Community Brag Posts

Grandy Barn Door Consoles

Submitted by Hartke22 on Mon, 10/12/2020 - 22:26

I started a custom woodworking bussiness about 18 months ago. Since then we've build everything from consoles to dining room tables to baby cribs. And to this day, I still refer to Ana White plans. Thanks a bunch!!

Estimated Cost
100
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
Minwax Dark Walnut
Minwax Early American
Minwax Jacobean
Minwax Clear Gloss
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Childs toy stove

Submitted by stevendaun on Tue, 01/01/2013 - 07:14

I built this stove for a close family friend for her 3rd birthday. For the burners I used heart shaped wooden cutouts. I also added her first name initial to the backboard as well.

Estimated Cost
$30
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
High gloss spray paint
Recommended Skill Level
Intermediate

Pallet Christmas Tree

Submitted by nickdevos on Fri, 10/17/2014 - 13:45

Built this pallet christmas tree for decorating the house during the season, nothing too difficult, just cut/paint/assemble.

Estimated Cost
$0.50 in screws
Estimated Time Investment
An Hour or Two (0-2 Hours)
Finish Used
Paint
Recommended Skill Level
Starter Project

Outhouse

Submitted by Speedbump on Fri, 10/16/2020 - 21:04

I built this outhouse for beside our barn. My first large project and I’m really pleased with how it turned out!

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Time Investment
Week Long Project (20 Hours or More)
Recommended Skill Level
Intermediate

Comments

Pedestal farmhouse table

Submitted by Nate74 on Tue, 01/01/2013 - 23:33

After my wife pinned the triple pedestal table, I took a look at the plans and redid them for a double pedestal table 78"x40". This is the first wood project that I have done in close to 12 years, it was good to get back to wood and I look forward to builing some more.

Estimated Cost
$200
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
Varathane stains and minwax wipe on poly. The stains I used are Varathane Kona on the pedestal legs and a mixture of Tuscan (2 coats) and 1 coat of Kona over top, on the table top and spreader beam. This was followed by 4 coats of Minwax wipe on poly.
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Tryde end table

Fun weekend project! I had never tried pocket hole joins before. The Kreg jig worked out great. Looking forward to trying a bigger coffee table in this same style. Thanks for the plans!

Estimated Cost
$50 or so including wood, stain and poly finish
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
Minwax American Maple and wipe on poly
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Sand Box with Built-In Seats using Cedar Wood and 1 Seat

Followed the original plan except below changes:
- Only one seat to make it more spacious
- Made 2 groups of 3 planks each and connected both using hinges so it can cover the end without seat
- Stapled Hardware Cloth with landscape fabric

Cedar wood was the most expensive thing in this project, since I would want it to last long.

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
150
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
Thompson's WaterSeal Stain & Sealer
Recommended Skill Level
Starter Project

Flip Top Storage Bench

Submitted by Bander on Thu, 01/03/2013 - 16:13

We needed somewhere to store shoes and sit while changing shoes, so I built this based on the flip top storage bench plans at http://ana-white.com/2012/10/plans/flip-top-storage-bench-new-plans

Total length of the project was 6 feet, so I added a 1x3 support at the middle. I made the storage top deeper so that it would hold adult shoes by using 1x6s instead of 1x4s.

I made the top into two "doors" so that they would be smaller and easier for our children to handle. I also rounded off the front edge with my router to make it easier on bottoms and shins.

Estimated Cost
$50
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
Finish was with MinWax prestain conditioner and MinWax Gunstock stain according to label directions, then 3 coats of polycrylic with light sanding between the coats.
Recommended Skill Level
Intermediate

Comments

Linda7

Fri, 02/08/2013 - 11:14

You've done a beautiful job. I like the extra length and how you divided the top so it's not so unwieldy.

Pirate Ship Loft Bed

Submitted by popicon88 on Thu, 10/23/2014 - 11:23

My son was in a pirate mood and needed a ship to help sail the high seas.  So I built him one.  I added maps, used magnetic paint for the waves so that we could put fish magnets on them, and then a wheel from a playhouse kit from Home Depot.  

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
$250
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
Semi-gloss Paint, magnetic paint
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Dog crate / end table

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/01/2017 - 10:55

Dog crate / end table built from the plans on your site. Customer chose Early American Miniwax finish. This was a fun build. Thank you! -j.

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
$80.00
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
Miniwax Early American
Miniwax Polyurethane Acrylic
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Planters

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 10/26/2020 - 08:30

Just made these last night! So quick and easy, thank you so much! You are so inspiring!

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Time Investment
An Hour or Two (0-2 Hours)
Recommended Skill Level
Starter Project

Comments

Johanna Bookcase

This was a great project to get back into woodworking after many years of not building anything. Used my table saw for cutting the 30 degree miters. Plans didn't call for it, but I made dado joints for the shelves using a router. This made the bookcase very solid. For the miters I cut them first and then measured and cut the piece to the finished length. I cut the vertical shelf supports after the shelves were in which insured they were the exact length. A great suggestion is to use The Hillman Group "Procrafter" #8 x 2-in Yellow Zinc Square-Drive Wood Screws. The #2 square drive never slipped out and the screws were self drilling and countersunk themselves. No need to predrill a countersink hole or anything else. Added the chimney after seeing it on another brag post. This cute little item brought a big smile to my granddaughter's face on Christmas morning. The time investment of 10 hours for me was due to rusty woodworking skills and needing time to think about things. Could probably build the next one in five hours. Painting took as long as the building.

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
$100
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
Trim is Velspar gloss latex enamel in Positively Pink.
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Comments

Buffet Table / Hutch with Wall Collage

Submitted by JD Corey on Sat, 10/25/2014 - 19:08

My wife wanted something to fill up a large wall in our kitchen so I designed a collage centered over a buffet table. I used the plans from the Salsa Console that I found on this website for the table. I had to modify the plans quite a bit in order for the table to fit the space that we had. After I had the design the way I wanted it, my wife and I found the frames that we needed and painted them with a black, brown,  and terquoise theme. I built the hutch using pine that I bought from the hardware store. I used quarter round moulding strips to accentuate the drawer faces and the cabinet doors. I added glass to the center of the cabinet doors and then backed the glass with the material from one of those cheap ceiling light panels to give the glass a 3D frosted appearance. I then painted the interior of the cabinets with that same terquoise color and ran lights inside the cabinets so that the terquiose color would show through the forsted glass. I finished the table off by staining it with a dark red maple stain (to match our kitchen table and island) and then added a few simple drawer/cabinet knobs. Everything came together nicely when we hung it all up over the table. Now all we have left to do is add our pictures to the frames.

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
$250
Estimated Time Investment
Week Long Project (20 Hours or More)
Finish Used
Minwax Red Mahogany
Recommended Skill Level
Intermediate

Rockabilly scooter

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 02/05/2017 - 09:49

Very easy and fun project. Thank you so much for the inspiration and plan.

Estimated Time Investment
Afternoon Project (3-6 Hours)
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Simple outdoor dining bench

Submitted by Randall on Fri, 10/30/2020 - 21:33

I made my bench around 53” and put the bottom leg apron about 1 1/2” from the floor and tha gave me the space to put 2 1x4 boards as a shelf

Estimated Cost
$20
Estimated Time Investment
Afternoon Project (3-6 Hours)
Finish Used
I haven’t decided what i will do for a finish. Not sure if paint or stain

Children's Storage Chairs

We used the basics of the plan as presented but added scroll-cut names and small clipart designs on the backs. He also routed a curved edge along the sides and fronts of the seats for a little smoother look.

For the lettering, I printed out the names on the computer, then applied them to the wood with adhesive for cutting. The font I used is called Epistolar. I had to find one that didn't look funny with the A since there would not be a way to keep the little triangle part at the top. Epistolar was the only font I had on my computer that would work for that. We simply drilled a hole midway below the peak of the A to make it look right. The font itself does not have any cross piece on the A.

For the small Jeep and Rocking Horse, I just looked online for a silhouette of a car and a horse. The rocking horse again presented a slight challenge since if we cut the rocker as it was shown, the horses legs would look funky. We solved that by cutting the rocker part slightly smaller and leaving some space between it and the horses legs.

A few things we learned: Be sure your letters aren't too close together or the wood will split when you are sanding. We had this problem with some of the A's before we drilled the hole smaller. We used a drill press, for the holes, and the board underneath was not fresh so some of the back pieces splintered. A fresh board under the holes would have kept that from happening.

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
We used Valspar paint for the green (Lime Passion) and pink (Raspberry Sorbet) and Olympic paint (Schooner) for the blue. One small sample bottle was enough of the Valspar to complete both chairs of the green, but the blue was left over from another project. We used a green primer coat first, something we had leftover from another project. We found it easier to sand the pieces prior to assembly.
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

mini dumpster dresser

Submitted by vic b on Thu, 10/30/2014 - 17:56

A modified smaller version of the dumpster dresser.

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Time Investment
Day Project (6-9 Hours)
Recommended Skill Level
Intermediate

Comments

Barn door entertainment center

Barn door slider with all 3 shelfs stained dark walnut with a white cabinet 

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
Dark walnut and white paint with several coats of poly
Recommended Skill Level
Intermediate

Comments

Fancy X Desk

I created this desk using the Fancy X Desk plans, but I used a project panel for top.

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
$80
Finish Used
Kelly Moore Pure White Semi Gloss
Sherwin Williams Weathered Teak
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Comments

Impressed

Submitted by malbers on Tue, 01/08/2013 - 11:06

Just need to stain it.

I'm pretty impressed with myself, thanks for the plans!

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

Comments

ryanjami

Tue, 01/08/2013 - 12:56

Looks great. I am planning to build the same table, but wasn't sure what wood to use. I noticed you used pine. I am curious where did you find yours because at our big box stores the Pine is really expensive.

malbers

Tue, 01/08/2013 - 13:10

It's really just construction lumber. Construction lumber is usually cut out of pine as far as I know. The 2x4 and 2x6 boards are just plain old lumber. Just go through and look for straight ones.

The 1x6 boards were the tricky ones for me. Our Menards regional hardware/lumber store carries cedar also, but that is much different. If you just find the aisle with the 1xanything boards, that's what I used. They came in a 'standard' board and a 'Select' board, I used the standard boards; but you use these 1x6x8ft boards to make the table top and it's kind of difficult to find good, straight ones in the standard pile. If they aren't really straight you get gaps in your table top. But, the Select boards are like 4 times the cost $3 something versus $12 something per board, and you need 6 of them, so that adds up.

So you could just ask for the construction lumber when you get there and see if that works.

Also, I had to go back for one more 2x6x10ft board. The amount you are told to buy vs. the cut list didn't add up.