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Half scale scratch-built dresser

Last week when I saw this tutorial from Antique Daisy for making a dresser with fake drawers, it inspired me to make one for the Rosedale. I’ve been looking for a tall skinny dresser that sort of matches the bed and nightstand I’d built from kits for the bedroom. The corner where I wanted to put it is only about an inch wide and so far I haven’t been able to find anything that works in that space, so making my own seemed like the best move. And I hate building drawers, so a dresser with nonworking drawers is even better!

Daisy built hers from a block of wood, but since I didn’t have a piece that was the right size handy, I cobbled my dresser together from strip wood that was lying around. First, on the front edge, I glued on narrow pieces of wood to create “frame” to hold in the drawer fronts. (I used the drawer fronts as spacers to glue the trim pieces on, then pried them out so they could be painted separately.)

Next I glued the fronts and sides together to form a box. I also glued a thin shim just above the top trim piece, since the crown molding I planned to use at the top was slightly shallower than the trim and I wanted them to line up.

Since I was using spare pieces of wood, I didn’t think ahead of time about how thick the dresser would be. (We’ll revisit this later!)

Here it is from the side. You’ll notice that the side piece on the right is a bit too short, I didn’t have enough wood. That’s okay, since the top edge will be covered with crown molding (and I’d planned for that side to face the wall, anyway!)

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Fairfield kitchen cabinets (continued)

My order of Bonnie Lavish kits included a counter top and sink. The sink is made of wood—three skinny cutout pieces that are glued together to create depth, and a bottom piece with “drains” scribed into the wood. The photo below shows the sink parts after the three cutouts were glued together, but before the bottom piece was glued on.

After assembling the sink, I primed it and the counter top with one of my favorite paint colors, Glidden Sandy Feet.

I colored in the drain holes with brown magic marker (seemed easier than painting those tiny circles, plus I’d been using the marker for touch-ups on the laser cut edges of the cabinet pieces, so it was handy). Then I glued washers on top to look like drains. They’re a little big but they get the point across.

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