Hey there! It’s Angie from Knick of Time, here to share a new tutorial for DIY farmhouse wooden shutters.
When we finished our entryway remodel a few weeks ago, and I wasn’t sure what I wanted on the windows, so I made some temporary drop cloth curtains for privacy until I made up my mind. Later I realized that wooden shutters would tie in really well with the barn door cabinet my husband had built into the wall, and they would be easy and really inexpensive to make – easy enough for even a novice woodworker.
Supplies Needed:
~ Pallet wood or pine boards
~ roofing nails or short screws
~ paint
~ T-hinges
For each shutter, you’ll need some long and short pieces of either pallet wood, or cheap pine boards. I measured the inside of our windows to determine the length to cut the 4 long pieces of wood needed, and measured the width of each window (divided by 2) to make sure the 4 pieces of pallet wood were the right size to fit half of each window width when they were connected together. You’ll also need 6 shorter pieces of wood (3 for the front and 3 for the back of each shutter). These should be cut just slightly smaller than the width of the 4 long pieces.
We had a hard time finding screws that were the right length, so we used galvanized roofing nails to attach the 3 short boards onto the top, middle and bottom of the 4 long boards.
Make sure the nails are pounded all the way flat to the wood.
Here’s what it will look like on the front side with the short boards attached. The roofing nails are short enough that they don’t protrude and show through the front of the short pieces of wood.
On the back side you can see all the nails, but don’t worry – those won’t show when the shutters are finished.
Paint the remaining 3 short boards and use wood glue to adhere them at the top, middle, and bottom to cover the rows of screws and clamp or weight the wood in place, and allow it to dry thoroughly.
At this point I recommend doing a “dry fit” to make sure the shutters fit correctly in your windows, then paint the front and back side of each shutter, and attached the T-hinges on the left side of one shutter and the right side of the other, so they close together.
The final step is to screw the bracket on the T-hinges into the window frame.
I love that these offer total privacy when closed, but allow full sunshine to pour in on sunny days, and whether they are open or closed, both sides match and look beautiful.
I use my entryway to take a lot of photos for my blog, and I can partially close the shutters to control how much light comes through the windows. They really are the perfect finishing touch in the room and have the exact farmhouse style I wanted.
You can see all the steps of progress of our entryway remodel HERE.
See you next month!
more projects from Angie:
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