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Making Oilcloth - Waterproof Coverings for Your Campsite
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118,484 Views • 2 years ago • Click to toggle off description
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Views : 118,484
Genre: Education
License: Standard YouTube License

Uploaded At 2 years ago ^^
warning: returnyoutubedislikes may not be accurate, this is just an estiment ehe :3
Rating : 4.931 (111/6,325 LTDR)

98.28% of the users lieked the video!!
1.72% of the users dislieked the video!!
User score: 97.42- Overwhelmingly Positive

RYD date created : 2025-08-27T16:24:13.629459Z
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166 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@ieuanhunt552

2 years ago

I don't know why I would need to know how to make canvas waterproof but it's fascinating to watch regardless

347 | 15

@silveritea

2 years ago

I have wondered how this was made for decades. Thank you!

77 | 0

@larocdokarnap3227

2 years ago

I was recently wondering about how they would waterproof things in history, just the word oilcloth makes me realize how obvious the answer should have been.

79 | 0

@shadowsoulless6227

2 years ago

Btw You don't 'need' the red iron oxide, it's literally just a pigment

10 | 0

@Ben546

2 years ago

Where my family is from they have traditionally referred to waterproof fishing gear as "oil skins" ... is this where it originates from?

63 | 2

@RCP641

2 years ago

Most of the comments on these shorts are about the content, and it is fascinating but the main thing I would like is a 8 hour playlist of the music that he puts in the background it would be perfect for sleep/meditation.

12 | 0

@owenschulz9504

2 years ago

So cool that this or at least a version of this is still used all over today

5 | 0

@judithwake2757

2 years ago

I NEED TO KNOW how to make canvas waterproof !!!
Good oil skin is hard to come by and when you can find it costs an arm and a leg to buy it !! It out lasts poly tarps by decades.
THANK YOU !

2 | 0

@Bangalangs

2 years ago

Cool to watch, HIGHLY FLAMMABLE

5 | 1

@betsystone5733

2 years ago

The full video of this is the first one I ever watched on this channel, and I have been hooked ever since. ā¤

5 | 1

@cchutney348

2 years ago

I love hard work, I could watch it all day.

11 | 1

@suspicioustumbleweed4760

1 year ago

Linseed oil is still used in your kitchen floor or plank flooring. It’s amazing how much we depend on our forests.

11 | 0

@orion6able

1 year ago

Oh my gosh, thank you I definitely needed this!

2 | 0

@heartattackjack9349

2 years ago

Modern Man - You mean it's not plastic and it's waterproof?
Bronze Age Man - Plastic? Don't now what that is. Is it made of tar so water can't get through? Oh, it's pliable and can be shaped. Like bone. Oh, it doesn't break down and rot. But you use it in everything? What do you mean, what did we use? Canvas. We had tents. They were waterproof too, but we used different things, like oil that soaked into the canvas. Bitumen or tar. Pitch. Lots of things. Ask my dad, or granddad. I'm still learning.

9 | 0

@johnb911

1 month ago

Sometimes I wish I grew up in a simpler time too… I think this channel kinda captures that to some degree… my family used to do ā€œreenactmentā€when I was a kid (revolutionary war period) and my best friends family did it with us…. I’ll never forget how beautiful those days were just hanging w my best bud as kids, runnin around… havin fun.. in our old timey clothes, bein kids…. Then my mom f*cked his dad… soooo… that wholesome chapter was over… but I still look upon it very fondly. Being a kid and participating in that was so much fun.. it’s just too bad we all have to grow up, and accept how this world actually is… who knows, maybe I’ll start doin it again, w my own family.

| 0

@ILikeToLaughAtYou

2 years ago

We use very similar things for American Civil War reenacting, called a gum or tar blanket. Same concept, canvas tarp painted with tar or a similar rubber-ish substance to keep the rain out. We cut holes in the middle of ours to use as ponchos as they sometimes did.

2 | 0

@miskee11

2 years ago

but how do u make linseed oil and mineral spirits?

34 | 6

@zedhiro6131

2 years ago

What is the purpose of the red oxide other than pigment? How usable would the oil cloth be for a rain cloak?

15 | 10

@Brody1007

2 years ago

Love your videos!! Amazing!!

1 | 0

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