Mantle’s almost done

mantle-before-stain

After alot of careful planning the mantle shelf is just about finished.   Once it was all planned out, the acutal building wasn’t too difficult.  I cut the boards down to size, used a buddy’s planer to surface the boards, followed by a bit of hand sanding.  The assembley was easy enough although a pair of errant shots with the nail gun made life a bit difficult.  It looks great as is, but to protect it (and because the wife wants it to match the rest of the trim) I still need to stain it and put some poly on it.  I was hoping to have it be strong enough that a little kid could hang off it, but since its a 9″ board cantilevered straight out I’m not sure its that strong. It will however easily support anything we’d want to put on it.

Mantle Shelf Design

mantle-mockupsThe design for the mantle shelf started many months ago when we first were figuring out what we wanted to do to the fireplace.  Jess and I decided that we didn’t want a full mantle as that would be too formal for the family room.  Instead we decided that we would just do a relatively simple mantle shelf.  Jess had a pair of little pre-made knick-knack shelves and we decided to get something similar to those.   Therefore I cut a 2×4 to the right size, and bolted it to the wall before we put up the stones around the fireplace, and then pretty much forgot about the shelf until everything else was finished.

With the family room just about complete I started lookign into shelves, and found that although I could find some that we liked online, they weren’t going to be the right size, and were extremely expensive.  I gave it some thought, and after realizng it was basicly just going to be two boards with a piece of molding on the front I decided to build my own.   The first step was to build a mockup showing that I could get something decent looking.  Thats the one on the left, which I slapped together in a few minutes to make sure that Jess and I were on the same page before I went and bought some wood.  After I bought the wood I then had to figure out how to put it all together without any obvious fasteners, while still being strong enough for a little kid to hang off of.

I built the 2nd mockup to try out some different techniques, as well as to determine the proper spacing between the various parts.  The final design I came up with was a 3/4″ board with a 45 degree bevel on the front.  I then screwed through that into the molding, and also through the back of it into the top board.  This provided a stong joint with no fasteners showing.  To support the board, I cut a 4×4 down to about 3″ thick,  and screwed through that into the top.   The bottom was then screwed into this board as well, so that the only visible fasteners would be on the underside, in the back, where no-one would acutally see them.

Mantle Shelf Pt-1

mantle-shelf-parts

To cap off the fireplace we needed some sort of mantle.  We decided taht a traditional mantle would look to formal with the stone we had chosen to surround the fireplace, so we instead decided to use just a mantle shelf.  After a bit of searching, and lots of thinking I decided to just build one myself instead of trying to buy one.  So the other day I went out and bought some nice cherry wood to build it out of.   It’s a pretty simple design, basicly just a shelf wrapped with crown molding.  The molding was initially a problem, since I don’t have a shaper to make my own.   After a bit of searching I was able to find a company in Ohio, Baird Brothers,  that had some beatuiful cherry molding that was actually pretty cheap.  Of course UPS charged more than the molding cost to ship it, but none the less its a great looking piece of wood.  Now its just up to me to assemble it and figure out how to attatch it to the masonary wall.