@@BearMountainBuilds Nice. It looked so uniform in the shot where you had all your cut pieces laid out, I was just thinking mine never look that good. Great video!
At the Home Depot in a reject pile section. They sell only twisted and bowed once there so whenever they come across straight one they putting in a reject pile😁
I found a 2x4 at home Depot that was perfect and I mean perfect. No twist, no bow, no knots, no chipped ends, no dents. I told my brother, I almost hate to use it.
Had an awesome time this weekend building these with my 17 year old. He’s so proud of building something so strong! Thanks for giving him something to take pride in.
From what I’ve seen in person and on UA-cam, probably 80% of DIY garage shelves and workbenches rely only on the shear strength of screws and nails to support the vertical load. When a DIY outdoor deck gets “built” like that, people have been seriously injured or worse when it collapses. Thank you for showing how to put the vertical grain under the horizontal elements and not beside them. 🤜🤛
Those DIY Decks are handling 10 times the load you are typically putting on these shelves when they collapse, I have some shelves in my garage where the back rail of the shelf (built similar to how he did his shelf frames) are screwed directly into studs with no support to the ground and the front supports are face mounted with some screws then "reinforced" with a TimberLok at each vertical support on one side of the garage and have a single shelf suspended from the ceiling using the same technique, been up and loaded for several years with no issues.
@@DanielRichards644 I agree completely. My point was that most folks who aren’t trained in load bearing construction don’t understand the difference between safety-of-life and safety of vice / tools. 🤜🤛
@@ridermak4111 What he did is certainly stronger but you can save a few 2x4s by screwing the back supports of the shelves directly into studs and the front into single vertical 2x4's that that will still hold a lot of weight as I have stood on those type shelves. 100% agree on decks and other structural components but not necessary for shelving.
Good old fashion Basic Construction on the frame for weight distribution. Thanks for honoring the older methods of construction. Some methods should never be replaced. Awesome job. Thanks again.
You produce some of the best content on UA-cam. Here’s why: Your camera work is spot on. Your shots always feature exactly what the narration is about. Lighting is perfect too. Your narration is flawless. You’re focused yet fun and natural without any distracting nonverbal utterances or off topic sidebars. Background music is right where it belongs, in the background. Your marketing chops are solid. You give plans away for free while politely asking for subscribers. You collect names and email addresses when you give plans away. Great for studying who is watching your content and for relationship building. Your audience engagement is sincere and smart. The flag connection is brilliant. I predict you’ll be a deca-millionaire by the time you’re 50. 👍🇺🇸
One thing I did on my shelves that you might want to consider is to rout out slots (something like 2in × 5in) in the shelves just inside the front support 2×4. Place these at the ⅓ point between bins. Then round out the top slot edge. This gives you very nice handholds to make climbing the shelves very easy. Now that I have these, I find that I use them quite often, and it makes the top shelves a lot more accessible without having to go fetch a step stool or other aid.
Thank you for sharing! My wife and I just built our first single family home and have a storage room that this design would be prefect for. Thank you for sharing the plans and having a very easy to follow video🙏
I am addicted to organizing and always building shelving. I have watched almost every single video of building shelving on UA-cam for entertainment, your design simplicity is by far the best really enjoyed it. Only thing to make perfection is to add glue in every single joint, and only 2 bolt to hold it to wall make faster for moving around later.
Excellent build. I love ur use of incorporation of lap joints without actually cutting out the lap joints in the wood. I am sure this design is fit for purpose for my needs and will be using it for my next project. Thanks and keep up the good work and for keeping your plans free.
Lovely vid, thank you. I have built those shelves but with a slight variation. If the two end cross pieces are cut 4" longer than the two inner cross pieces, the end pieces can then sit outside the end of the shelf long pieces rather than inside. Then, those ends of the shelf bear all of their weight on the vertical spacers (as yours do) but the cross piece is included in having the weight carried by the spacer rather than the screws. You also gain 8" of shelf length within the same overall footprint. Finally, the shelf covering (in my case 1/2" ply) is installed on each shelf before the next set of spacers. Just means no notching the covering around them. Hope that makes sense, and thanks again for the vid!
@@markbaker5167 The outer-most cross pieces, the parts that he installed at 3:30, are not spaced with the 2x4 off cut pieces. Instead, they go where he has the clamps at the part, on the end of the long 2x4s. They're cut a different length, so that their edges are flush with the long 2x4s.
Family members were laughing at my "weird" lap-joint, which happen to be exactly what you did. I'll show them that your project is solid and very well designed (simplicity is a blessing). Thank you for your projects!
You can also let them know this is also the same way DIY aquarium stands are built. I built one for a 150 Gallon. Tank + Water + Decor, has to be pushing 2,000lbs.
Nice video. An additional video about what kind of things you store in the totes, how it is divided and how or if it is labeled to make locating things easier.
Thank you for this video and for the free plans. I used them to build a slightly modified version of this in my garage this weekend. My first major woodworking project, I enjoyed it a ton!
I have the same setup, however I have an angled 45 degree lip at the end so you can slide out the totes and look in them without taking them down. Good for more frequent usage
You do really nice work. It feels better when you do a good job rather than just slapping something together. I tend to put heavy stuff on my shelves and it makes great sense that you bring the load down to the floor. Thank You!
I needed this lap joint concept when I built a raised garden planter last year. The weight was carried side to side but nothing carried/supported the weight to the ground and 3/4 of the way through the season we lost one whole corner of it. Very smart and sturdy design.
was able to build this over the weekend thanks to you. i plan to tackle your miter station next! thank you for the free plans - subscribed and look forward your future builds.
My late dad built a shelf system just like that in our garage. Only difference it was fastned together with bolts and nuts on the non wall sides. The long beams did bow after a while due the massive weight of the cardboxes with carmagazines. I guess like length like that there was about 500lbs on each shelf. I still to this have those magazines stored at a mates garage. There was also a ton of carparts on those shelves that I would love to have today.
Great video. I also use this technique when building shelving systems throughout my home. One suggestion i follow; I don’t allow the wood to directly contact the concrete flooring. I use either a Simpson tie base platform or I make a platform or spacer from pvc boards for same.
Just started my woodworking journey back in august. finishing up my first semester now . and your channel has been the best for my growth and understanding of all that we’re doing . keep it up .
Just got my shop built , got the electrical done and 1 wall insulation and boarded up plan on building my own shelves. Thanks for the advice/ tips/ suggestions! 😁
Love it and the use of clamps. I have the hardest time keeping things together or working on things alone because I just don’t have enough hands! I love the drill guides
I've done a similar build with the lapped joints. Over time, the rails continued to dry out and shrunk a bit so that the spacer supports were no longer directly supporting them; only supported by the sheet strength of the screws.
I was thinking it might make more sense to not screw in the ends in between the spacers and let them sit freely and screw in a stopping block at the very ends
These are awesome. Have you ever thought about closing the sides with chip board and making shelves between the braces to hold screws and spray paint and stuff. Love watching you work.
Going to build this but will replace the double thick legs with single and nail everything together with a framing nailer and make it a full 8 feet wide with six legs. Thanks for the inspiration!
Hola! 🖐Now that I've completely emptied out my two car garage in preparation to build my shop, I have to quickly organize and store all our stuff neatly and in an organized fashion before Grammy (my wife) puts the hammer down. This video is the perfect refence with which to tackle putting together some very sturdy shelves. Thanks for the video and clear explanation of the entire build. Take care and have a good one, Adios. 👊
Love your design, just what I was looking for. I had a basic idea and came to youtube to consider options. Most other builds have the legs screwing into the end grain of the shelves. Obviously this cannot be avoided for the mid span cross braces, but surely it cannot be a good practice to screw into the end grain for the main attachment point of the shelves to the legs. Great idea and great work.
This is great for my use as when we moved to our retirement home a few years ago, I purchased roughly 45 of the same containers for the move. Great plan to reuse in an orderly fashion. They also look real nice/clean. Thanks!
Thanks for the great build concept. It is completely scale able. I built one for the back deck yesterday and will do another one for a small garage today.
Well... I've done carpentry, finish carpentry and woodworking professionally for over 40 years and this is the first time I've ever seen anyone pre-drill OSB and pine 2x4s used for garage shelves. Its also the first time I've seen someone use pocket holes in this situation as well. To each their own.
I've been building almost the exact same thing for a few years now as a side hustle. 1) personally, i think it's a much cleaner look to switch the spacers to the other side of the leg. The front and back are flush (horizontal supports with legs) and there's no gap between the wall and the shelf. 2) get rid of the back legs entirely. Put a couple of GRKs through the horizontal supports to secure it to the studs. Saves on lumber and time. If you build the shelf in a corner, you can get away with just building ONE leg, as opposed to 4.
I wonder what screws were used in this project. Generally, I am a fan of these American 2x4in structures and I have just ordered a set of such boards for a shelf in the garage, but I have doubts about the diameter of the screws. Usually #9 or #10 appears in these videos, i.e. 4.5-5mm (I write from Poland), and in my opinion they may be too thin and cut off over time. Isn't it better to use 6mm, i.e. your #12, especially for connections with vertical legs?
This is similar to the way I’m planning to build shelves but wanted to see other ideas. The way my buddy showed me and a big change I’d make to yours is that I’d make the ends of the shelf panel flush to the ends and put plywood on the shelf before putting the next brace. This allows edge to edge shelf for staircase that’s not bins
Love the build ideas. Just built one of your modular shop tables tonight. Turned out great. Going to finish the second table tomorrow. Casters and latches come in Wednesday.
Awesome work. Me being lazy, I’ll stick to industrial plastic or steel ones from Costco. I wish I could get furniture made to your calibration of work.
Always enjoy seeing a solid and very functional build! And the small lessons really come in handy, e.g. the lap joint explanation. Super simple explanation makes it super easy to understand and implement.
thanks for the another good building idea: simple, structurally sound, pocket screws are neat. I built the shop bench and I think I will give the storage shelves a try next.
This looks great! I'm about to completely remodel our garage and will be using these plans with all of our leftover lumber from our Halloween walkthrough!
For a standard vertical stud wall I would have eliminated the two wall supports. I would have screwed the platform spacers directly to the wall. Also would have placed the platform end boards all the way to the end of the horizontal rails. For the outside supports I would have used the same setup but would have place the supports on the end of frames so as to have a smooth space. I then would have had an additional 7 inches of shelf per platform in a smaller footprint with the same degree of carrying capability with two less pieces of lumber.
Watching from Philippines❤ Love to watch your channel cause, people like me new learner as a furniture builder, you make it easy for me to follow your details. You give us, how many pieces to cut every section, size and etc. ❤❤❤ Next time bed frame. 👍
Honestly, this sounds and looks like a perfect thing for me, who lives in an apartment with a small shed to store additional stuff in. Only problem is, that it's a brick wall. (European, heh.)
A few hopefully constructive comments: 1. Why lose the bottom space? Why not build the first level just an inch or even less above ground? 2. Why lose the space on the left and the right: you could either extend the OSB to both ends (but this would involve vertical force on the OSB) or 4 rectangle cuts on the OSB. 3. Sagging: is there any risk of sagging? When is it necessary to add a central vertical 2x4?
1. I slide the boxes underneath the first platform and they just sit on the floor. 2. You could extend the OSB and make a little cubby on either side, but not a huge space loss 3. For how much weight I'm putting on these shelves, I'm not worried about sagging. If you're spanning 8' or more might be time to add a center vertical support
Just a suggestion. You used 8 2x4s vertically. You could use structural screws with shear strength, screw your shelf rear 2x4 into wall studs, think like a ledger is attached, and only use two front vertical 2x4s using the same structural screws. Yea, a bit more assembly to think about..
Could you use 1 center 2x4 on the framing running the length of the shelf instead of 2 cross pieces per shelf? Mainly just need to be able to support the center of the plywood. Solid build!
Just FYI, Lowe's sells similar 27 gallon storage bins (near identical) made by Project Source for $12 each. The ones in this video description link are almost $25 each.
I just built a similar shelf. Was a LOT more difficult than this and doesn't look near as good as yours. Glad I found your channel, just wish it was sooner 🙃🙃
Great design on this, actually has more strength to carry the load than mortise and tenons would but it's dead simple, that frame could be made just as well with as little as a circular saw and a speed square
Thank you so much for the free I traction you offer through your website. That is very thoughtful of you.I like your simple to understand instructions I am ordering your plans to build garage she5
Where did you find the world's straightest pile of 2x4's?
Can’t say they were the straightest I’ve ever used. There were a number that were bowed or twisting but this design forces that out of them
@@BearMountainBuilds Nice. It looked so uniform in the shot where you had all your cut pieces laid out, I was just thinking mine never look that good. Great video!
At the Home Depot in a reject pile section. They sell only twisted and bowed once there so whenever they come across straight one they putting in a reject pile😁
I found a 2x4 at home Depot that was perfect and I mean perfect. No twist, no bow, no knots, no chipped ends, no dents. I told my brother, I almost hate to use it.
@@lopaka76 hahaha yeah I would be saving it like a trophy or for some epic build where you could feature how flawless it is.
Had an awesome time this weekend building these with my 17 year old. He’s so proud of building something so strong! Thanks for giving him something to take pride in.
From what I’ve seen in person and on UA-cam, probably 80% of DIY garage shelves and workbenches rely only on the shear strength of screws and nails to support the vertical load.
When a DIY outdoor deck gets “built” like that, people have been seriously injured or worse when it collapses.
Thank you for showing how to put the vertical grain under the horizontal elements and not beside them. 🤜🤛
Those DIY Decks are handling 10 times the load you are typically putting on these shelves when they collapse, I have some shelves in my garage where the back rail of the shelf (built similar to how he did his shelf frames) are screwed directly into studs with no support to the ground and the front supports are face mounted with some screws then "reinforced" with a TimberLok at each vertical support on one side of the garage and have a single shelf suspended from the ceiling using the same technique, been up and loaded for several years with no issues.
@@DanielRichards644
I agree completely.
My point was that most folks who aren’t trained in load bearing construction don’t understand the difference between safety-of-life and safety of vice / tools. 🤜🤛
@@ridermak4111 What he did is certainly stronger but you can save a few 2x4s by screwing the back supports of the shelves directly into studs and the front into single vertical 2x4's that that will still hold a lot of weight as I have stood on those type shelves. 100% agree on decks and other structural components but not necessary for shelving.
Good old fashion Basic Construction on the frame for weight distribution. Thanks for honoring the older methods of construction. Some methods should never be replaced. Awesome job. Thanks again.
You produce some of the best content on UA-cam.
Here’s why:
Your camera work is spot on. Your shots always feature exactly what the narration is about. Lighting is perfect too.
Your narration is flawless. You’re focused yet fun and natural without any distracting nonverbal utterances or off topic sidebars.
Background music is right where it belongs, in the background.
Your marketing chops are solid.
You give plans away for free while politely asking for subscribers.
You collect names and email addresses when you give plans away. Great for studying who is watching your content and for relationship building.
Your audience engagement is sincere and smart. The flag connection is brilliant.
I predict you’ll be a deca-millionaire by the time you’re 50. 👍🇺🇸
I really appreciate the kind words! I’ll keep trying to make the best content I can!
I couldn’t have said it better👍🫡
I appreciate the outcome, of course, but what I really liked was the clean work environment and the preparatory work. Kudos to you, sir.
One thing I did on my shelves that you might want to consider is to rout out slots (something like 2in × 5in) in the shelves just inside the front support 2×4. Place these at the ⅓ point between bins. Then round out the top slot edge. This gives you very nice handholds to make climbing the shelves very easy. Now that I have these, I find that I use them quite often, and it makes the top shelves a lot more accessible without having to go fetch a step stool or other aid.
The hollows on either end can be use to hang long handled items such as lawn and garden tools, extension cords, maybe even bikes.
That’s a great idea! I wish I had thought of that and added it to the video
Thank you for sharing! My wife and I just built our first single family home and have a storage room that this design would be prefect for. Thank you for sharing the plans and having a very easy to follow video🙏
Simple. Functional. Looks Great! I could see this being a great way to build a DIY playground for kids without the worry of collapsing!
I am addicted to organizing and always building shelving. I have watched almost every single video of building shelving on UA-cam for entertainment, your design simplicity is by far the best really enjoyed it. Only thing to make perfection is to add glue in every single joint, and only 2 bolt to hold it to wall make faster for moving around later.
I was originally planning on glueing but decided to not so I could take disassemble the shelves and move them if I needed to
Excellent build. I love ur use of incorporation of lap joints without actually cutting out the lap joints in the wood. I am sure this design is fit for purpose for my needs and will be using it for my next project. Thanks and keep up the good work and for keeping your plans free.
Watching this is so therapeutic! Love the workmanship!
Lovely vid, thank you. I have built those shelves but with a slight variation. If the two end cross pieces are cut 4" longer than the two inner cross pieces, the end pieces can then sit outside the end of the shelf long pieces rather than inside. Then, those ends of the shelf bear all of their weight on the vertical spacers (as yours do) but the cross piece is included in having the weight carried by the spacer rather than the screws. You also gain 8" of shelf length within the same overall footprint. Finally, the shelf covering (in my case 1/2" ply) is installed on each shelf before the next set of spacers. Just means no notching the covering around them. Hope that makes sense, and thanks again for the vid!
I didn't quite get it
I'm so visual I need to see it....
@@markbaker5167 The outer-most cross pieces, the parts that he installed at 3:30, are not spaced with the 2x4 off cut pieces. Instead, they go where he has the clamps at the part, on the end of the long 2x4s. They're cut a different length, so that their edges are flush with the long 2x4s.
I absolutely love the drill guides. I, too, like my screws to be neat and all in the same positions!
Family members were laughing at my "weird" lap-joint, which happen to be exactly what you did. I'll show them that your project is solid and very well designed (simplicity is a blessing). Thank you for your projects!
I love simple solutions
You can also let them know this is also the same way DIY aquarium stands are built.
I built one for a 150 Gallon. Tank + Water + Decor, has to be pushing 2,000lbs.
Sorry your family shamed your weird lap
Tell them you don't worry about "weird" you worry about "wrong". Maybe that'll get 'em to shut their pieholes! 😉
Great idea, will be using this for my new home garage when we move in..thank you from the UK
Exactly what I need for my workshop. Time to go vertical. My pole barn has 12' walls and a 16' peak, so I can go shelf wild~! Thanks.
Nice video. An additional video about what kind of things you store in the totes, how it is divided and how or if it is labeled to make locating things easier.
Someone made this and posted on Facebook. She commented about you. I downloaded your free and subscribed. Thanks!
Thank you for this video and for the free plans. I used them to build a slightly modified version of this in my garage this weekend. My first major woodworking project, I enjoyed it a ton!
I have the same setup, however I have an angled 45 degree lip at the end so you can slide out the totes and look in them without taking them down. Good for more frequent usage
Now this makes more sense to hold a lot of weight I like the way you made them!
Super simple to follow and adjust to my needs. Thanks, I used this to build my shelves this weekend.
You do really nice work. It feels better when you do a good job rather than just slapping something together. I tend to put heavy stuff on my shelves and it makes great sense that you bring the load down to the floor. Thank You!
Very nice design. The support “spacers” make perfect sense and haven’t seen them in other diy storage selves videos.
Excellent video. This looks more durable than the tote slide-in frames.
That’s exactly why I built this instead. The slide ins can’t take very much weight in the bin
I needed this lap joint concept when I built a raised garden planter last year. The weight was carried side to side but nothing carried/supported the weight to the ground and 3/4 of the way through the season we lost one whole corner of it. Very smart and sturdy design.
Nothing better than time lapse video. Nice job.
was able to build this over the weekend thanks to you. i plan to tackle your miter station next! thank you for the free plans - subscribed and look forward your future builds.
My late dad built a shelf system just like that in our garage.
Only difference it was fastned together with bolts and nuts on the non wall sides.
The long beams did bow after a while due the massive weight of the cardboxes with carmagazines.
I guess like length like that there was about 500lbs on each shelf. I still to this have those magazines stored at a mates garage. There was also a ton of carparts on those shelves that I would love to have today.
Thanks! I have learned a lot from you.
Thanks so much!
Very solid work, this looks like the best video on shelving I've seen so far, I think I'll build these for my wall-mounted shelving in the garage.
Great video. I also use this technique when building shelving systems throughout my home. One suggestion i follow; I don’t allow the wood to directly contact the concrete flooring. I use either a Simpson tie base platform or I make a platform or spacer from pvc boards for same.
Just started my woodworking journey back in august. finishing up my first semester now . and your channel has been the best for my growth and understanding of all that we’re doing . keep it up .
Just got my shop built , got the electrical done and 1 wall insulation and boarded up plan on building my own shelves. Thanks for the advice/ tips/ suggestions! 😁
Love it and the use of clamps. I have the hardest time keeping things together or working on things alone because I just don’t have enough hands! I love the drill guides
Great, strong build. I watched a few different vids prior to making my choice and will go with your. THANK YOU!!
I've done a similar build with the lapped joints. Over time, the rails continued to dry out and shrunk a bit so that the spacer supports were no longer directly supporting them; only supported by the sheet strength of the screws.
I was thinking it might make more sense to not screw in the ends in between the spacers and let them sit freely and screw in a stopping block at the very ends
Thanks!
I really appreciate the super thanks!
Appreciate you for the time and demo + the download! Subscriber for life.
These are awesome. Have you ever thought about closing the sides with chip board and making shelves between the braces to hold screws and spray paint and stuff. Love watching you work.
Good idea to use more of the space!
Going to build this but will replace the double thick legs with single and nail everything together with a framing nailer and make it a full 8 feet wide with six legs. Thanks for the inspiration!
Hola! 🖐Now that I've completely emptied out my two car garage in preparation to build my shop, I have to quickly organize and store all our stuff neatly and in an organized fashion before Grammy (my wife) puts the hammer down. This video is the perfect refence with which to tackle putting together some very sturdy shelves. Thanks for the video and clear explanation of the entire build. Take care and have a good one, Adios. 👊
Love your design, just what I was looking for. I had a basic idea and came to youtube to consider options. Most other builds have the legs screwing into the end grain of the shelves. Obviously this cannot be avoided for the mid span cross braces, but surely it cannot be a good practice to screw into the end grain for the main attachment point of the shelves to the legs. Great idea and great work.
Great build!
I built mine the same way, except I hadn't bought my kreig jig at the time. (Used my nail gun). Super strong and sturdy!
This video makes me want to build a storage shelf for my garage and get organized!
This is great for my use as when we moved to our retirement home a few years ago, I purchased roughly 45 of the same containers for the move. Great plan to reuse in an orderly fashion. They also look real nice/clean. Thanks!
These look like just what I was looking for our basement laundry room. I downloaded the plans! Thanks!
Thanks for the plans! Followed them pretty much exactly with a couple of exceptions.
Thanks for the great build concept. It is completely scale able. I built one for the back deck yesterday and will do another one for a small garage today.
Very thorough and precise workmanship! GREAT JOB!!!
Thanks!
Thank you so much!
Nice idea. They turned out great. I will need to use this setup in my storage shed when I revamp it this fall
Well... I've done carpentry, finish carpentry and woodworking professionally for over 40 years and this is the first time I've ever seen anyone pre-drill OSB and pine 2x4s used for garage shelves.
Its also the first time I've seen someone use pocket holes in this situation as well.
To each their own.
Thank you! Used this template and modified it a bit for my needs. Great sturdy shelf!
I’ve got open studs in a storage shed. I think I can adapt this pattern and just use the existing studs for a couple legs.
Yeah that would definitely work!
Excellent as usual. Appreciate this very much. I’m going to build these for my daughter’s house now!
I've been building almost the exact same thing for a few years now as a side hustle.
1) personally, i think it's a much cleaner look to switch the spacers to the other side of the leg. The front and back are flush (horizontal supports with legs) and there's no gap between the wall and the shelf.
2) get rid of the back legs entirely. Put a couple of GRKs through the horizontal supports to secure it to the studs. Saves on lumber and time. If you build the shelf in a corner, you can get away with just building ONE leg, as opposed to 4.
Whats a GRK?
Long brass coloured screws
I wonder what screws were used in this project. Generally, I am a fan of these American 2x4in structures and I have just ordered a set of such boards for a shelf in the garage, but I have doubts about the diameter of the screws. Usually #9 or #10 appears in these videos, i.e. 4.5-5mm (I write from Poland), and in my opinion they may be too thin and cut off over time. Isn't it better to use 6mm, i.e. your #12, especially for connections with vertical legs?
I use mainly #10 which are pretty beefy screws, but there's nothing wrong with going bigger if you want. I always approve over building
Perfect timing! Once I finish sheeting the garage I need to add storage👍
Simply perfect, perfectly simple. THANK YOU!
Looks great! I’m about to build this with modified dimensions to make some more basement storage.
Just subscribed! I loved this!
This is similar to the way I’m planning to build shelves but wanted to see other ideas. The way my buddy showed me and a big change I’d make to yours is that I’d make the ends of the shelf panel flush to the ends and put plywood on the shelf before putting the next brace. This allows edge to edge shelf for staircase that’s not bins
That would work as well
Love the build ideas. Just built one of your modular shop tables tonight. Turned out great. Going to finish the second table tomorrow. Casters and latches come in Wednesday.
Awesome work. Me being lazy, I’ll stick to industrial plastic or steel ones from Costco. I wish I could get furniture made to your calibration of work.
You're awesome. Love your design to the best of all the you tube videos. Solid and simple.
Always enjoy seeing a solid and very functional build! And the small lessons really come in handy, e.g. the lap joint explanation. Super simple explanation makes it super easy to understand and implement.
thanks for the another good building idea: simple, structurally sound, pocket screws are neat. I built the shop bench and I think I will give the storage shelves a try next.
I just built some simple shelves in my shed, but yours are far better than mine. I’ll be adding these to my garage. Subscribed!
I really like this design. My kind of woodworking. Would enjoy watching a video on a similarly simple outside potting bench.
Nice work ! I wish I could get nice lumber like that in my "neighborhood". I live in Canada and we export the NICE lubber to the USA...
Thank you for your sacrifice! Haha
As always, great project, great presentation, and TYVM for freely sharing your plans, not many here are willing to do that.
Loved the video, you made it look so easy, now im going to redo my garage, thanks keep up the great work
I am going to give it a try. Just downloaded your plans. Thank you
Thank you for the video and the plans this fits my plan for my shop.
Awesome build! I’m going to modify my current shelving unit.
This looks great! I'm about to completely remodel our garage and will be using these plans with all of our leftover lumber from our Halloween walkthrough!
I enjoy your channel. Your projects are fun and useful!
Great ideas. I may be actually able to get my basement and garage organized now 🙂
For a standard vertical stud wall I would have eliminated the two wall supports. I would have screwed the platform spacers directly to the wall. Also would have placed the platform end boards all the way to the end of the horizontal rails. For the outside supports I would have used the same setup but would have place the supports on the end of frames so as to have a smooth space. I then would have had an additional 7 inches of shelf per platform in a smaller footprint with the same degree of carrying capability with two less pieces of lumber.
Watching from Philippines❤
Love to watch your channel cause, people like me new learner as a furniture builder, you make it easy for me to follow your details. You give us, how many pieces to cut every section, size and etc. ❤❤❤
Next time bed frame. 👍
Actually a bed frame will be coming this fall!!
@@BearMountainBuilds
I will be watching it.
Thank you...
This is fantastic looking oh wow!
Also, not for nothing, you're quite nice to look at too :)
Honestly, this sounds and looks like a perfect thing for me, who lives in an apartment with a small shed to store additional stuff in.
Only problem is, that it's a brick wall.
(European, heh.)
A few hopefully constructive comments:
1. Why lose the bottom space? Why not build the first level just an inch or even less above ground?
2. Why lose the space on the left and the right: you could either extend the OSB to both ends (but this would involve vertical force on the OSB) or 4 rectangle cuts on the OSB.
3. Sagging: is there any risk of sagging? When is it necessary to add a central vertical 2x4?
1. I slide the boxes underneath the first platform and they just sit on the floor.
2. You could extend the OSB and make a little cubby on either side, but not a huge space loss
3. For how much weight I'm putting on these shelves, I'm not worried about sagging. If you're spanning 8' or more might be time to add a center vertical support
Just a suggestion. You used 8 2x4s vertically. You could use structural screws with shear strength, screw your shelf rear 2x4 into wall studs, think like a ledger is attached, and only use two front vertical 2x4s using the same structural screws. Yea, a bit more assembly to think about..
I needed this!! Thank you so much!
You're amazing bro! Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Could you use 1 center 2x4 on the framing running the length of the shelf instead of 2 cross pieces per shelf? Mainly just need to be able to support the center of the plywood. Solid build!
Yeah you probably could
Another great video! Glad to see you post again. Excited for more!
Just FYI, Lowe's sells similar 27 gallon storage bins (near identical) made by Project Source for $12 each. The ones in this video description link are almost $25 each.
I just built a similar shelf. Was a LOT more difficult than this and doesn't look near as good as yours. Glad I found your channel, just wish it was sooner 🙃🙃
Great design on this, actually has more strength to carry the load than mortise and tenons would but it's dead simple, that frame could be made just as well with as little as a circular saw and a speed square
smart, simple, cheap and scalable!!!! Nice work and thanks!
I just need a shelf for storing crafting tools and supplies? Can you make this more like an opened back bookshelf?
Looks great. Looks rock solid. And easy to build alone.
Awesome, thanks for the plans!
Great build great simple idea thanks for sharing
Thank you so much for the free I traction you offer through your website. That is very thoughtful of you.I like your simple to understand instructions I am ordering your plans to build garage she5
What is the measurement you used to place your screws for the platforms to screw into the verticals?