Turn a Shelving Unit Into a Cupboard!
The completed doors.
I then painted the wood using ivory eggshell paint to match the shelving unit.
Once the doors were painted we screwed one black screw per vertical plank into the horizontal plank. So four at the top and four at the bottom.
To ensure the screws were equidistant along the diagonal plank we drew a line on the diagonal plank where it crossed the vertical plank.
We then measured down the center of the diagonal plank to where it crossed the vertical plank and halved this measurement. This is where the first screw went.
As the other door wasn’t exactly the same, in order to obtain symmetry we drew a line across both doors and marked where the first screw would go on the other vertical plank.
We did the same for the screw at the top of the vertical plank. Then measured between the two, divided by three and marked where the other two screws would go.
On the shelf we attached a flush hinge and measured the distance from the top of the shelf. We attached another flush hinge the same distance from the bottom of the shelf. Then repeated this on the other side.
Once we screwed the doors to the hinges there was a gap in the middle which was larger than predicted. To fix this we had to use one more plank and cut it size to fit between the two doors.
This was then painted white and screwed onto the shelf in the middle. We then fitted two magnetic catches at the top of the shelf to ensure the doors stay shut.
Finally, we attached black drawer pulls to the doors that I had left over from a previous project.
We also secured the whole thing to the wall as the doors were heavier than the wood the shelf was made from. Also as the shelves didn’t have a wide base it could have easily tipped over when the doors were open.
I am just so happy with how this turned out and love that we were able to use surplus wood to construct something new. Most of all I’m so happy that our DVDs are hidden away from sight and little hands that are tempted to grab them!