You might not think it, but home stores carry all the furniture you’d find in a show room; it’s just not assembled yet. Black & Decker Readymade Home Furniture shows you how.
You can find just about any furnishing imaginable in the aisles of the home goods store—coffee tables, wine racks, chandeliers—with just a little assembly (and creativity) required. In
Black & Decker Readymade Home Furniture, you will learn how to
re-imagine the big-box building center as a source for stylish, customized home furnishings that are i
nexpensive and easy to make yourself .
Metal connectors, pipes and ductwork, rope, sheet goods, glass, and all varieties of hardware are just a few of the ingredients you can shop for to turn yourself into a furniture maker—
without the need to buy a lot of woodworking tools and learn complicated joinery .
Inside this book, you will find a wealth of insightful information on how to
convert everyday building materials into fine furnishings , along with 24 projects, complete with instructions to get you started. Unique and custom styles and colors, durability (select the quality materials you want), low cost, and a sense of satisfaction are just a few of the benefits you will experience by
doing your furniture shopping at your home center or hardware store.
A few of the demonstration projects included in
Black & Decker Readymade Home Furniture are:
- Shoe rack from concrete forming tubes
- Copper pipe tubing pot rack
- Nuts-and-bolt candle holder
- Door desk made with axe handle legs
- Modern media center from angle iron and melamine board
- Door handle coat rack
- Ductwork coffee table
- Bagged concrete planters
- Faux rock and pump waterfall
Sobre el autor
Chris Peterson is a veteran home improvement and design author. Among the many books he has written are Barndominiums, 5-Gallon Bucket Book, Building with Secondhand Stuff, Manskills, four books in the Ideas You Can Use series, and many books in Cool Springs Press’s BLACK+DECKER Complete Guide series. He has also co-authored numerous home design books with noted media celebrities. He lives in Ashland, Oregon.