Bed Project Phase 2

I started my storage bed project a short while ago.  Ok, it was nearly 2 years ago.  Still, I got another bit done.  The mattress sits on a plywood platform.  Wood strips form a lip around the edges and keep the box springs in place.  Those had been a set of short pine parts, but would now be full maple pieces.  The bottom face of the bed frame was plywood and an open hole.  That got covered with an easily removable maple cover.

I started this phase right after I finished the frame, but got side tracked.  I lost a lot of the photos.  The earliest thing I have is of the bottom cover getting ripped down to rough width.  I did that by hand.  No small amount of work!  Table saws are real time savers these days.

After that I went about flattening the massive board with a scrub plane which, according to my heart rate monitor, easily qualifies as cardio.  Scrubbed on the left half, untouched on the right in the picture below.

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After a bit of time with my jack plane it was becoming flatter.  The maple always gives me tear out grain issues though.  A smoothing plane and card scraper fix most of up.

The bottom cover was the largest board I had ever worked by hand.  It was daunting, but starting to look good.

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With the dimensions and finish all about right I could move on to adding a hand cutout feature.  I roughed with my chisel, then used a rasp and spoke shave to smooth it all out.

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Glued washers to the back of the board held it firmly against magnets in the bed frame.  The issue is that this kind of board doesn’t like to be flat.  That gap is a little unsightly.

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No need to panic, I can fix this and make it even better.  A piece of molding attached with pocket holes will stabilize the board a bit, cover up that gap, add a feature to keep the covered centered on the frame, and add some nice flair.  Below is that molding cut to size and fit checked on the bottom cover.  It would ultimately get some rounding on the router, but I forgot to capture that process.

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Similarly, I didn’t get anything of my work on the side rails.  They got a groove to help alignment with the bed platform and some rounding on the router to ease contact with shins and knees.  I used the same waterlox varnish finish technique as on the rest of the bed.  I am really liking how that finish works!

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I assembled the bottom cover once all the finish work was done.  It takes and ugly hole and makes it look like a great maple masterpiece.

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The old pine temporary rails were removed and new maple ones installed.  I clipped the bottom two corners of the bed platform before installing the rails.  No real load is held there at the very edge, and my shins catch that.  Now the railing and platform are all more leg friendly.

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Phase 3 is going to be making all the drawers that go underneath the bed.  I want them to be largely hand worked as well.  For this project I used a miter saw to cut things to length and a router to perform round overs.  Otherwise everything was done with hand tools.  Not necessary, but something I want to spend more time on.

Raised Garden

Our collection of pepper and tomato plants were starting to have a problem.  The tabasco plant was rapidly declining, and some of the other peppers had a burnt look to them.  After asking around we decided to move them from the front to the back.  Our front receives full sun from mid day on.  The back is filtered by some oak trees early on, full in the mid day, then house sheltered in the afternoon.  The results have been better, the plants look less withered when I go to water every afternoon.

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Honestly our little back garden area doesn’t look great.  We have made a few attempts at growing thins in there, but none have succeeded.  Many of the better gardeners in the area seem to forgo in ground planting for raised beds.  I guess our soil sucks for most things.  Lets try a raised bed.  The brick edgers came out and weed screen went down.  It worked out, we put screen around and behind the AC unit, and poured lava rock on it.  It needs more rock, but this should keep the grass from going too crazy back there.

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Lowe’s had garden soil on sale for 2 bucks a cubic foot, and HD had the cedar raised bed thing for 10 bucks off!  I put in two bags of compost for good measure along with the soil.  After some jockeying we got all our various tomatoes, peppers, and a few new vegetables in.  Any more plants and we will need to build another one of these units.

I am leaving the screen too wide until everything settles.  In retrospect I should have run it up the insides of the cedar.  Oh well, that is what next time is for!  Until then hopefully our plants thrive and we get more of those awesome little tomatoes the one bush was giving us.