shawesome
Member
Hi all,
I've designed a set of cabinets to go into a built in wardrobe, I've never done something like this before (but I have watched lots of youtube) so I'd really appreciate your feedback and criticism of it to see if I can't make it better/viable. Mostly, I'd be interested to know if it's strong enough as one of the carcasses doesn't have a side, which is my main concern. I'm going to go through everything because I'm not 100% I've designed something that'll work. Also apologies if my terminology isn't correct, as might be obvious I don't really know what I'm talking about.
The Design
Here is the design itself. The whole thing is varying thicknesses of MR MDF. It's two carcasses on top of plinths in an L shape. The left hand carcass has drawers at the bottom and a rail at the top. We've got some shorter hanging items and some longer items so the idea is the shorter stuff can hang over the drawers and the longer stuff can fall into the void. The right hand carcass has two sets of drawers and a larger storage area where baskets or something will go above it. I also wanted to add this as I hope it'll add some strength and structure to the carcass and it is missing it's left hand side. A quick note on the colours, they are just to show material thicknesses where green is 18mm, blue is 12mm and pink is 6mm.
The space
The space it's fitting into looks something like this:
It is about 1180mm wide, 1630mm deep and 1950mm high at the lowest point and 2300mm high at the highest point. There is a 15mm skirting board going all the way around the room.
Plinths
I must confess I don't know much about these, they are often in cabinet builds that I watch but they are often quickly glossed over. Perhaps because they are straight forward? Regardless I'm planning on making these out of PAR softwood and butting them up to the skirting boards on each side. I'll level them up somehow here too. The spacings of the span pieces won't be exactly as they are here, I got lazy in the design I'll do some more thinking and try to place them underneath the points where the vertical pieces of the carcass go and then space a few more around where it looks equal.
Carcasses
This is the biggest unknown for me. I've planned to make two of them arranged like this:
The obvious point of concern is the fact the right hand carcass has no left hand vertical board. There is going to be some support in the middle (see below) but still I wouldn't want that top piece to sag. I've tried to compensate but have an 18mm back panel and would plan to join these two with biscuits and glue. I was also thinking perhaps I could get some metal brackets at the top of the two carcasses and fix them together like that also.
Drawers
All three sets of drawers are similar, just one set (the left one) is larger.
The carcass is (hopefully) simple, it's just a box made from 18mm mdf with a top on it to hide the top parts. There's a 6mm piece just stapled on the back. The depth of the carcass is 460mm as I'm planning on using 450mm drawer runners and I wanted to have enough wiggle room there to get it wrong.
The drawers themselves will be more complicated (for me):
The front and back are 18mm mdf and the sides and bottom are 12mm. There will be a rebate towards the bottom of the drawer to accept the bottom panel with enough room to fit an undermount drawer slide.
The drawer front will look like this:
I've planned to make it a faker shaker where I'll glue and pin 6mm rails and stiles to a 12mm board. I have no idea how thick these should be, is there some sort of rule of thumb?
Bookcase thing
I definitely got lazy here, apologies. I'll put a 6mm back on it and also I'll probably rebate the shelves into the sides for more strength.
All together
Here it is all together in the space:
If you've got this far, thank you so much for reading. I'd love to hear your thoughts on how to improve this and any challenges I might face on the way and how to address them.
I've designed a set of cabinets to go into a built in wardrobe, I've never done something like this before (but I have watched lots of youtube) so I'd really appreciate your feedback and criticism of it to see if I can't make it better/viable. Mostly, I'd be interested to know if it's strong enough as one of the carcasses doesn't have a side, which is my main concern. I'm going to go through everything because I'm not 100% I've designed something that'll work. Also apologies if my terminology isn't correct, as might be obvious I don't really know what I'm talking about.
The Design
Here is the design itself. The whole thing is varying thicknesses of MR MDF. It's two carcasses on top of plinths in an L shape. The left hand carcass has drawers at the bottom and a rail at the top. We've got some shorter hanging items and some longer items so the idea is the shorter stuff can hang over the drawers and the longer stuff can fall into the void. The right hand carcass has two sets of drawers and a larger storage area where baskets or something will go above it. I also wanted to add this as I hope it'll add some strength and structure to the carcass and it is missing it's left hand side. A quick note on the colours, they are just to show material thicknesses where green is 18mm, blue is 12mm and pink is 6mm.
The space
The space it's fitting into looks something like this:
It is about 1180mm wide, 1630mm deep and 1950mm high at the lowest point and 2300mm high at the highest point. There is a 15mm skirting board going all the way around the room.
Plinths
I must confess I don't know much about these, they are often in cabinet builds that I watch but they are often quickly glossed over. Perhaps because they are straight forward? Regardless I'm planning on making these out of PAR softwood and butting them up to the skirting boards on each side. I'll level them up somehow here too. The spacings of the span pieces won't be exactly as they are here, I got lazy in the design I'll do some more thinking and try to place them underneath the points where the vertical pieces of the carcass go and then space a few more around where it looks equal.
Carcasses
This is the biggest unknown for me. I've planned to make two of them arranged like this:
The obvious point of concern is the fact the right hand carcass has no left hand vertical board. There is going to be some support in the middle (see below) but still I wouldn't want that top piece to sag. I've tried to compensate but have an 18mm back panel and would plan to join these two with biscuits and glue. I was also thinking perhaps I could get some metal brackets at the top of the two carcasses and fix them together like that also.
Drawers
All three sets of drawers are similar, just one set (the left one) is larger.
The carcass is (hopefully) simple, it's just a box made from 18mm mdf with a top on it to hide the top parts. There's a 6mm piece just stapled on the back. The depth of the carcass is 460mm as I'm planning on using 450mm drawer runners and I wanted to have enough wiggle room there to get it wrong.
The drawers themselves will be more complicated (for me):
The front and back are 18mm mdf and the sides and bottom are 12mm. There will be a rebate towards the bottom of the drawer to accept the bottom panel with enough room to fit an undermount drawer slide.
The drawer front will look like this:
I've planned to make it a faker shaker where I'll glue and pin 6mm rails and stiles to a 12mm board. I have no idea how thick these should be, is there some sort of rule of thumb?
Bookcase thing
I definitely got lazy here, apologies. I'll put a 6mm back on it and also I'll probably rebate the shelves into the sides for more strength.
All together
Here it is all together in the space:
If you've got this far, thank you so much for reading. I'd love to hear your thoughts on how to improve this and any challenges I might face on the way and how to address them.