My laundry situation is a pile... of MESS.
Truly evaluating why, I realize that it's because I bring the clean laundry out of the laundry room and into the living area of our house to fold... yet, I don't really have an assigned location to do so.
Skipping excuses - I have just decided that when I'm in "laundry mode," I need to do laundry (get this) In. The. Laundry. Room!
This past weekend I did something that I haven't done in - well, let's count the years. I promised Dave that I wouldn't touch a saw while pregnant. Our son is seven years old, and after making that promise while pregnant with him, I just... was busy.
Back to this weekend. I used a table saw, hand saw, screwdriver, drill, and elbow grease to make myself a wall-mounted (correction: door-mounted) folding table. And DIYing felt sooooo good!
I remembered my grandma having had a wall-mounted table in her kitchen, and when seeking solutions to my laundry-pile-mess I thought back to that table. Hers was a lift-up wall-mounted table. I needed a pull-down due to the door handle. Surprisingly, there weren't too many options online. (There are individual sellers on sites like Etsy. No shade to them! I just wanted this table now. No waiting. No shipping.)
I'm journaling the project for future reference.
This is truly my first DIY project since living in this house. Our house. And there will be more!
MATERIALS:
47.75" x 23.75" x .65" white MDF shelf board (in actuality, it's 5/8 thick) - $20
1" x 4" PVC trim board (in actuality, it's 3/4" thick and 3 1/2" wide) - $20
1" x 2" PVC trim board (in actuality, it's 1 1/2" x 5/8" thick) - $6
Edgemate white iron-on edge tape - $9
1 1/2" x 30" piano hinge - $14
2 1/2" hinge - $5
Everbilt white steel window sash lock - $3
Clear Gloss Enamel spray paint - $6
2 1/4" PVC trim screw white
PROCESS:
Measure. Measure. Measure.
this table needed a brace on the bottom. A frame on the top to house the lock. I also needed to consider the length of the table, how much room I would have behind me while folding, how long the legs would be, and what would be a comfortable height for me to fold. All while working around the door's handle.
Fully completed, it measures 36" long and 36" tall. (Correction - from the door's wall, it comes out into the room 36 7/8".)
My awesome neighbor, Larry, helped me run the shelving board through my table saw and the tabletop is exactly 36".
The true bummer about wanting MDF shelving this large, is that the sides were not finished like smaller shelving boards can be. So, the next step was ironing on the edge tape and trimming the excess.
Cut the 1x4 trim board to two lengths of 31 3/4" and one length 23 3/4" wide.
They used their (washable) paints. A couple hours later I sprayed their masterpiece with two layers of Gloss Enamel just to seal their art, prevent stickiness, and hopefully prevent chipping. (We shall see.)