![]() ![]() Thank you for supporting the fabulous brands that make Reality Daydream possible! This post contains affiliate links.* Leaf-Shaped Nesting Tables Tutorial ![]() And not only that, I knew I could make them even better. But I felt like the price tag was steep… almost laughable. For example, I saw these little tables that are nesting tables shaped like leaves at IKEA! I loved them. I learned that FrogTape didn’t create nearly as sharp a line as good ol’ 3M Scotch Blue.Sometimes when I’m out and about shopping with a friend (or my toddler), I’ll see something I love but could TOTALLY make myself. I tried three different types of gold paint and will compare the products in another follow-up post that you can await anxiously: Plaid’s Liquid Leaf in Brass, Rub ‘n’ Buff in Gold Leaf and Krylon’s Gold Leafing Pan. Step five, don’t you know that the time has arrived… to dress it up a bit with some gold dip-dyed legs. $34, which isn’t cheap, but $34 + the $60 tables is still significantly cheaper than anything I found elsewhere. The IKEA glass is tempered, which means it can’t be cut, so I had a new piece of glass cut to fit. No pictures of this step, because I paid Ashland Glass to do it for me. Step four, I can give you more… photoshopped IKEA illustrations. Step three, it’s just you and me… and a too-long particleboard shelf. The cutting scars are discrete like a high-class face lift – not invisible, but you wouldn’t notice them if you weren’t looking for them. I think I look half-crazed in the right-hand photo: I was really excited that this hackneyed scheme of mine was actually working out. I touched up the cut edges with a Sharpie paint pen while Jarrod crept up on me with the camera. It fit perfectly tight – so much so that I didn’t need glue. The winner: a piece of 1/2 inch hardwood. I walked around The Home Depot inserting all manner of things into the hollow metal tube to determine what would allow for a nice, tight fit. Step two, there’s so much we can do… to piece this back together. The top was more challenging because I needed to reconnect the pieces in a way that would be as stable and seamless as possible. Modifying the bottom rails was easy I just needed to drill new screw holes at the end of each piece to replace the holes I sawed off. Sawing left me with the pieces seen below. Hence the precautionary fire extinguisher. I’ll elaborate more in a separate follow-up post (oooh, I bet you can’t wait for that) for now I’ll say that I went with my Ryobi miter saw, which was fast, accurate, loud and sparky. I tried three approaches: a grinding wheel on my miter saw, a hacksaw and a jigsaw. I needed to make six cuts, as indicated above. Step one, we can have lots of fun… learning how to cut metal. I’ll use NKOTB and some modified IKEA assembly illustrations to walk you through it step by step. ![]() Just like your favorite New Kids on the Block song, there were five major steps: cutting the metal frame, piecing back together the frame, cutting the MDF shelf, cutting the glass and painting the legs. Much love to Jarrod for encouraging me to barrel through. The VITTSJO series is new to IKEA, however, so it’s not turning up on Craigslist yet. I totally winged it with this hack – there were several opportunities for disaster and I would have preferred to buy them used because it would made it less of a bummer if I ruined them. I bought the set planning to hack it but partially assembled it first just to confirm that the table as-is didn’t make any sense. I would prefer that the smaller table nest fully within the larger table. It seems that stores offer only a few nesting table options, and they are very expensive.Įnter the VITTSJO nesting tables, which seemed perfect in concept, except what’s up with the child table being twice as long as its parent table? Not sure what IKEA is going for there. I then searched for new nesting tables at every store/website I could think of before giving up. I searched for used nesting tables on Craigslist for months before giving up. It had to be metal and glass because we already have too much wood happening in there. I wanted a larger table for our lamp (West Elm’s Morten Table Lamp, which I scored for much cheaper via a floor model sale) and a smaller table for Jarrod to pull out to use next to his chair when we’re camped out in the living room for the evening. ![]() And now for my next trick, I transform IKEA’s VITTSJÖ nesting tables…īut let me back up: as with all things, I had very specific requirements in mind. ![]()
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