Blog Archive
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2013
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May(87)
- A Creative Exercise Using RUSCH Clocks
- Granite Coffee Table with EXPEDIT Wall shelf and L...
- Glass top kitchen peninsula
- Antique Exit Sign Lamp
- Floating Star Wars Beds
- BESTA "white" board and keyrack
- Ikea Lamps Into Art: Mosaic Lamps
- Portable workbench
- Walk through Pantry
- Vintage Look Tarva TV Console
- Drop Leaf Expedit
- Reclaimed Lerberg Etagere
- Billy Bookshelves Kitchen Island
- Yeah Yeah, Yet Another Rast Hack...
- Variera panels on a Hemnes nightstand
- Hacker help: Need help to identify this chair
- Retro bed table
- T Kitchen Island/Dining Table
- PS to Sideboard
- Hack that Shack
- Clipshelf - The shelf parasite
- Easy Mid Century Ikea Credenza
- In time for summer: BBQ pit hack
- Faktum as walk-in closet
- IKEA Rast Hack {new nightstands}
- Modern dry-erase standing desk
- Stereo System with 4 Bland Matt bowls and 2 Lack S...
- Mr. Hektar & Mrs. Arstid
- Hacker help: Kvissle as diaper caddy?
- Cat cubby window seat with Ikea Akurum Kitchen Cab...
- Cooking with Rast!
- LACK Side Table - Night Table
- Full wall Besta media unit
- Hallway storage from Pax wardrobe
- Wall mounted shoe rack from Pax door
- Lillangen + flower pot = bike rack
- How to create a Gerhard Richtexpedit bedside cabinet
- Laundry organizer from kitchen cabinets
- Compact living desk mod
- Macro camera slider rail
- 2 x Frosta into a dress hanger
- Double Rast Cabinet Hack
- Hacker Help: Sofa with built-in storage shelves?
- Easy IKEA Cabinet Makeover with shelf paper
- iCork Clock
- Framed: Vika Furuskog gets a custom base
- Kura bed hack makeover from deep sea to outer space
- Miniature Car Display
- My hidden spice rack hack/kitchen fan
- Kura bunk bed with underbed storage
- Floating Ikea horizontal cabinet on soffit
- Hacked UDDEN kitchen
- Modern Speaker Stands for Under $50
- Full BILLY wall
- Riveting Ply PELLO Recliner
- Closet Toolshed
- Trofast sand and water table
- Pretty Jewelry Holder from Wooden Cutlery Tray
- Alang Lampshade Swaparoo
- Raspberry Pi PRUTA case
- Hacker help: Workstation between two Expedit shelves?
- Ikea Hacking - this time...Android style
- Closet system using Ikea Molger Bench
- Klubbo + Fjellse Slats = Vintage Industrial Table
- TOGA place mat Headboard on the Budget
- Very hacky in Berlin - 10m² full of storage
- Breakfast bar/home office desk
- Helmer-Air Renderfarm
- IDEALISK Jewelry Displays for Earrings
- Frosta Dual Speaker Stands / Bar table
- Low Cost Home Theater Speaker Stand
- 4 Bennos, not quite enough space
- Stand up Billy bureau or mini bar
- Art desk for kids
- 18 Dollar Wheel Mount
- Ikea Rast Dresser with silver ring pulls
- No Lack of sunglasses...
- Expedit = Play kitchen
- Lack Table Corner Shelf Hack
- Kvart desk lamp (Industrial lamp with Fas variation)
- Wall fitted expedit book shelf
- Changing table a la Vika Amon
- How to turn an Ikea computer desk into a loom stan...
- EXPEDIT Cat Litter Box
- From dining table to kitchen bench
- Rabbit hutch for Amigo by Evelien Lulofs
- Kitchen cart/sideboard
Thursday, 30 May 2013
BESTA "white" board and keyrack
Materials: BESTA door, paint, nails, polymer clay, glue
Description: My front entrance hall - like many front entrance halls - suffers from a semi-perpetual pile of clutter. A little while ago, I started fixing this by making a coat rack/bag hooks by up-cycling a plank from a shipping pallet a friend gave me.
I've been wanting a key rack for that space, and am also planning to build a shoe rack from the remainder of the pallet.
Then a recent trip to IKEA yielded a BESTA cupboard door in the seconds section for $10, and this weekend project was born...
As always, the first (and least fun!) part of this project was surface prep. The door not only had that dirty great sticker on it, but had been wrapped in sticky tape, as well as having some minor chips and dents in the paint work. Getting the sticky residue off proved interesting. The frame was not such an issue, as I needed to sand it lightly anyway to create a good surface for the paint to adhere to. The glass...believe it or not, I ended up using a toothbrush to scrub the residue with TOOTHPASTE and white vinegar, before polishing off vigorously with a towel.
Next up, I created the "hooks" for the key rack along the bottom. Previous experience making the bag rack taught me that polymer clay by itself tends not to be strong enough to use as a load bearing material. So I used bullet head nails to create the sub structure of my hooks (Baker Boy very kindly bent the ends of them for me to create the hook shape).
I deliberately left the final portion of my nails "bare", so that at assembly time I would have a uniform diameter for drilling the holes for them. It also helped in ensuring that the front of the hooks was even after assembly - as I made each hook, I lined it up with the others to make sure the length of blue clay from the bend to the start of the bare nail, was the same. That way, once the nails were placed in the holes to sit flush against the start of the blue, all the hooks lined up.
Then, painting everything. First, I cleaned the glass REALLY well, then spray painted it on the "wrong" side in Dulux Ultra Chrome, to create an opaque back for the "whiteboard" surface. You could use any light colour for this. Then I used some Jo Sonja greens to paint the frame, after masking the edge of the glass with tape so I didn't over brush onto the glass. I wanted the slight "streaks" with the white showing through, to match the somewhat rustic finish on my coat rack - if you wanted a really smooth finish, I recommend REALLY sanding the existing finish from the door to give the paint a good surface to adhere to.
Finally, time to put it all together. I measured out equal spacing for the hooks, and then drilled holes just wide enough for the portion of nail that was extruding from each hook, then fixed them into the holes with glue. I also glued the letters on to the top of the door and...ta-da! we hung it on the wall. I'm pretty stoked - it gives us not only a key rack but a great place to leave messages, reminders, etc.
See more of the Besta whiteboard and keyrack.
~ Kath, Adelaide, Australia
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