OP
Red Leader
Well-known member
Okay, here is my latest way-too-late update.
I got the corner drawer for the shelving built. Since the baby could come any time, I want to try and knock out as many bigger things as I can, and then save some of the other stuff that I can do in 10-30min spurts for when the little guy arrives.
I'm glad I got this one out of the way. It took me about 3 frickin hours and definitely had some moments of frustration. All that to say, its built, and soon it will be ready for screws, bondo, and paint. Here is how I did it:
Here is what I'm starting with. The goal: get an open-able drawer on the end of the curved shelving:
By daveamy at 2011-06-18
So, first things first - Make curved sections that match the curve of the wood already up on the wall. I didn't want to have to do a lot of bondo repair to blend the curve, so I wanted to get as close as possible. I had to match each curve because, of course, they were slightly different (would come back to bite me in the ****). In any case, I made two of these:
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
And one of these:
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
And did a little bit of this:
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
And put them together like this (doing it right took about 1.5 hours):
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
What the above picture doesn't show is the tendency of the plywood facing to pull out the screws attaching the corner pieces. I had to get that sucker strengthened up. Hence, more wood and glue:
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
There is not a screw in the top of the post securing it down for a reason. I found that depending on how I tweak where the top of that post meets the top plywood piece, is changes the caddy-corner curvature of the whole piece. I will wait to 'fine tune' it to get a perfect fit before setting a screw in there.
Here is the general idea:
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
Hinges will be located on the left side and it will open from the right side. I'll put a little wooden knob on it and it will stay in place with some little magnets I'll counter sink in each piece. Then both will get bondo and matched up perfectly. They are already close, closer that what that picture shows. I had to tweak the curved facing on the bottom that was already up there. It was a huge pain, but will hopefully all pay off, one day
Also, I needed to blow off some steam later, so I decided to put that energy to good use and finish painting some garage door hardware:
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
Here is where things currently stand:
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
I got the corner drawer for the shelving built. Since the baby could come any time, I want to try and knock out as many bigger things as I can, and then save some of the other stuff that I can do in 10-30min spurts for when the little guy arrives.
I'm glad I got this one out of the way. It took me about 3 frickin hours and definitely had some moments of frustration. All that to say, its built, and soon it will be ready for screws, bondo, and paint. Here is how I did it:
Here is what I'm starting with. The goal: get an open-able drawer on the end of the curved shelving:
By daveamy at 2011-06-18
So, first things first - Make curved sections that match the curve of the wood already up on the wall. I didn't want to have to do a lot of bondo repair to blend the curve, so I wanted to get as close as possible. I had to match each curve because, of course, they were slightly different (would come back to bite me in the ****). In any case, I made two of these:
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
And one of these:
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
And did a little bit of this:
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
And put them together like this (doing it right took about 1.5 hours):
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
What the above picture doesn't show is the tendency of the plywood facing to pull out the screws attaching the corner pieces. I had to get that sucker strengthened up. Hence, more wood and glue:
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
There is not a screw in the top of the post securing it down for a reason. I found that depending on how I tweak where the top of that post meets the top plywood piece, is changes the caddy-corner curvature of the whole piece. I will wait to 'fine tune' it to get a perfect fit before setting a screw in there.
Here is the general idea:
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
Hinges will be located on the left side and it will open from the right side. I'll put a little wooden knob on it and it will stay in place with some little magnets I'll counter sink in each piece. Then both will get bondo and matched up perfectly. They are already close, closer that what that picture shows. I had to tweak the curved facing on the bottom that was already up there. It was a huge pain, but will hopefully all pay off, one day
Also, I needed to blow off some steam later, so I decided to put that energy to good use and finish painting some garage door hardware:
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
Here is where things currently stand:
By daveamy at 2011-06-25
Last edited:





