My TOP Money Making Project this Year! Truly Woven. Free Plans.

My TOP Money Making Project this Year! Truly Woven. Free Plans.

Best selling woodworking projects farmhouse woodworking projects projects that sell wood crafts wooden woven cross Today, Ill show you how to transform a single 1x6x8 board into 12 stunning wooden woven crosses. This in the only video featuring a truly woven cross. These aren't your grandmas run-of-the-mill butt jointed fakes. These are a top selling project for me and an easy wooden craft idea for a school project. FREE DOWNLOADABLE PLANS: https://www.whosthevoss.com/product-p... MORE SMALLS LIKE THIS PROJECT:    • Small Projects (Free Plans)   WHERE To Sell Your Projects:    • $0 Startup. WHERE To Make The MOST Money!   WHEN To Sell Your Projects:    • This is When to build and Sell for MAXIMUM...   Build yourself one of those fancy little tv's that was in the background:    • Tiny TV. Fits ANY Phone! FREE PLANS! GET E...   How to Calculate Wear and Tear: I consider my equipment an investment, with each tool lasting 5+ years. These items I do not even attempt to calculate the minimal amount each project takes away. However, blade usage is definably factored in. I replace the blade on my table saw and miter saw every 6 months. I could have them sharpened, but due to their usage, I'm more comfortable tightening a brand new item back into my saws. My blades are around 50.00 each, six months is 180 days, 4,320 hours. If this project takes me two hours, i know I'm not at the saw 100 percent of the time. Both blades costing me 100.00 divided by 4,320 hours is .023 dollars per hour of usage. Power Usage: Electricity can be calculated by figuring the percentage of your shop vs your house, to figure out how much you pay to run electricity in the shop. Add your home and shop square footage together, and ask Google "What percent of (total square footage) is (shop square footage). My total square footage is 1284, the shop is 716 (we live in a tiny house, and newly expanded shop) and 55% of my electricity bill belongs to the shop. Again, divide your electric bill by your shop percentage, and divide that number by 720 (the number of hours in a month), and that's your rough hourly cost. :) 0:00 - Intro 0:15 - F is for FAKER 0:26 - WhosTheVoss.com 0:33 - First Cut 0:41 - Table Saw Time 0:57 - Perfect Miters 1:57 - Vampires are Real? 2:28 - Intricate Joints lookin simple 3:30 - Jigsaw or Bandsaw 4:51 - Sanding 5:33 - HYPE 5:56 - Assembly 8:47 - Seems like a sin.. 9:09 - Stain Bath 9:46 - The Meat and Potatoes 12:28 - Thanks for Sticking Around!