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Three pot plant stands made from Tasmanian Oak and stained with clear varnish.
The project
I made these new pot plant stands using Tasmanian Oak timber.
I have been wanting to make these stands for the last six months. After looking at different ideas online, I decided to go with this style.
All joints are glued. The legs are made using floating mortise joints. I used a horizontal home-made router table.
The top box section was made using a box joint jig. I also made the jig to do this process.
For the top part, where the pots sit, I glued three pieces of 110 x12mm Tasmanian Oak, recessed to give a shadow line and recessed to mount into the box section of the planter stand. The top base wasn't glued, it was just fitted into the slots and held together by just gluing the box joints.
Here are more photos of the work done to complete these planter stands. I only needed three of the stands. I started by making one as a prototype. This was my original and first try at making a planter stand.
So for the next three stands, I redesigned the top section with slots. No brackets required.
If you put your mind to make something, it's very rewarding when you see the finished product.
Tools and materials
Tools and materials used in the project:
- 32 x 32mm Tasmanian Oak
- 110 x 12mm Tasmanian Oak
- Home-made floating tenons to suit mortises
- Plastic angle brackets and screws
- Wood glue (Titebond 1)
- Water-based satin clear varnish
- Plastic feet floor protectors.
How to build a planter stand
Inspired by Workshop member JoineryJo's popular project, Joe previously shared a full step-by-step guide How to build a planter stand with a full list of tools and materials required.
More inspiration for your plant stand project
Community member LePallet used Pine to make his pot plant shelving stand.
Experienced Workshop community member Mitchell built this recycled pallet ladder pot stand, which he painted with Dulux Design Chalk Effect Paint.
For more creative ideas from Workshop community members, check out our 7 stylish plant stands.
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Morning @JoeAzza
Thats some might fine work! And I do mean fine as in accurate and fine as looking good The level of accuracy you have is something Id dream about but never really put the effort in lol
Thats a nice workshop in the background btw Really I need to build myself one I think.
One question I have tho is how come you used the 4 rubber wedges to join the top box to the legs?
Dave
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😯WOW! These are gorgeous, what a lovely job. I have no idea what a box joint jig is, it sounds like an old dance hahaha. Well done!
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Hi @Dave-1 @thank you for your kind comments, I used black plastic table top joiners to join the the top section to the legs
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Bookmarked - beautifully done.
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