Vintage Window Greenhouse
Ana's greenhouse plans modified to fit two vintage windows in the front.
Mary Ann Alvarez
Ana's greenhouse plans modified to fit two vintage windows in the front.
Mary Ann Alvarez
We had an extra door after building our house. We were not able to get store credit, so we found a some good use for it. After searching the plans here we saw the rolling workbench and decided what to do.
The door was so heavy and long so we modified the original plan and put a middle support. Our plan is based on the "Rolling Workbench with "Drill Holders"".
I saw the Farmhouse Doll Beds on Ana's Website and knew right away I wanted to make them for gifts for my daughter and my 3 great nieces!!!
I added a few touches to make them my own.
I am thrilled with the way the mattresses I made came out.. and my mom helped with making me the bedding!
In reply to Love it! by carongirls
Sun, 02/16/2014 - 17:29
Thanks, my mom is the one who made the bedding! I did the mattresses.. which was fun. Got my daughter involved and we even made the buttons. I found matching bedding for the beds.. just different colors! Thanks for the comment!
Tue, 02/18/2014 - 11:19
I cut the plywood to fit the bottom of the bed.. I had to drill 1/8 inch holes through the bottom of the plywood to coorespond with placement of the buttons. I then placed foam over the plywood and covered with the material. I pulled material tight over the foam and stapled it to the bottom of the plywood. Lastly I used a button making kit from Hobby Lobby and made the buttons - pulling the string through the mattress with the button attached and pulled it tight. After pulling it tight I used an offset screw underneath the mattress to tie off the string.
Tue, 02/18/2014 - 11:27
This was such a fun project that the next project on the list is making the Farmhouse twin size bed so my daughter can have a matching bed!!!
This was quite the project. It was the most fun and rewarding of the handful I've done so far. It took quite a while but now that it's finished I'm very satified. I would like to eventually build an extra large dresser that matches.
***The one thing that I am not totally happy with on this project are the euro drawer slides. They are loud and they have a cheap chinsy feel to them. When I build drawers in the future, I will either spend more and get fancy slides, or make some simple waxed wood slides for a more premium feel.
Needed a small desk for the vacation home - modified Ana’s plans slightly to use some wood I had sitting around. I am so happy with how this turned out!
My wife found this design on your site and set about convincing me that it would be a good idea to replace the (new) IKEA loft beds that we had recently bought.
The loft beds were not such a great idea as they were 7 feet tall in an 8 foot tall room. Needless to say, i didnt need all that much convincing that replacing them was a good idea...so the first step was to list the loft beds on ebay to fund the builds. They sold for nearly 2/3rds what we purchased them for so we were very happy with that!
Armed with our cash we set off for the Hardware store to pick up our timber, drop saw and coach bolts. We purchased all the timber that we needed and the screws and (i dont know what they are called but) the things that you screw onto the post and the rails to allow them to slot into one another and be pulled apart relatively easily (see the image titled Foot).
We made the bed head slightly lower than the plan calls for and made the foot exactly half the size for uniformity (1200 high and 600 high respectively). We recycled the side rails from an old 1980's waterbed (which saved us considerable money and gave the bed the nice chunky feel we were looking for. Additionally, we raised them 350mm off the ground so that we have space for the future trundles that will be built (watch this space!).
To give the slats in the bed head and foot a little more of a framed appearance, we mitre some 19mm x 30mm beading timber to fill around the slats in either end. You can see this from the pics. We then added some non structural pine to the inside of the rails for the bed base to be affixed to.
After some research, we discovered that it was in fact cheaper and easier to purchase the slats already done and tied together with the polyester strap from ikea...(its called the sultan lade bed base if anyone is interested). I then drilled holes in either end of the slats and screwed them to the rails. This helps with both Rigidity and mattress support as it stops the slats from sliding around the place.
The bed was then filled with putty in the knots, cracks, nail and screw holes, sanded, then painted. I used a water based undercoat followed by 6 coats of semi gloss acrylic applied using a mini (100mm) roller. This has given a lovely silky texture to the paint that has to be felt to be believed.
All up we spent a little over $140.00 on material (but if we needed to buy the rails it would have been over $200.00...still a bargain considering we have seen a very similar bed in the retail stores for over $1000.00!
Just yesterday I won a second hand (donor) bed on ebay...watch out as I start my next build.
Thanks Ana, without you putting this out there, my wife would never have found it and I would never have built it.
Thu, 10/11/2012 - 20:51
I really love your modifications. Would you be willing to share your new measurements of the head and foot board? Thanks!
I made this for my 2 year old son who's Daddy is a Navy sailor aboard a Naval Aircraft Carrier. Our son LOVED this when I finished the project.
Built by Holli Peterson
Fri, 04/17/2020 - 09:30
Can someone post plans for this? Materials? Cost?
I love it!!!
Thanks!!
Thu, 08/31/2023 - 21:23
I’m looking to make one similar to this but looking to make it a little bigger for two Great Danes. Do you still have the plans and or cut list for this project to help me out. I’d greatly appreciate it if so.
Coffee station with trash can holder and storage.
Royce and Lynn Ledford
Another build for a co-worker. She wanted a bench for the front of her bed. I got the colors from her bedroom and matched it.
I built this "Sweet Shop" for my daughters for Christmas this year. I cut vinyl on my Silhouette machine for the signs and made a couple of extras in case they decide to use it for a library or post office later. It was a fairly simple project and I made it over a couple of days while my youngest was napping. I added some scrap 1x4's to the front to cover my imperfect paint job-ha!
I made my first dining table using pocket holes. About a week after I sold it, I ended up having to go to the lady's house and put one of the legs back on it. I quickly realized pocket holes were great for most things, but dining table legs might not be the best. Ever since then, I've been using dowels to reinforce pocket hole joints on table legs. So far it's been a great solution. Here is a video explaining how it works. Hope you like it. Patrick
Simple Rustic X inspired entry way table. I was able to build this project in a Sunday afternoon completely from 70% off lumber from a local big box store. All together it came in under $10 without my time or supplies.
Dimensions are 44x12.5x33.
(2) 2x4x96
(3) 1x4 furring strips
(2) 2x2x96
Brad Nails, Glue and a few screws.
I needed a screen door but one on hinges wasn't a option. So I built one as a barn door. The center bottom panel is a doggie door. Lynda Westbrook
Fri, 10/20/2023 - 06:47
Do you have a problem with insects coming around the edges? Or is this an interior door and you just needed good air flow?
This was a really fun little project. I used my Kreg jig to avoid filling/sanding exposed screws.
Wed, 06/06/2012 - 10:40
Sitting on the fertile fields,Previous artistic words we can clear,T Einsamkeit this Es ist kalt und lonely child named regungslos Ich weine so cold and quiet leise in die Zeit I at the time of cry Ich Wei ?Always feel the night time is just a fresh.
TV is a Chinese family essential entertainment facilities. that everybody dare to modify the background data type stuff, since the original system BUG lot, my circle of friends topic always inseparable from our old professional, for not familiar with things, leave have!!Like himself, Yang always take me to visit his company, die in the past.htm 3G reflect.
Pretty basic design - I made a few modifications to the published plans.
1) Slightly longer guard railings
2) Made the cleats flush with the bottom of the side rails so that the guard rails are elevated above the mattress.
3) Added "slat" design for the headboard.
Overall a pretty simple project, but like everything, takes time. Best of all, my little man loved it at first sight and is already using it!
Wed, 02/26/2014 - 06:49
Right before you posted this, we were just looking at this plan after coming to the realization that our little lady is going to graduate from her crib soon. I love the modifications that you made and stain that you used. Awesome work!
Awesome plans! Followed everything and it came out great. Thank you soooo much, my son loves it!!!
My daughter recently threw out a lot of her things because she wanted to have a grown up room and not a kids room. So she asked if I could make her furniture and wanted a dresser as her first piece. So I couldn't say no!
This was my second project from this web site and my first dresser. Boy was it tough, but I loved every minute of it! Even though the plans were marked Advanced, I made it even more so by trying out dovetailing for all the drawers. By hand. With just a Japanese pull saw and chisels. That added about 10 hours onto the total build, but it was for my daughter, so it was worth it!
This is how it turned out.
Definitely one of my favorite rooms in the house. Not shiplap but reclaimed wood. Had to deal with lowering everything because of the trunk lines but overall we love it.
Leslie Webber
This was our second build. Seemed easy enough, but definitely a 'learning experience' here! Most importantly, we learned the value of a straight board and how furring strips are anything but. Thankfully, I got my main squeeze by my side through it all. Even if he is mirroring that same confused expression I get when things don't quite pan out the way they should. LOL!