Building plywood upper kitchen cabinets even spectacular upper kitchen cabinets can be made simply with only a few pieces of hardware and some relatively straightforward construction.
Building plywood wall cabinets.
Since we re building our cabinets we can choose any custom dimensions we want to suit our needs.
The best material for building cabinets is plywood 3 4 inch plywood for the box sides top bottom and shelves and 1 4 inch plywood for the back panel.
Birch purebond plywood full sheets are best but 2 8 sheets would work as well.
Hickory 2 4 purebond plywood panels.
This is a comprehensive video that gets into great detail on what is required to make kitchen cabinets including different styles of cabinet face frame and.
Begin with the right cabinet dimensions.
In most cases with 3 4 plywood about 42 should be the maximum width but narrower cabinets will have more stability.
The sample base and wall cabinets shown below have these features to make building them as simple as possible.
Birch purebond plywood full sheets are best but 2 8 2 4 or 4 4 sheets would work as well.
Overlaps on the sides let you fine tune the cabinet width during installation.
Whether you need new kitchen cabinets bathroom cabinets or more storage in your garage or basement the construction is the same.
Most factory built cabinets have a recessed toe kick that s typically about 4 in.
Once your cabinets are installed finish off the base front with a strip of 1 4 in.
In this episode we ll walk through the basics of building upper cabinets that will work great in your laundry room or kitchen.
Next cut four 32 inch 2x4 boards and place them perpendicular between the 8 foot pieces on each end and two in the middle image 1.
We ll build a cabinet carcass.
Because of its simplicity a wall cabinet is ideal for demonstrating the key benefit of frameless construction.
Plywood that matches the cabinets.
What you will need to build your own diy kitchen cabinets.
The material and thickness chosen will decide how wide a cabinet we can build.
Begin building the base of the cabinets on the ground by laying out two 8 foot 2x4 boards on the floor parallel to the wall.
It s important to use dead straight wood for bases so it ll be flat for setting the cabinets.
There are some limitations however.
Wall cabinets typically have one or more shelves not including the bottom of the cabinet and may or may not have doors.
Building a basic wall cabinet is a great introduction to woodworking.