As my first furniture project I was impressed at how straight forward this was.
I expanded the plan to fit our family of 10. I also decided that splitting the benches into two and extending the overhang on the ends would allow us to tuck the benches all the way in without the legs colliding. The table is 120" with trestles centered at 20", 60" & 100". I did some math to make sure that this wouldn't cause the table to be tippy and I should be able to stand on the very edge (like a diving board)
Biggest fail was not keeping the top level. This created far too much sanding for my liking. Any tips on how to avoid the pocket hole joins from shifting? Would be appreciated. My clamps don't have a deep enough mouth to reach the joins and I guess the kids aren't heavy enough to hold it all in place.
Hardest part was cutting the curve for the benches decorative pieces.
Comments
booksnotbombs
Sat, 09/06/2014 - 18:30
Did you build this to be the
Did you build this to be the height of a standing desk? It looks great either way! I am looking for a good plan to modify. I like the staging of Ana's website on the monitors. :)
DIYER_MD
Sun, 09/07/2014 - 08:26
Thanks
No, it is still a regular height desk. The legs are actually 28 1/4 inches. This makes the desk right at 29 inches. I set the monitors up on the top because I like them a little higher and it frees up the desk space. It makes them comfortable viewing for me. I appreciate your nice comments. If you want a nice but simple desk, this is the perfect plan. I started building this one right after I saw it on the site.