are perpendicular to the plane of the image.
Puolitettupuolituttu
If you want to build two free-standing walls first and then glide them together, sure, I guess. The fourth wall will be tricky though.
yermawsmaw
SidewalkWidflower
Nope, sorry, I don't get it. Please explain to a loghead?
JadeNB1729
Soak it in wood.
Ghlargh
These shapes cannot be slid in from the sides, but the individual logs can be stacked from the bottom up.
artdecoasfuck
These are stacked like life-sized Lincoln Logs with square-sides. The fancy/complex cuts where they notch-together are cool, but are (1/2)
HappyLookouuut
You very well may be correct, but I was thinking the “frilly” parts maybe served the purpose of limiting movement due to natural expansion/
artdecoasfuck
simple in being essentially a frilly straight-down Lego connection rather than some crazy "impossible dovetail" type of joinery. Still (2/3)
artdecoasfuck
some mad craftsmanship is probably involved in cutting that frilly Lego joint. (3/3)
User762436
How does that get built?
Thandruin
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodworking_joints
DogTaxEvader
That's exactly what this isn't (I think)
slamorama
Look close at the end grains. Each carving is one log. Easy to stack them vertically.
HeatproofNut
With your hands.
Beanyoneyk
YayItsMillerTime
Larirari
By builders
varrdak
One piece at a time.
frenchfry1
Magic my dude
angryscreechingnoise
the cuts are diagonal.
joshuartistry24
The joints are tapered
kookyabird
Stacked. These are separate logs put together, not two boards joined.
735824
Slowly and carefully by expert craftsmanship.
Librarybot
3D printing from seeds
ShiftingPattern
I think you maybe skipped a few steps between that and the finished product...
OwlBeReady
It would be done with a pre cut stencile the exact pattern does not matter as long as you use the same stencile each time.
CorneliusCornwall
Carefully
badatediting
welluhwhatdoyouwantmetosay
Like a log cabin with extra steps..
usernamemustbe4characterslonng
The old “how can we make this harder on ourselves”
rzlprnft
I think they used a material called wood
endyrr
One on top of the other from the ground up
PooPooInSpaghettiEveryoneUpsetti
Makes sense
bfreeze01
Sounds easier than one under the other roof down.
BeccaBeccaBoBecca
HiMyNamesCoop
By soaking the logs in wood first
PicassoCT
I see you have studied the wood identification books..
frontsightfocus
Krakencrotch
The legacy of @SHITTYBANANAS lives on.
meadmaker
The ancient ritual persists.
nikkinikorasu
scarloclorne
Yeah it’s built by stacking the joints.
AllysiaAiua
Ohhhhh, thanks. That's suddenly stupidly obvious
SmoeAhsolse
The seems are not eat to see at first glance. It may be that there's so much "visual noise" from the wood grain that we filter out them out.
NotTrollgasm
LordLEFTY
So you think you're a smartass dont you?! ...gotta give it to ya.
tonbeor
butt joint
BenderRodriguz1010
AisforApple
Is the joint shaped like this?
monstaguts
aye, it checks out cap'n.
DuckSick
You could 3d print Lincoln logs .... dude....
Borted
Thank you, that was hurting my brain.
PetitChocolat
driyon
If that's the case wouldn't it make more sense for the spikes/ flat edges to face the other direction.
Kapi23
They aren't perpendicular to each other, so you can slide them into position
iCoIIectDownVotes
petrolhead1987
Not quite, look closely. You have assumed that each join is an individual piece of wood, the pieces have multiple joins on them.
AisforApple
Not sure what you mean. The rings in the end grain show that each lap is a new log.
petrolhead1987
Never noticed that, I apologise. I was trying to look for dividing lines along the sides, and didn't even notice the rings.
blackzver
This looks plausible. Thanks for taking the time and drawing it!
Cantstopdontstopwontstop
Guy. Did you, did you just make this??
Mittens0
Thank you! I was breaking my brains overhere trying to understand it
Roqinn
That's the way it appears in the pic. I can't see them sliding together. They would have had to have been placed 1 on top of the other.
TheLastNalbinder
Like Lincoln logs
Roqinn
Just like those!
LordLEFTY
Did you make this render just for the question? Bruh...
FisterMantastic
I honestly hope so.
AisforApple
It's just a screencap, but yeah. I do 3D stuff for a living so it's not as big an effort as it might seem.
IfWereStillAliveInTheMorningThenWellKnowWereNotDead
I fucking love this website
Marteocom
"not a big effort"... Dude... For me, typing this reply is a big effort...
DevinCastellucci
People are on different wavelengths and that's okay.
ddskafjlrkeig43perog
3dcurious here, which programs do you use?
AisforApple
For personal, I'm a Blender heretic, with PS and substance for textures. For work, it's a Maya pipeline.
ddskafjlrkeig43perog
cool, i've learning cinema4d, foking crazy program
DuckSick
Thank you for that image, it solved the problem my brain has been having with this for like a month. How did they cut it tho? Chisel??
Warchild1987
Sawmills as far back as the late 1700s (ish? I'm not an historian) would cut these joineries with end mill bits. Belt driven tools are old.
SpawnLegacy
3d printer probably.
89tulkas
Archaeologists have found some remarkably well preserved medieval Slovenian 3D printers.