![]() I love Watco Danish Oil because it is a beautiful, durable finish that is easy to apply - so much I wrote an entire post about it!ĭanish Oil is a color and finish in one, so all you need is one coat! You can go back and further seal the table (or just the tabletop) if you so desire. I started with an 80 grit and finished with a 120 grit. I was going for a rustic real wood look, but decided to sand to take splinters and rough patches out. You can fill with silicone after final finish, or use a Kreg Jig to build your tabletop first, then attach. NOTE: Since we aren't joining tabletop boards together edge to edge, there may be a small gap between boards. I am careful about screw placement so it looks good in the end. So I find the middle on both ends,Īnd then I attached the 2圆 studs to the top with screws. Now for the top - I like to start in the middle and work outward. The middle support piece keeps the aprons from spreading, and also give you something to attach the tabletop boards too. The ends overhang 3/4" - be careful that your legs are square when you add the stretcher. ![]() So I pushed the two shorter diagonal corners together until the two diagonals matched. Then I flipped everything back over and checked for square. One trick is I will screw at an angle (kinda like a pocket hole screw) in opposite directions, so if the table is wobbled at all, the screws dig in from opposite directions. Then I flipped everything over and added the side aprons. I used scrap pieces of 1x boards to elevate the horizontal boards on the legs. Bonus - these are exterior screws, so I could use my table outdoors too. You can use a circular saw or jigsaw, but do make sure your cuts are very good and straight.įor attaching, I'm using 2-3/4" self tapping screws. There's only 12 cuts on the entire table, and it's all the 2x4s. My table will be 92-5/8" (standard stud length) long. The 2圆s are for the tabletop boards, and since they are all precut exactly the same at stud length, I set them aside - no cutting required. I purchased 6 - 2x4s and 6 - 2圆s in stud length. Can only use 2 tools - a drill and a saw (since most beginners don't have a Kreg Jig yet - and I do stress yet).So I gave myself three criteria for a new somewhat temporary dining table. or at the very least have to be the bad guy and retrain the family. Once you give in to the kids eating on the couch, you're done. But still, I insisited we need a dining table to move in. We are moving into the new house, but with so many, many functional projects to tackle (like closets and pantry cabinets), a beautiful dining table is way down on the priority list. Just because you aren't an expert woodworker with a zillion tools doesn't mean you can't still start somewhere, right? I've been wanting to get the beginner crowd a VERY simple, inexpensive farm table plan for years now. UPDATE 2: We added a tinted poly coat to the table and it now looks like this! UPDATE: Bench plans have been posted here. This post is sponsored by Rustoleum by all opinions expressed are my own. I have been a long time user and fan of Rustoleum products.
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