DIY Ultra Thin Kitchen Open Shelving
When I was renovating the kitchen in the lakehouse I decided to remove all of the upper shelving which meant I needed to build something else! I decided to replace the closed cabinet shelves with diy ultra thin kitchen open shelving!
Starting the Building DIY Ultra Thin Kitchen Open Shelving
I started to build my diy ultra-thin kitchen open shelving with a laser level. This ran a laser across the wall to make sure that my shelves would be mounted properly. I measured to where the shelves needed to be. The floors and the ceilings are a little odd, so a laser level was the best option. When I had everything the way I wanted, I ran painter’s tape along the laser line and painted it dark so I would have a permanent level line to base my shelving brackets on.
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Placing Brackets for the Shelving
To completely hide the bracket hardware that will hold these shelves up I am lining them up with the level line, then tracing around the bracket and finding the stud with a magnetic stud finder! I am then cutting out the drywall where the bracket will sit. This is so I can recess the bracket behind it right on the stud. These brackets hold 150 pounds, I want this shelf to be very strong. I want it to be ablet to hold plate stacks and other heavy things. I do not want them to sag away from the wall. This is why I staggered the brackets one up, one down. Once the brackets are screwed in place, I am covering the brackets with fiber tape and three coats of mud. Once the brackets are covered I am painting over the mud, you would never guess these brackets are recessed into the wall!
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Lumber for the Shelves
Once the brackets are in place I am going to start cutting the lumber. Solid lumber would have been too expensive, so I am using cabinet-grade maple plywood that is 3/4 inch thick. The shelves I am cutting are going to be 11 inches deep. I am going to bevel all of the edges so they meet at a 45-degree angle. This is going to make the wood pieces look like one. It took me a total of 5 hours to cut all of this wood
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Finishing the Wood
I am using the work pro sanding set to sand down the wood. I wrap my sanding paper around a sponge to soften the edges of the sanding paper. Before staining, I am using a pre-stain wood conditioner. Once the wood conditioner is in place, I will stain it with a chestnut color. I realized that the chestnut color is too light, so I am mixing it with walnut-colored stain.
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Cutting Spacers
The next step in this project is to cut spacers. The brackets are what are going to hold the weight of the shelf, but I need a shelf that is 2 and 1/4 inches tall. These spacers are going to go between the two 3/4 inch sheets of plywood to give me exactly the right depth.
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Installing the DIY Ultra Thin Kitchen Open Shelving
Step one of this installation is to nail your spacers into your top board. I am nailing them with one-inch long nails 16 gauge Finnish nails. Then I am going to flip my board onto the brackets and am putting little 3/4 inch wood screws through the bottom of the brackets into the plywood. Next, I put the bottom board against the wood spacers and shot 2-inch brad nails through the spacer into the top board. The little spaces between the two boards are 2 1/2 inches wide and are being filled by pieces of plywood that I cut to fit and are being glued down. On the other side of the kitchen, I am doing a longer shelf. These two meet at a 90-degree angle. I am using brad nails to connect the two shelves. To finish the shelves I am coating them in polyurethane.
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If you loved this project and want to see the entire kitchen renovation, read my DIY small kitchen makeover blog post!
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