depends on your budget! If money is no object, by all means get the hardwood (oak, maple) or exotic(teak, redwood). If your doing this to save money, pine is your best bet.
If you go with the pine and want to stain it as opposed to paint, then be sure to buy the conditioner(available almost everywhere stain is sold). What it does is even out the wood so that you don’t get light/dark splotches in your wood.
Either way you can save yourself some money on the bookcase buy buying what is called luan for the back. It’s a floor underlayment. If you look you’ll see that one side is really pretty raw. I’ve used it on several occasions as "finish" grade and when sealed it’s beautiful. It will take paint as well. The problem is you can’t use it on the horizontal surface(like where the books go) because it’s so thin.
If you’re hanging the shelves directly into the wall you want to make sure you secure it properly, which means an anchor of some kind. Talk to your hardware guy and explain what you want, they’ll help find the right size for the job.
Oak would be nice, but you can use pine. If you look at your local library, there will be lots of woodworking books and you can get ideas from them. Also measurements.
21. July 2010 at 2:24 am
Hardwood is best but get what you can afford
21. July 2010 at 2:24 am
depends on your budget! If money is no object, by all means get the hardwood (oak, maple) or exotic(teak, redwood). If your doing this to save money, pine is your best bet.
If you go with the pine and want to stain it as opposed to paint, then be sure to buy the conditioner(available almost everywhere stain is sold). What it does is even out the wood so that you don’t get light/dark splotches in your wood.
Either way you can save yourself some money on the bookcase buy buying what is called luan for the back. It’s a floor underlayment. If you look you’ll see that one side is really pretty raw. I’ve used it on several occasions as "finish" grade and when sealed it’s beautiful. It will take paint as well. The problem is you can’t use it on the horizontal surface(like where the books go) because it’s so thin.
If you’re hanging the shelves directly into the wall you want to make sure you secure it properly, which means an anchor of some kind. Talk to your hardware guy and explain what you want, they’ll help find the right size for the job.
21. July 2010 at 2:24 am
Oak would be nice, but you can use pine. If you look at your local library, there will be lots of woodworking books and you can get ideas from them. Also measurements.