This was my basic inspiration. This is one of the two existing shelves that came with the house. Basically, there is a back brace, and two side braces and the shelf is plopped down on top. First came the planning.
I measured all the areas I wanted to put shelves in and then drew in a rough sketch of what it would look like with the shelves. Each set got a different sheet of paper. This one is the dining nook plans.
I then re-measured everything and printed some one-inch graph paper. (I love the Internet. I didn't have to go to the store and buy some graph paper, I just googeled it and printed.) Then I made a final plan. To the right of the drawing, I listed the total number of lumber needed for each part--shelf, back, sides. To the left I listed all the supplies I needed for this particular set of shelves. This one has a long list because I plan to put a grow light in so that took a lot of extra supplies.
I also sketched out how the shelves would be cut out of the particle board so I would know how much particle board to buy.
I transferred all my left hand lists to a single sheet of paper
And then transferred those numbers to an excel spreadsheet.
I then put all my plans in a notebook and walked over to our local Lowes (where we had gift cards) and spent an hour and a half locating all the things on my list. This was a great idea. I will always do this for projects from now on. It is so much less stressful to just wander the aisles with a notebook, rather than trying to make decisions when you have a full cart of lumber. Plus, I went home and slept on it and realized I had forgotten things.I came home and added a column with the aisle numbers, and a column for the prices. I then got a rough total of what things would cost.
And that pretty much took about eight hours of the first day.
1 comment:
Wow!! Great planning! I am really impressed withy all of your contemplation and careeful plotting to make tghis so. I can't wait to read the other two posts! -S
Post a Comment