Easy to do when your house is made out of cardboard 😭
@lalalajuice3 күн бұрын
But those hinges wont last long? I have bad experience with those.
@BlakeAudibert3 күн бұрын
Would have been easier to add a j hook but it looks nice bro
@tyraewoldt23765 күн бұрын
😊Thank you so much! Really awesome diy 😊
@Inday_weng6 күн бұрын
Wow thanks for the tips
@NickRichardson-v2e7 күн бұрын
Cap
@Carrm3ist3r9 күн бұрын
Following this video right now as I am doing our nursery number 2 room 😂 thank you!!!
@overclockxp9 күн бұрын
The music sucks
@ilynpayne749111 күн бұрын
Plastic wall eeeh? 😂
@MrCeo-b7e12 күн бұрын
Are you talking about the material cost?
@esra88814 күн бұрын
Waste of time for me living in Germany having solid bricks walls :D
@WhiteArtsMagic15 күн бұрын
How much more are you going to spend doing this?
@waiyiptang947216 күн бұрын
😊😊😊 A teaching guide for me. ✌️✌️✌️
@certifiedyaminspector-dadd622416 күн бұрын
Not terrible
@cristinacastro52618 күн бұрын
God please help me cristina castro God please amen ❤❤
@Danilyn_Livao19 күн бұрын
Amazing guide! You’ve made this intimidating task look so simple. Thanks for the detailed breakdown and making it seem doable for anyone. 👍
@ewanfozalo585519 күн бұрын
2x3 all the way for this build
@cedriclashar890519 күн бұрын
I definitely want to do this in Delaware. Beautiful work
@CuongBui-t6f19 күн бұрын
Awesome job man
@wilsonmaingrette71520 күн бұрын
Great vid💯
@rabakomaba456220 күн бұрын
Nice, nice, very nice. However you can make it yourself. Just google WoodPrix and learn how to do it easily.
@megyu1721 күн бұрын
You’re about to give me a heart attack when I saw your hand being too near to that blade on the table saw 😭 please be careful, I want to learn a lot from you
@joeparham288923 күн бұрын
I would like to do that but my wife is not in compliance. Good job though!
@CreativeThinking5223 күн бұрын
Awesome tutorial. Thanks for sharing. Have an amazing weekend.👍📺
@kimmy499423 күн бұрын
For those that wants to do project but don't have tools nor a workshop, where I live there are some woodworking coop (And other craft) coop that are reasonably priced with all the tools. I just learned it existed, so check in your area if it's something that would interest you!
@danhei295625 күн бұрын
Fantastic! A friend of mine has these exact same shelves in his garage. Now I know how to do it without having to figure it out! Love the way you used screws to hold the back in place initially, followed immediately by the clamps. Never would have thought of that!! 😀
@ГалинаАлферова-з6к25 күн бұрын
I bought excellent e-book from WoodPrix.
@stefanonovelli981025 күн бұрын
this is the convenience of having plasterboard walls which in Italy are practically always made of concrete and brick. But you did a really good job
@r.schmalzried731527 күн бұрын
We bought a house that was built new with wood floors. Quarter round everywhere. I hate it too.
@johnhavel768527 күн бұрын
Those turned out looking great! I’m buying a house we just got done doing the kitchen on unfortunately when the guy decided to do the kitchen i wasn’t aware that he wanted to sell so now that I’m buying I’m thinking I may end up redoing the kitchen again but full diy like this since I can build the equivalent of tens of thousands of dollars of cabinets for a few thousand and they will be as good if not better quality than those particle board pieces of junk so many people install. The ones we just did look great but the aesthetic of greyscale everything is not my cup of tea. It’ll do for now until I get the time and money to make it happen but I’m thinking some nice maple plywood and solid maple frames with a black walnut epoxy river countertop on the island and probably some nice granite or Cambria for the rest of the counters. I’m thinking it’d look pretty awesome but still gotta save up a few grand to make it happen.
@saulkravitz29 күн бұрын
I didn’t catch the hinge and slide on the miter saw.
@ecoxocticeternal81629 күн бұрын
I am lost....
@jasonaubry861129 күн бұрын
Sooo you said none of those are power cables...How do u get power to the t.v.?? Did I miss somthg..I mean I'm definitely not a tech guy...But I do believe all electrical shit needs power...Idk tho..
@AaronClark-f6m29 күн бұрын
Really breezed over the dangers of running your power cables through the way 😅
@kingvictor217429 күн бұрын
Cries in Germany walls💀
@TexasElectrician77Ай бұрын
Congratulations! Great job but you have now permanently located the chandelier to what will probably be a temporary table! It looks very small for that space and they probably hung it to where it would be over the center if a much larger table. Maybe not, I don’t have enough information here, but it looks that way.
@JimmyC23Ай бұрын
Did you put the electricity back on?
@VelavellyАй бұрын
So the vertical support doesn’t need to be screwed into the ground or ceiling, how do they provide support? Construction diy newbie here
@byronness7385Ай бұрын
Maybe use a push stick to teach people properly so they don’t become part of the secret handshake society
@leknerlekАй бұрын
Thank you for great idea and building steps
@ironwolf3699Ай бұрын
bro... the jump scare at 1:08 gave me chills... /s
@JoseRidesАй бұрын
I noticed you caulked the outer edges of the trim on both sides of the wall. Did you also caulk where the trim meets the shiplap? I’m wondering if that might create globs in the gaps between the boards.
@90nadzАй бұрын
Unfortunately, we've concrete walls here in UK.
@MudinyeriАй бұрын
As the former owner of a construction company (lots of kitchen remodels), I was going to mention a few things. A couple have already been mentioned - using a push stick on the table saw and sanding/priming/painting the interiors of the cabinets before facing them. A couple others: 1. Make cleats to hang your upper cabinets (It looked like you might have done this, but you didn't mention it.) to make it easier to hang them and keep them level. 2. Put paper (newspaper, butcher paper, etc.) between your clamps and the wood to keep from accidentally gluing your clamp to the wood if a little glue squeezes out. Otherwise, a good video.
@deezle14605 күн бұрын
french cleats are fine IF... IF you plan on leaving a "pleasing / aesthetic" gap between the cabinets and ceiling... this guy did leave a huge gap so french cleats would have been an easier 1 man install... but in my case, my ceilings are high enough BUT the section of my kitchen designated for cabinets has box framing that actually lowers the cabinets (1940's home)... seems like the framing's sole purpose was to lower cabinets by about 12 inches... I ended up ripping off the drywall from the framing but I decided to keep the framing... completely hollow frame... I suspected there would be an hvac duct in there but NOPE, just completely hollow... if I used french cleats I would end up with a weird small gap... I definitely wanted to use french cleats but I think that gap between the box frame and cabinets would lower the cabinets too much and leave an awkward thin gap
@cykr0Ай бұрын
Dude, your american walls are made out of paper and hope…. The most walls in germany are solid. But it looks nice
@jimpie231Ай бұрын
My brother-in-law from Poland in 1994 made me 3 storage units using 2x3’s and 1/2 plywood. I bought the 2x3’s, some brown paint and some drywall screws that were laying around and some old plywood that was thrown out at work. The units were 12’, 6’ and 7’ long. The 2x3 frames were used vertically and 4 plywood shelves on each, the shelves were just screwed to the upright 2x3 unis. When I moved I took this the units apart, to my new home. The 12’ shelving unit went into the basement, the other 2 in the garage. They have served me well and remind me of my wonderful brother-in-law Henry.
@brianhawthorne8480Ай бұрын
Build the walls on tje short side and use shims if needed. Your going to end up with a wavy wall and issues with drywall cracks if your hammering in the wall so tightly
@Elsa-qy9hrАй бұрын
Why did you use the bracing boards under the plywood some vertical some horizontal on the second shelving unit in this clip?🤔 just curious, is it stronger that way?
@IAteFireАй бұрын
He was using them as spacers, not installing them - but if he had, they would’ve served to hold up the weight instead of all the strain being on the nails