I Had been pondering this idea over in my head for better than a decade now so it was time to move on it. I was sick of beds that always moved when you moved. Cheap beds joints always seemed to loosen up. My brother bought a $2000 dollar Ashley bed and he said it started acting up after less than a year. Basically, it started racking at the stretcher to leg connections as beds nearly always do (as well as workbenches).
I have always been a metalworker first and when structural problems arise, I generally use steel to solve them first. I figured a steel bed would never move. However, steel is not the most aesthetically pleasing material. Especially for indoor furniture. I figured some wood accents would have to be used to overcome this deficiency of steel. In my head I pictured black painted steel with walnut insets between the framework. Well, down here, walnut is expensive so I was delighted when Hurricane Irma brought a cherry tree down in a friend’s yard.
After the wood dried to my liking it happened to be around Christmas and I was itching for a new bed. I had told LOML that the cherry would be used for kitchen cabinets in the next few years when we redo the kitchen. I told her about my plans for the cherry and she agreed to use it for the bed. I even convinced her that this steel bed I was going to make would be a fine piece of furniture and she skeptically trusted me on that.
So I welded up a steel queen size bed frame.
Here you see the cross braces I made to accept drawer slides.
I painted it a hammered copper color of RustOleum spray paint sold at the BORG. Started fitting drawers that I had built out of ¾ ply. The best ply I could find at the BORG so it was mediocre. I ended up using a false front drawer design.
Finishing the drawer faces and inset panels.
Here with the panels and drawer faces installed and starting on the headboard.
Building the headboard.
I have always been a metalworker first and when structural problems arise, I generally use steel to solve them first. I figured a steel bed would never move. However, steel is not the most aesthetically pleasing material. Especially for indoor furniture. I figured some wood accents would have to be used to overcome this deficiency of steel. In my head I pictured black painted steel with walnut insets between the framework. Well, down here, walnut is expensive so I was delighted when Hurricane Irma brought a cherry tree down in a friend’s yard.
After the wood dried to my liking it happened to be around Christmas and I was itching for a new bed. I had told LOML that the cherry would be used for kitchen cabinets in the next few years when we redo the kitchen. I told her about my plans for the cherry and she agreed to use it for the bed. I even convinced her that this steel bed I was going to make would be a fine piece of furniture and she skeptically trusted me on that.
So I welded up a steel queen size bed frame.
Here you see the cross braces I made to accept drawer slides.
I painted it a hammered copper color of RustOleum spray paint sold at the BORG. Started fitting drawers that I had built out of ¾ ply. The best ply I could find at the BORG so it was mediocre. I ended up using a false front drawer design.
Finishing the drawer faces and inset panels.
Here with the panels and drawer faces installed and starting on the headboard.
Building the headboard.