Community Brag Posts

Farm House Table

Inspired by Ana and driven by a desperate desire to nest, I made this table in my first-trimester. We live at this table. It's where we eat, play, and craft. On special occasions we stand on top of it, and sometimes we even eat under it. We love the way it looks in our mid-century ranch house with modern chairs. Thank you, Ana!

Estimated Cost
$100
Estimated Time Investment
Week Long Project (20 Hours or More)
Finish Used
natural water-based poly
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Comments

kids picnic table

Submitted by Annie D on Mon, 06/29/2015 - 17:05

This was a lot of fun to build. Took a few hours while kids napped plus a few more after bedtime.

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
$45
Estimated Time Investment
Afternoon Project (3-6 Hours)
Finish Used
Exterior green paint
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Sofa table

Submitted by kgclark31 on Sun, 01/02/2022 - 18:33

I built these sofa tables for my wife’s client. She has a interior paint business. Her client was talking about wanting she sofa tables, so she volunteered me to build the tables. I didn’t have a design for the tables, so I looked at several different designs and talked to the client on what she was looking for. So I just did some rough sketches and got some ideas from my wife. I used mostly 1 bys for the build, just depends on the size on what width and length of board you are going to need. The top of the large table is a 5/4 preglued board that Menards has in store, again depending on width and length on the size of board you use. I used the 5/4 board for better stability and strength. I used a red oak stain then applied several coats of poly to finish. On the top I used a 200 sandpaper after a couple of coats of poly to get the top smoother for more coats of poly. Over all the build was pretty easy if you have good woodworking knowledge. Used pocket holes (Kreg) to attach sides and frame to top. On the large top side I used two 1x8’s to get the width i needed. Joined them with pocket holes (Kreg). If you can dream it, you can build it.

Comments

Using Spindles; Shown with the Farmhouse Bedside Table

Submitted by melissa2 on Thu, 05/12/2011 - 14:47

When a plan calls for a 2 x 2, you may be able to add a little extra detail by including spindles. I was able to with the Farmhouse Bedside Table! The top of each leg is a plain old 2 x 2, to accommodate the drawer section. Just below that is a spindle with the top squared-off section cut off. The bottom of that spindle is attached to the top of another, where both were squared off and the same dimensions. This "ugly" joint is why the piece of furniture is painted instead of stained--even then, because of variable grains, this specific seam can be seen on close inspection. You can potentially stain furniture that has spindles if you can match the grains and are not connecting two ends that have exact dimensions, which would create an even more obvious seam on stained furniture. Where I joined two pieces of differing dimensions (example: circle to square), there is no visible seam.

To accommodate the specific spindles I wanted to use, the main dimensions that had to be changed were merely the height of the cross bars and shelf. However, with cuts, I waited and cut them (and had larger ones cut at stores) as I went, to help get them to be more exact since the 2 x 2s were slightly off from the spindles' squared-off area.

This all may sound complicated, but it wasn't!

To get the correct leg height, I first cut one end off two spindles and put them together with the two intact ends meeting. The resulting dimensions were subtracted from the required leg height of 26 1/4", leaving the length to cut the 2 x 2 at. This required a lot of measuring, being sure that the legs would be "squared off" in the areas for the drawer and shelf.

To make the "joints" between the legs--each of which is three pieces (!), I used 1/4" x 1 1/2" dowel pins. These are readily available even in craft stores. These aren't the same as dowel rods--they have grooves in them. Next, drill holes the dimensions of the dowels in the exact middle of each leg piece, and put glue inside the hole and around the top of the smallest-dimensioned piece. Connecting and clamping as you go, this will create stronger joints than just using glue.

After the legs were made, I followed the instructions as indicated, being careful to measure before each cut and adjust the measurements where needed.

For another example of how you can use spindles, here's a cat feeder I designed and built back in January:
http://flattops.webs.com/petfeeder.html (Purchased ones in real wood are usually over $100!)

Though it's far from perfect, I'm really happy with how the table turned out--and hope that my experience may inspire you to give spindles a try! I'd love to know how you use them!

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
Under $100
Estimated Time Investment
Week Long Project (20 Hours or More)
Finish Used
1) Paint on primer, and use a roller to smooth (with all paint coats);
2) Paint on Painter's Touch by Rustoleum in "Heirloom White";
3) Sand;
4) Paint;
5) Spatter on black craft paint;
6) Sand edges down to bare wood, and some surface areas;
7) Put water in brown craft paint, and use as a stain in sanded-off areas, wiping off excess with paper towels. Use some to make stains on other areas;
8) Hammer in random spots with a meat cleaver;
9) Varnish with one coat of semi-gloss
Recommended Skill Level
Intermediate

Lydia Puppy (Toddler) Bed

Our puppy needed to move out of our bed, and I love the looks of the Lydia toddler bed, so we made this one for her!! It's fantastic and I'm so happy with how it all turned out! It was Mike's first time using a Kreg Jig and he loves it!

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
$60
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
Ebony Miniwax Stain, one coat of poly
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Comments

Miniature kitchen for a 2nd birthday

Submitted by lswenson on Fri, 07/03/2015 - 14:41

I made this for my son's second birthday last year.

I made a few changes to the plans. Instead of a shelf in the oven, I put in a wire cooling rack to resemble a oven rack. I put knobs on the back of the stovetop instead of the lower front. I added doors to the lower half on the sink.

The sink is a 9" loaf pan. The stove knobs and faucet were salvaged.

Toy food and realistic pots and pans are from IKEA.

Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Recommended Skill Level
Intermediate

Great table idea

Submitted by eburt4 on Sat, 01/20/2018 - 09:01

Made a few design changes as I went along, but overall the plans were great. And with my wife's finishing we have an antiquey farmhouse table. 

Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
Early American stain on top with two coats of semi-gloss poly. Gray first paint coat and antique white on top coat for base. Lightly sanded with orbital sander to bring gray forward.
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

My sons stool - first project

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/11/2022 - 21:21

I used the plans for the simple stool, and put my own twist on it by adding my sons initial “J” on the sides and adding an avengers themed top with an epoxy coating for protection. This was my first project and the plans and cut list made it super easy!

Comments

I Love Reclaimed Wood from Pallets

Submitted by texasjuju on Tue, 05/17/2011 - 07:41

My husband and I made a toddler picnic table for the grandbabies out of reclaimed wood from pallets. I have a bench sander that I used for a lot of that wood, but wow what a lot of work. So for Mother's Day, I asked for a Dewalt thickness planer, and I have to say I think that's been one of my best purchases in a while.
I had no idea how beautiful some of that pallet wood could actually be until I started running it through the planer.
I needed a book / magazine shelf in my guest bathroom so I used a plan submitted by a guest, modified it a little and used my reclaimed wood.(Flat Wall Bookholders) I used an oak poly stain in order to bring the grain out some. I couldn't be happier!
Thanks Ana!

Estimated Cost
Free, I had everything I needed.
Estimated Time Investment
Afternoon Project (3-6 Hours)
Finish Used
Minwax PolyShades Classic Oak
Recommended Skill Level
Starter Project

Teal Blue Picture Ledges

Submitted by KaityJene on Wed, 07/10/2013 - 21:58

At first I was going to stain these ledges so I only used pocket holes to attach the back of the shelf and I attached the front using small finish nails. The back and the bottom are made from a 1x3 and the front is a 1x2.

Check out my blog post for more information.

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
$15
Estimated Time Investment
Afternoon Project (3-6 Hours)
Finish Used
Eggshell Interior Paint
Recommended Skill Level
Starter Project

Outdoor Server/Cooler

Submitted by NJ_DIY on Mon, 07/06/2015 - 20:32

My wife wanted an outdoor server for our back deck. I did so, but decided to add some flare. I built it so the top comes off and a cooler is exposed for our drinks. And to not waste any wood, you turn the top around and I painted with Chalkboard paint so she could write up a menu. Added some color she would like, found a tutorial on chevron, add a few accessories, and viola!

Estimated Cost
$75
Estimated Time Investment
Week Long Project (20 Hours or More)
Finish Used
Benjamin Moore Tropicana Cabana, Polycrylic
Recommended Skill Level
Intermediate

My snowflake

Submitted by mustpetdog on Tue, 01/18/2022 - 14:41

I decided to make several of these for family this past Christmas. I made mine from oak which was harder to work with, but more resistant to scratches and nicks. I primed and painted them white with some leftover wall paint. Then I added some craft paint that had glitter in it. While it was still wet, I dusted it with more glitter: white and iridescent. Then I sealed it to keep the glitter from going everywhere!!! Then I hot glued all the sides with a rhinestone like ribbon I found at the Dollar store. I was very please with the result. I also found pearl like stickers that I hot glued on the other snowflakes when my rhinestone ribbon ran out. I added felt stickers (those that are used on the bottoms of chair legs) on the back to prevent the wood from banging on the door every time it opens and closes.
Love this project! I thought it was pretty easy and it was a good practice with the jigsaw, drill and sander which are relatively new skills for me.

Built from Plan(s)

Comments

Child Picnic Table

I modified this plan quite a bit. I chunked up all of the wood for a sturdier table. I also did braces on the underside of the table and benches so there would be no nail/screw holes on the top. For the D, I taped a chip-wood letter from Hobby Lobby to the wood while I burned over the entire top.

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
$20
Estimated Time Investment
Day Project (6-9 Hours)
Finish Used
Burned the wood and sealed with outdoor polyurethane.
Recommended Skill Level
Starter Project

Coffee Table With Flip Top

Submitted by grovesteen on Sat, 07/13/2013 - 12:16

Please click the link to my blog post "One Man's Trash is Another Man's Treasure" to get the full story and more pictures.

Estimated Cost
$40.00 with found objects
Estimated Time Investment
Week Long Project (20 Hours or More)
Finish Used
Base: "colorwashed" with latex paint and water mixture. One part paint to two parts water. Mix thoroughly, brush on and wipe off with a damp rag. Top: Minwax Special Walnut Stain with three coats of Polyurethane. Sanded between each coat with 220 grit sand paper.
Recommended Skill Level
Intermediate

Farmhouse Storage Bed with Geometric Pattern

Submitted by dmcarwin on Fri, 07/10/2015 - 10:15

I have always loved Ana's Farmhouse bed, so when she came out with the Farmhouse bed with storage drawers I knew it was the perfect solution for our small master bedroom. Ana's plans were awesome and made this an easy build. I wanted my bed to be a little unique so I tried a geometric pattern for the head board and foot board and I LOVE it! I also decided to make my slats removable for easy access to under the bed storage and this is one of my favorite features of the bed! I think my husband and I just found a new spot for hiding christmas presents! :) Check out my blog post for all the details and loads of photos!

Estimated Cost
I am thinking around $300 for the bed with materials and stain and poly.
Estimated Time Investment
Week Long Project (20 Hours or More)
Finish Used
I used Minwax pre wood conditioner and Mixwax Jacobean for the main bed and drawers. For the geometric inlay I used Minwax Natural Stain. I also did there coats of poly sanding with 400 grit in-between coats for a nice smooth finish.
Recommended Skill Level
Intermediate

Comments

Close to standard plan

Submitted by woodje12 on Tue, 01/30/2018 - 04:04

This is fairly close to standard other than I raised up the sides and footboard 2" from the plans. I also used a plywood platform in place of slats and a standard box spring (there are 3 2x4 supports under the plywood). This saved some money since we just bought a king size Casper mattress and we prefer the look.

The other modification is that I purchased "bed rail fasteners" from Amazon. These "clips" enable us to easily disconnect the side rails from the headboard and footboard (like you might find on a purchased bed frame) for when we decide to move or redo our floors or whatever. I thought that was better than having a semi-permanent connection with screws. 

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
~$200 not including new DeWalt drill and Kreg jig set!
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
The stain is two parts as we thought that the special Varathane product that Anna used had a blue or purple tint to it once we tested it (look into it, others had the same comments on Home Depot/Lowes sites). So instead we used the regular Varathane Weathered Gray stain as the base (we tested which looked better going on first) with a light top coating of Minwax Special Walnut brown stain to give it depth. Good luck and thanks Ana! 
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Comments

woodje12

Tue, 01/30/2018 - 04:12

I went back and added another modification I forgot. I bought bed rail fasteners from Amazon in order to be able to quickly disconnect the rails from the headboard and footboard. I prefer this versus having to disassemble the whole thing when we move/redo the floors/whatever. I'm happy with that decision even though it made the alignment a little trickier.

canuck

Tue, 01/30/2018 - 09:42

I love how you raised it.  What height does your mattress sit at?  I'm thinking of raising the rails by 2 or 3 inches as you did, but using 1x10 or 1x8 for the rails instead of 1x6s.  In your opinion, would this look good?  Or make the clean lines look too heavy?

woodje12

Fri, 02/02/2018 - 08:25

Sorry @canuck I tried to reply to your other post but it never posted apparently? I was going to do the same thing with 1x10's but then I lifted one at Lowe's and thought it would just be too heavy and cumbersome. As it is, the bed feels like it could take a direct mortar hit! Then I looked for 1x8's and they weren't in stock so I ended up just using the stock 1x6's. 

I think you could raise the rails/footboard another inch or two easily (I did 2" higher so 16.5" for the footboard posts because my wife wouldn't let me go higher) and still be fine aesthetically. The plywood platform sits a tad below the top of the sides of course and then the mattress is 10" tall so I think the final result is just above 25" from top of mattress to floor which was close to other beds in our house (our last bed was slightly higher [with a full box spring], at 26.5"). 

Thanks for the compliment and good luck!

emcgill05

Fri, 10/15/2021 - 06:10

We too have used the same modifications as you. However the bed fasteners I have bought seem to be too wide for the male connector ends on the 4x4.

Can you provide a link to the fasteners you bought?! I thought I was going to get this together today but doesn’t look like it.

Thanks,
Liz

nellerzicious

Thu, 06/18/2020 - 09:31

I also purchased bed rail fittings for the bed. How did you line everything up? Did you attach it to the cleats or the 2x6's on the side rails? I really wish that they came with instructions for installation, but they didn't, do you have any advice for me? Thanks!

My Boys Playhouse!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 01/28/2022 - 03:18

We made a few changes to fit our needs but love the design. Way better than any kit you can buy!

Comments

Hanging Bed

Submitted by dhrider33 on Sun, 05/22/2011 - 17:48

My son wanted a loft bed for his birthday ... until he saw this hanging bed! When he and his sister went to their cousin's house for the night, we decided to give it a try.

It's actually not that hard. Being rookies, we didn't realize how heavy the 2x4s are. If we were to do it again, we would use 1x4s instead. But, our bed is quite sturdy. We exhausted our cordless drill mid-way through the project.

But, this plan doesn't need many cuts. Most of the cutting was done at Home Depot.

The tricky part was actually getting it on the wall. We borrowed 2 squat racks and put the bed on those until it could be anchored. We also bought L brackets and used those rather than the lag bolts. The rope gives it a nice look, but actually won't become load bearing unless the bed starts to fall.

Our son loves the bed and it gives him plenty of extra space to work with in his room.

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
~$75
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
Natural
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Seesaw Surprise

I was actually looking for loft-bed plans when I stumbled upon this little gem. My kids were out of town for a week at the grandparent's house. I had some free time on my hands and before jumping into a big project like a loft bed, wanted to get my feet wet with a smaller project. I way overshot the 2 hr assembly time on this one. My extended cut/assembly time was because I triple coated each surface with paint and then put a clear coat sealant over the whole project. The paint choice was because my daughter's favorite color is blue and my son's is green. Plus, the racing stripes across the base and the cantilever took some extra time with added paint. With the screw holes, I took a 1/2 inch thick dowel and chopped off a bunch of 1/4 inch thick "coins," match painted them & glued them over the screw holes. As a result, it appears that there are dowels holding it together. With the seats, I used my trusty jigsaw and cut a ~34 inch long hourglass shaped piece of wood (wide at the top/bottom, narrow in the middle), then cut that in half to use as the form-fitted seats. I shaped the outdoor fabric (awning material that matched my paint job) around the seats, filling with 3 inch thick batting. The kids are coming home tomorrow and I hope they like their new toy.

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
$75
Estimated Time Investment
Day Project (6-9 Hours)
Finish Used
White primer, gloss enamel, painters tape to help form stripes,
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner