Friday, March 04, 2016

Building a kids lego table

Avni is a big fan of Lego, such a big fan that if we ever need to got to the mall, one and only way to convince her to join us is a promise of Lego play time at the store and a promise of Lego bricks. Over time we have bought enough and more and have been thinking of providing her a platform or a dedicated table where we can store all the bricks in some form of "order" that she can play and build.

We explored lot of commercial possibilities and even spent money on a few, they either turned out very expensive or too small enough that they didn’t meet our needs/specification.

After some brain storming and internet searches, we narrowed on a plan to have multiple storage drawers and mount a big thick wooden panel on top and make one of our own (credit goes to Sandhya). The storage drawers were readily available in our favorite container store and we bought 6 total, 3 for each side. The wood was the tricky one.

Being a novice in buying lumber, I had no idea what to ask for when I went to Home Depot to buy the wood board. All I knew was I need to buy a board that is about 4ft long and about 20" wide and about 0.75" thick. When they asked what do I have in mind to do, I said "I am building a Lego table for my daughter", that almost threw them off balance. In the end they were helpful and showed me the available boards and I picked one of the decently expensive ones (don't remember much).

The board dimension was 2' X 4' and as per suggestions from the internet, it was supposed to be cut to 20” width which is the size of our drawers, I would have gotten it done but the saw at Home Depot was broken and I picked the piece intact, I am glad I did that for the 4” extra space is pretty nice to have. 

Then came the challenge of priming the wood and painting the wood, by Avni’s choice we had to paint one side pink and another side purple (considering it would be mounted on drawers, I could have saved myself time and money by using 1 color of paint, oh well hind sight). the tedious part was waiting for the paint to dry before applying next coat and the spillages from 1 side to another and those touch ups, all said and done it took more than a week to get it all painted. Few things I learned were that to get quality paint on the wood use the smallest possible brush that your work can permit and  use painters tape to save time (most importantly, apart from spilling of paint to other side it would prevent paint accumulation along the edges).

The last step was mounting to the storage drawers, per recommendation from the Home Depot Gorilla glue, here is where I should have listened to the experts. I should have put really low amount of glue instead of spreading copious amount for the glue did expand over time and it started spreading everywhere, I had to go with a knife to cut out the unwanted glue. I did manage to get most of it out but for some areas I just had to make up my mind out of sight mind.

One thing we did was to use electrical tape and taped all round the corners and the edges to make them smooth.
  
The finishing touches came from Sandhya who did awesome stencil work. One thing for sure, after the table and all blocks in 1 place Avni seems to be playing with her lego’s  more than before. All in all it was worth the time and effort in creating it.

Below are some pics, from concept to finish and the fun in between. 


No comments: