/r/ArtisanVideos
This community is a space for curated high-quality video content that showcases the talent and skills of trades-persons and crafts-persons as they engage in and practice their craft.
This subreddit is a celebration of quality and perfection in nuance of skill.
No blatant advertisements or self promotion.
No how-to or DIY
This is NOT an art subreddit.
FLAIR YOUR POST. I'm going to start removing them instead of fixing them. It takes 2 clicks after you make it.
Use descriptive titles.
No karma-bait or click-bait in the titles.
Link directly to the video. No .gif.
Time stamp your post title with video length.
Check the new queue after you post a video to make sure it's there. If it's not, message the moderators to have it removed from the spam filter.
Do NOT inbox or DM me.
Culinary - Anything to do with making delicious food
Design - Creation of the idea. ex: technical drawings, prototypes, testing and troubleshooting
Maintenance - Keeping knives sharp and machines running!
Modification - Modifying finished products
Performance - What goes into putting together that final result?
Production - Crafting parts and products from raw stock or resources
Please note that filtering by flair is incompatible with dark mode.
/r/art
/r/ArtisanGifts
/r/ArtisanGifs
/r/ArtisanHelp
/r/barbervideos
/r/beyondthegame
/r/blacksmith
/r/ChoppingFood
/r/curiousvideos
/r/DIY
/r/EngineeringPorn
/r/Factories
/r/FastWorkers
/r/FoodVideos
/r/JustFreshMyShitUp
/r/OddlySatisfying
/r/Restorationvideos
/r/shoptours
/r/SlowTV
/r/streetfoodartists
/r/techniquecritique
/r/TheMakingOf
/r/watchmaking
/r/woodworking
/r/ArtisanVideos
Weaving strips of cane through each other to form a lattice pattern, typically as the back or seat of a chair.
I love the part how he forged iron with copper and the most beautiful thing is he made copper inlay handle. Perfect combination i say. although it’s not very practical but an art and a beautiful collection item.