How I built…

Plant stand

Difficulty 5 / 10
Time * 4 hours or so
Costs Under 20$
Keep in mind that when I did this, I had been doing this for just under 2 years

Back story

Over the weekend, I thought I’d make a little something for my girlfriend. While at it, I thought I’d try to make some tenon and mortises — or whatever this turned out to be.

For this project, I used:

Tools

Materials

Qty Material
- 3/4″ pine plywood
- #8 Screws – 2 1/2″

How I went about it

  1. Rip and cut the pieces

    I started by ripping 4 pieces of 18″ long for the legs and 2 more at 12″ to tie everything up together.

    I also cut another 12″ piece to test out the proper depth for my half lap joint in the center.

    Note: I *think* this is made of 3/4″ thick pine, but I am not 100% certain of the species as I only got it from someone’s lawn where it said “Free”.

  2. Figure out the proper depth

    I started by calculating the approximate height by eye and quickly noticed I was way too high. I lowered my blade and tried matching my pieces but I was now a little too low. Third time was a charm (Goldilocks!) and my depth was near perfect, so I went on and cut the work pieces.

  3. Tenon and mortise time

    Using a 3/4″ Forstner bit and my drill press, I cut a circle on both ends of where the inner legs will go. Due to the thickness of my wood, I figured I’d go full depth and rather and making proper tenons and mortises, I’d “simply” pass the inner pieces fully across the legs.

    Then, I used a chisel to clean up my edges until I could fit my inner legs really nice and snug.

  4. Sand. Sand. Sand.

    The last step is something I, unlike many others, actually enjoy. I actually like the sanding process. (Either this is because I’m still new to this, or I am not doing it correctly!) From what I’ve learned, I understand the best practice is to move up by a scale of 50%, so I started with 80 grit, then moved up half of this and went up to 120. I used some 180 grit to finish it off ever so slightly on the corners of each piece.

  5. Finish

    I had some aerosol transparent satin varnish lying around so I tried it out on my test pieces from earlier (when I tried out the half lap joint) and I liked the result so I went on and applied it all over. I assembled everything and made a happy woman.

Key takeaway

  1. Needs work

    Not too bad for someone who’s never done any tenon and mortise joints, but I can’t wait to have a decent result. In the meantime, it wasn’t so bad, so I’ll go back and keep working on it.

The final product