ahh, the ol' trap of "It will save money to DIY" :)
Give us some pictures of the wood working!
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ahh, the ol' trap of "It will save money to DIY" :)
Give us some pictures of the wood working!
i agree with cubism_pitta@lemmy.world, WE DEMAND PHOTOS OF YOUR WOOD, OP!
We all want to see their wood
We do these things not because they will save us money but because we thought they would save us money!
Him " I need a new miter saw. " wife "no you fuckin dont" him "we need a new bed frame" wife "good idea"
Hopefully OP can achieve the "design I like and well built" parts. 2 outta 3 aint bad. And if it is well built it should last a life time and then it's cost-schmost.
Agreed on build pics!
I mean isn't it?
You just have to compare apples to apples.
If you're trying to compare an IKEA bed to what OP makes. Op would DIY this out of cardboard.
Actual wood furniture is expensive af
True.
I bought an expensive as shit handmade bed (extra long) and it isn't showing a single weakness after over 25 years and at least 10 moves (it's M13 bolts, you could have a tank for sleepover).
Only if you compare it to custom bespoke pieces. It would probably still be cheaper to buy a bedframe that looks close tot his and work from there.
And this one, for example, does look very close to the Ikea Tarva.
OP said solid wood, that alone would put a premade bed frame like this easily over 2k, not even bespoke.
As with any DIY project, I think the extra cost is worth the knowledge you gain... Unless you're doing DIY tree removal next to your house.
Pro: I did my first tree removal
Cons: I did my first demo work
Boy math
No worries my back remembers all the cutting and staining
Looks good! Don't forget to add a mattress on there.
sleeping while balancing on a 2x6 builds character
I have a recurring dream I'm bivvied and balancing on a ledge with no anchors/rope, then I wake up petrified and disorientated.
Rock climbing and mountaineering has given me many joys, though bad safety setups has apparently become my nightmare fuel.
And my slats
Optional.
Op you absolutely need cross boards/slats.
You should not use a flat plywood platform to accomplish the same outcome, it will be more expensive, less stable over time and contribute to eventual mold in your mattress unless you live in like Death Valley (and maybe even there too depending on how you humidify your house!)
Again, you without any qualification need to use slats or cross boards to support the mattress and will be unhappy if you attempt to use ply for that.
If you want the “clean look” of a plywood platform, use an overlay of decoratively cut (50%+ negative space) 1/4” wallboard (freedom ply here in the us!) on top of your slats. When someone asks for a plywood platform over their slats, which has happened twice now, I usually set the saw in a jig and rip a bunch of four or five inch strips off some 1/4” and put them an inch or so farther apart than their width (so a bunch of 5” strips would be 6 + inches apart each) and join the whole thing together with a thinner strip across the top and bottom underneath held together with countersunk screws that have either acorn nuts on their bottoms or something else. You need countersunk so stuff can not get caught on the top and acorn nuts on the bottom so hands and cats don’t catch any strays fishing around under that thang. You can’t use glue because you need the whole apparatus to go parallelogram when the bed frame does.
E: oh yeah, if you can tolerate it, check the dump/your local listings for a busted ass metal frame with rails long enough for your design (or close enough not to matter). Those steel L brackets are a super good way to make sure the wood doesn’t pop apart over time. Use some kind of a poly product where wood supports metal to make it even better.
E2: reclaimed metal parts look really sick when you sand and repaint them a loud color that no one will see until they take the mattress off.
E3: if you bake enough slop into your overlay strips you can actually glue them in the case that you trust yourself to glue square and true. Okay I’m really done this time.
I live near Death Valley--New Mexico. I'm not at all worried about mold, in the summer humidity is typically about 10%, in the winter it can rise up to 60%--yes, it's backwards from most places--and it only gets really high on rainy days. (EDIT: I just checked humidity is currently 10%.)
Also, the mattress is approved by the manufacturer for a solid surface.

Finally, I already bought the plywood and cut the pieces, I'm not buying more wood.
For a bunch of dull people y’all do some cool shit.
I left the plywood platform out of the render to show the structure.
I'll post some progress pics. All I've done so far is cut a few sticks to length.
The red bit is a foam pad covered in corduroy upholstery. I'll be sewing the cover too.
Make sure the mattress you're buying can use a platform.
More than half require slats because they must breathe
I used plywood for under my tempur pedic but drilled 4" holes along it to give it breathing room. Also upholstered it with an old sheet to help with breathing room.
No mold or sagging after a couple years! No huge box spring or cheap, noisy slats.
For a moment was wondering how the hell you're pulling off somethingthat big... I thought I was reading from the 3dprinting community.
Neat
Maybe it's the angle but it looks like this is woefully lacking in box spring/mattress support.
What do you think of Blender as a design suite?
I'm not OP but it's not the best. Like, it's possible to use it for this purpose but a proper CAD tool will work much better.
Blender seems like a decent fit for this project, as the geometry is fairly simple and there shouldn't need to be a ton of precision anywhere. Anything where geometry doesn't need to match any already existing hardware particularly well, it is usually much faster to prototype in Blender in my experience. For certain things though, especially when you get curved surfaces involved, blender becomes the much harder option. Parametric obviously has many other advantages, but the stuff you can do with curved surfaces, booleans, and bevels in CAD tools is often extremely difficult to recreate in Blender.
Yeah that's pretty spot on in my experience. I'm not designing as much these days but booleans in particular were a nightmare in blender and something that's really handy for making parts that fit together. And of course parametric.
Blender has been improving booleans, but they still aren't perfect. So, yeah, that's often a hang up.
What kind of wood and joinery are you using?
Seconded. Also, doees the maroon segment in the headboard move side to side? Also, are you willing to share your plans?
The red part will be a foam pad I'll custom order, and I can handle the upholstery myself. No it doesn't come out, I thought about it but, I don't need what little space there is back there. The shelves are plenty. I'll post what plans I have, it's the 3D model and a cut diagram, plus I can include a shopping list.
Totally awesome to do something properly like this yourself. Good luck with the build!
Consider some cross boards, it'll help with sinking if you don't use a box spring.