Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Hackers Help: Can you ID this fabric?

ikea-fabric-1

Once again, as the IKEAhackers community has proven so helpful over the years, I am looking for the name of this beautiful fabric. I had it made into a table cloth and pillow cases, and then I washed it, and now it’s faded beyond recognition. I would love to search for it online, as it fits my decor beautifully, but that would entail knowing the name of the design.

Thanks to all you know-it-alls, much appreciated!

~ Kathrin

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Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Book stand from Tosterup handles. Works for Tablets too.

Join the 2 halves of the TOSTERUP handles and you get a book stand / holder. It works great for tablets too.

DIY book stand from IKEA TOSTERUP handles

Materials:

  • 1 package Tosterup handles (available in black, yellow and white)
  • Carpet tape to fix the felt
  • Felt 2.6 x 19 cm (microcellular rubber should work as well)
  • Felt 2.4 x 19 cm (microcellular rubber should work as well)
  • Cork 16 x 3, 5 X 0.4 cm (microcellular rubber should work as well)
  • Cork 21.5 x 4.5 cm to cover the front if requested
  • 2 connection plates
  • 4 x rubber bumpers
  • 2 x 4 x 20 mm (come with Tosterup)
  • 2 x 4 x 25 mm (or longer if the backside should be higher)
  • 14 x nuts for 4 mm screws
  • 2 capping nuts for 4 mm screws

tablet-stand

Connect both handles as shown on the photo. It’s also possible to use longer screws to vary the height.

DIY book stand from IKEA TOSTERUP handles

DIY book stand from IKEA TOSTERUP handles

DIY book stand from IKEA TOSTERUP handles

Place a piece of cork or microcellular rubber between both handles and bumpers below the connection plates.

DIY book stand from IKEA TOSTERUP handles

The stand is very stable and you can vary its height also. It can be used for books, cards etc. as well.

When used for tablets, you can wind the cables beneath the stand.

Tablet stand

~ by Katryn

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Monday, August 28, 2017

15 LACK tables as Metabolight interactive display unit

15 LACK tables hacked as Metabolight interactive display unit


IKEA items used:

  • 15 x Lack tables, white

Other items:

  • 5mm Perspex panels with printed or cut vinyl
  • 8mm white slide binders
  • MattWhite vinyl
  • 18mm MDF base board
  • Batten light holders
  • Double sided tape
  • Screws
  • L-brackets
  • Fixing plates

We were commissioned to make a travelling, portable exhibition as part of a project for University College London Engineering. While looking for possible solutions we happened upon the Lack table, the perfect white box for only £5! We bought a few and played around with them, stacking them up and filling the openings with images and information.

After a few tests we found a way to build them into simple towers with perspex panels filling the apertures between the legs, while still being able to disassemble and flat pack them with relative ease. The stand is made up of 5 different towers of Lack tables fixed to two base board for stability.

15 LACK tables hacked as Metabolight interactive display unit

The towers are built from the top down with the top most table being a basic Lack table. The second table top is then screwed into the bottom of the legs before having its own legs attached with the standard IKEA double sided screws. The process is then repeated until the desired height is reached. Simple!

Slide binders are affixed to the inside of the legs with double sided tape to hold perspex panels. The panels can then be slid in easily. The panels for each table need to be added as the towers are built to ensure they were held tightly.

Holes were drilled into some of the table tops so that light bulbs could be threaded through and illuminate the perspex panels from behind.

15 LACK tables hacked as Metabolight interactive display unit

15 LACK tables hacked as Metabolight interactive display unit

15 LACK tables hacked as Metabolight interactive display unit

Once the separate towers are assembled, they are arranged on the base boards and L-brackets are used to fix them in place. A few fixing plates are also used to tie the towers together and give them a bit of extra rigidity.

Then it’s all done! The perfect platform for information panels and interactive displays.

~ by Michael, Design Science


More ways to use the LACK as a display stand

Lack exhibition table

The “Lack Freischwinger” is a compact, easy to build table suitable for exhibitions or displaying of artifacts. Read more.

Lack side table as product display panels

LACK side tables glued onto 45 x 45 mm planks and wall mounted as a product display panel. Read more.


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Sunday, August 27, 2017

#62: What The New Owners Changed In Our Old Houses

Watching your former homes get altered by their new owners can be tough, and we witnessed a couple of changes that bothered us more than we expected. So this week we’re sharing how we got over those feelings and how to find the silver lining in seeing someone undo your designs. And back at our current house, we took a big step in making our driveway more kid-friendly that was long overdue and surprisingly painless to pull off. We also look at what items you shouldn’t be buying secondhand, why Sherry has been sentenced to more time in “tooth jail,” and how our beach house is having a brush with a true-crime saga.

You can download this episode from Apple PodcastsGoogle PlayStitcher, and TuneIn Radio – or listen to it below! Then use this page to check out any links, notes, or photos we referenced. Note: If you’re reading in a feed reader, you might have to click through to the post to see the player. 

What’s New

  • Hallelujah, our driveway is paved! Don’t mind the lighter and darker areas in the pic above (it had just rained), but below is a snapshot of how out of control the weed situation was getting at the front of our driveway. Plus the kids longed for a driveway where they could scoot and bike, so we knew it would be an improvement they’d enjoy too.

  • The crew we hired was super speedy and we all had fun watching their progress throughout the afternoon. If you want to entertain your kids, get your driveway paved.

  • And since we know you’re all really here to see Sherry’s mouth contraption now that her Invisalign has been extended, here’s a GIF version of a video she posted to Insta-stories recently. She’s just using the dog filter to distract us from the elastics.

What’s Not

Listener Question

  • As always, you can tour our first and second houses if you want to see anything we referenced in those homes.
  • And Sherry was right – we did talk about our first house being for sale again waaay back in Episode #13. I can’t believe I forgot!
  • Below is our bedroom as we used it, including the built-in closets on either side that added some much needed storage to the room (you can read more about that project here). We don’t have a photo of what it looked like once the new owners removed it, but it basically looked like our room before we added them (which you can see here).

  • Below are some glimpses at the fence situation in our first house. On the left is the fence as we had it, which was pretty low-profile and kept the yard and the driveway feeling open to each another. On the right is a picture we took when we were invited back to visit our first house a couple of years ago with the kids (it was so much fun). The new fence is nicely done, but it definitely makes the yard and the driveway feel more separated.

  • And as Sherry mentioned, we’ve had some second thoughts about how we would arrange our last home’s kitchen if we were to do it again today (namely the opening to the dining room, seen at right below). You can see it’s “P” shape better in this post.

We’re Digging

  • American Fire is the book I’m loving lately about a long line of arsons on the Eastern Shore of Virginia, just north of our beach house a few years ago. I’ve gotten deeper into it since recording and IT’S ONLY GETTING BETTER.
  • The photo above is not from the book – it’s a pretty shot Sherry took earlier this year in the county where all the fires had happened. It’s like some of the abandoned homes that were burned in the arson spree. So sad!
  • And is Sherry’s new favorite drink slowly and diabolically trying to kill her? Or is it as healthy as they say? Somebody tell her.

If you’re looking for something we’ve dug in a past episode, but don’t remember which show notes to click into, here’s a master list of everything we’ve been digging from all of our past episodes.

Lastly, a big thank you to Grove Collaborative for sponsoring this episode. You can head over to grove.co/YHLto automatically get $20 off your first order of $40 or more AND to get our favorite natural cleaner, Mrs. Meyer’s All-Purpose Spray, thrown in for free!

Thanks for listening, guys!

*This post contains affiliate links*

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Friday, August 25, 2017

Rolling laundry cart made from KNAGGLIG boxes

Rolling laundry cart made from KNAGGLIG boxes

Materials:

  • 4x KNAGGLIG boxes – the bigger ones
  • 4x RILL wheels (one set)
  • 3x hinges from a hardware store
  • 8x 15-20mm wood screws to join the crates
  • 12x 8-10mm wood screws for the hinges
  • 16x 10mm wood screws or slightly longer bolts + nuts to attach the wheels

This cost me about 60 euros.

IKEA KNAGGLIG storage box

Photo: IKEA.com

My goal was to make a simple laundry cart for a room in the attic with a very low ceiling, 2ft/60cm at its lowest. It had to be easy to move around, have several compartments, affordable, and nice to look at.

Instructions for KNAGGLIG rolling laundry cart / storage box:

1. Assemble the KNAGGLIG crates according to the instructions.

2. Attach two crates side by side using a total of four short wood screws that go through the topmost and the lowest piece of wood. Make sure alignment is good. The crate might be slightly crooked.

3. Repeat for the other two crates.

4. Stack the crates and attach the hinges. One in the middle and one in each end.

Rolling laundry cart made from KNAGGLIG boxes

5. Attach the wheels to the bottom.

Rolling laundry cart made from KNAGGLIG boxes

6. Make sure any screws didn’t poke through the wood on the insides of the crates. If they did, cut and file off the excess.

Rolling laundry cart made from KNAGGLIG boxes

Note that my cart doesn’t have a frame. You don’t want anyone sitting on it. It might not be a good idea to store bowling balls in it either. However, it’s very easy to add a frame to the bottom if you need a stronger cart. With this design you also need to lift whatever is in the topmost crates in order to access the lower ones. Works great for sorting laundry or other light items.

Rolling laundry cart made from KNAGGLIG boxes

This design is easy to customize. Want just a laundry cart with two large containers? Leave out the bottom part between crates. Want a lid for the cart? Use the KNAGGLIG bottom: invert the top crate, then invert the bottom of the top crate to make a smooth top. Add hinges.

Happy hacking!

~ by Mikko


More ideas for laundry carts

Laundry trolley

Joos hacked this small trolley for his grandma to carry around her laundry or other heavier stuff. Made out of two LACK tables, some wheels and a broom stick. Read more.

Salvage the ANTONIUS laundry basket with mesh. See more here.


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Thursday, August 24, 2017

IT sideboard: Keep the wifi router out of sight

Keep cable clutter at bay. Hack a slim and narrow, wall mounted phone and IT sideboard to house tech equipment like wifi routers and chargers.

Phone and IT sideboard

Materials:

IKEA:

  • OTTEBOL (40x192cm): 15€

ottebol-tur-wei-__0577656_pe668913_s4

Photo: IKEA.com

Additional:

  • Oak-plank (20x200cm): ca. 20€
  • Some Wood Pins
  • Wood Glue
  • Brackets
  • Mesh plate (metal)
  • L-profile (aluminium), optional

Total: 65€

Steps to hacking an IT sideboard.

1. Making the frame:

Get the OTTEBOL door and cut it into 4 pieces like shown on the graphic:

Cutting the OTTEBOL door

Be careful with the cut edges. They tend to break after you cut it. This was the hardest part.

2. Making the shelves:

After that, you just take the oak plank and cut 3 pieces of 20 x 36.4cm for the base, and two inner shelves.
Lastly, cut the top with a little overhang (if you want to). I did it at 20 x 42cm.

3. Mesh for IT equipment:

Cut the mesh plate to 41 x 20cm. Smooth the edges after cutting to prevent sharp edges.
Now take both side panels (right & left), be sure that the nice side is facing front.  Mill two slots (5mm deep, 20,5cm high) on the inside. That’s the spot where the mesh plate will sit.

Slots for the mesh

4. Assembling the unit:

Frame:
For the top and bottom planks I used wooden plugs. Drill them in, add some glue and assembly them.

Now add the mesh plate, because it is thin, you can slightly bend it to insert into the slots.

For the two shelves, I used a small L-profile (I’m lazy), but you can also do it with wooden dowels.

Phone and IT sideboard

Fortunately, OTTEBOL comes with predrilled holes for the hinges. But because of the cutting, you have only one left on each side. But that’s no big deal. Measure the existing hole and copy it to bottom section of your new door.

To cover the existing holes on the inside, I just mounted the hinges over the inner holes.
For the rest of the holes, IKEA did us a favour and added some white plastic covers you can use.

5. Installing the IT sideboard:

Because I wanted it to float, I used three brackets for the wall mount. Why three? At first I also just used two on the top, but because of the weight of the door it got a little bit wonky while using the door. So I just put a third at the bottom and the problem is gone.

Phone and IT sideboard

That’s pretty much all there is to it. Of course I did some touch ups and sanded down the edges of all shelves, as well as cut small slots at the back of each shelf (even the bottom and top) to allow for some air flow for the IT equipment.

~ by Jogi

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If you have NOT received the “Hack It, Jules” ebook …

Yikes!

I just realised that I made a typo in my email address, which means your email with the purchase receipt did not reach me.

My apologies. I’m so used to the site being IKEAhackers that my eyes totally missed the error — my email is without an “s”. Till someone dropped me a note asking why she hasn’t received the ebook. And then I checked my previous post and O.M.G!!!  (Thanks Gwen, you’re a lifesaver!) 

Kindly resend your receipt to ikeahacker@gmail.com (without the ‘s’ in ikeahackers as previously published.)

Again, I’m sorry for the mix up. Just get the receipt to me and I’ll get it sorted out pronto.

Thank you for your patience and for pre-ordering the IKEAhackers book.

Jules

 

 

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Wednesday, August 23, 2017

HOLY THINSET, BATMAN! The Beach House Bathrooms Are Tiled!

We had another progress-filled week at the beach house thanks to clocking over 40 hours of tiling across four days to finally finish all of the tile (well, almost all of the tile).

Just like last week’s super-sized post on trim, doors, and tile, we made a video to show you guys all the good stuff that’s happening over there – including two other not-tile-related milestones. Note: If you’re reading in a feed reader, you might have to click through to the post to see the player. 

We tiled the floors and shower pans by zooming in and out for two 2-day trips and tackling them together, but we knew knocking out EIGHT shower walls would be no speedy task. Our kids had stayed with their grandparents on those previous 48 hour trips, but we decided to bring them (and the dog!) for this trip since school hasn’t started here yet and we thought we’d turn it into a fun little vacation before back-to-school stuff begins. A friend offered us a place to sleep in town (she was going to be gone and merely asked us to water her plants, which was perfect timing and I watered those plants SO WELL you guys). So we arrived last Wednesday without a ticking babysitting clock or a rising hotel bill to worry about. And some serious tiling got DONE.

It turned into me mostly wrangling the kids and the dog around Cape Charles while John did as much tiling as his thinest-riddled hands could muster. I definitely felt a little guilty having fun with the kids while he toiled away, but another option we debated was me and the kids staying home and him just going to the beach house alone for a few days to concentrate and get things done… but I liked this plan better because I’d be nearby if he passed out from exhaustion or wanted me to drop by with ice cream (which I also did SO WELL you guys).

We ended up staying in Cape Charles until Sunday morning, and left with 2 of the 3 bathrooms completely tiled (and the third around 90% there). Meaning they’re ready for grout, and on the verge of getting toilets and sinks set too, which is extra exciting because we also OFFICIALLY HAVE RUNNING WATER! It’s all hooked up, and I even turned on the hose bib in the video. Because we’re still nerding out about the fact that we finally have water, glorious water, that goes from the street to our house (more on that saga here if you’re not caught up, and actually this podcast explains everything more deeply – because this whole water saga has been SO MUCH DRAMA). So it’s really really nice to be completely through that whole debacle and to know that when we install toilets, they will actually flush.

(we used this basketweave tile, this slate-like porcelian tile, and this long subway tile)

The downstairs bathroom is the most classic of the three, and since it also has the tallest ceilings (9 feet downstairs, upstairs is 8 feet) we used these oversized 4 x 16″ subway tiles on all three walls. It was the first of the three showers we tackled, and the large wall tiles made it go a bit faster than setting normal 3 x 6″ subway tiles.

We used the same wall tiles upstairs in the master bathroom too, which went even faster because it’s only two walls (the third will be a glass pane) and the ceilings are a foot shorter. The large scale white wall tiles pair really nicely with the small scale hex pattern on the floor, so we can’t wait to see it all grouted.

(we used this black & white hex tile, but replaced the black pattern with these blue tiles and the same long subway wall tiles)

The thing that ate up a crazy amount of time in here was tiling the curb, since it wrapped around two sides and required some mitering to get a clean looking corner. There was even some face-timing so John and I could plan it together while I was back at the house for nap time. Some people use slabs of marble or granite to top these “curbs”, but we thought it best to keep it simple in here and just continue our wall tiles along them. We trimmed  some bullnose tiles in half to create sort of a pencil border around the edges and then laid full wall tiles everywhere else.

This room is probably our favorite, especially because it’ll have the original clawfoot tub in here too eventually.

And here’s the hall bathroom all tiled…. except for a little bit of one wall and the curb around the front of the shower floor. John ran out of thinset (and energy) so we’re headed back in a few days to finish it up together.

(we used this floor tile, this white hex tile, this classic subway, and this blue patterned tile along the back wall)

That blank sliver on the bottom of that wall that looks like it’s missing a row of tile is because you want to set your first row off the ground so that you can make sure it’s level. You don’t want to trust that your floor is level and just follow the floor with that first row of tile (especially in a shower where the pan or tub is meant to slope towards the drain) because it could mean a completely crooked row of tile that’s more and more obviously crooked as you work your way up the wall.

So you mark a level line on the wall and then screw in a piece of scrap wood (see arrow) for that first row to rest on. Once everything is set above it, you just remove the wood and add the last row of tile – shaving down the tiles as necessary to fit against the floor.

Oh, and that blue tile on the back wall actually comes in 13 x 13″ squares – even though it looks like lots of smaller square tiles. It did take some planning to make sure we placed them in a randomized way. The 13 x 13″ squares aren’t all alike, but without being careful you could end up with the same tile designs all touching one another, so it’s smart to place them somewhat thoughtfully as you go, just so one area doesn’t feel weirdly cloned or clumped with all of the same patterns hitting in the same spot.

The other tip for laying these is to offset them as you build each row (I drew boxes around the big tiles in the shot above so you can see what we mean). We’ve seen some installs of this design where it’s reeeally obvious where the seams are between the big tiles because they aren’t spaced the same way that the 9 little tiles are within each tile. It kinda ruins the illusion, so offsetting them helped to make sure the spacing was correct all the way up.

This shower is looking somewhat busy right now compared to the other two, which are simpler/safer tile choices, but once it’s all grouted we hope it’ll be great (fingers crossed). We’re using pretty low-contrast grout on every wall in here, so the dark lines you see now won’t be nearly as prominent once we’ve grouted. Grout color can majorly change how much you notice the shapes/lines of a tile (for example, this is white hex floor with dark grout versus one with light grout). So yeah, we think in the end this shower will be interesting and layered, hopefully without being too nuts in there. And if it sucks, we can just retile it. HAHAHAHAHAHA NEVER.

We’re not trying to kid ourselves into thinking that grouting will be quick or painless, but we are SO EXCITED to see the final result – even if it means multiple trips again to spread grout, remove haze, etc. SOMEDAY WE WILL BE DONE TILING AND YOU SHALL HEAR MY VICTORY CRY ACROSS THE LAND!

Also, the pocket doors in the back bedroom are up in all of their chippy and imperfectly beautiful glory. We got asked a few times why we hung the doors if we have to take them off and seal them or paint them (we’re leaving the chippy ones chippy, but have to remove any flaking paint and seal them for safety’s sake), and the answer is just that we wanted to complete the entire house’s trim, and trim can’t be hung around doors until the doors are set and hung. So it’s much easier to pop the doors off after they’re hung (you just remove two pins and off they come) than to hold up the whole trim process, which holds up the trim caulking and painting process, which holds up the floor refinishing process, etc.

And as you saw in the video – tile wasn’t the only progress we made last week: more trim went up, the A/C is actually all installed and done (but I explain why it can’t be turned on yet – d’oh!) and for anyone who actually comes here for the lovely sight that is water flowing out of a hose bib, that’s covered in the video too. You’re welcome.

Psst- if you want to catch up on all of the other beach house updates we’ve shared, here ya go:

*This post contains affiliate links

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