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upcycling idea: DIY reclaimed wood framed mirrors

September 29, 2014

rustic bathroom vanity and mirrors

How about some basically free DIY reclaimed wood frames for you?

This is a classic case of someone’s trash becoming my treasure. On an innocent little walk around the neighborhood many months ago I noticed a neighbor clearing out a lot of old wood and other goodies from her property and stacking it on the street for garbage pick up. Now, some might wait until after dark and make sure that no one sees them rummaging through someone else’s garbage. But we are so far beyond that point, any shame I once felt about dumpster diving seems like a previous life at this point. It’s not my fault that people throw out things that I covet.

rustic bathroom vanity and mirrorsLast I checked “Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s garbage” wasn’t a sin. ๐Ÿ™‚

From that one garbage pick up so far I have made the legs for the DIY wood bed frame and the reclaimed wood wall art in the guest bedroom. And now these perfectly rustic mirror frames.

During demolition I found a plain mirror without a frame in the back of the old closet (that is now our master bathroom) that measured 20″ wide by 33″ high and I held onto it. As we got into the master bathroom renovation and contemplated things like one vanity light or twoย and the layout started to come together somehow it turned out that the mirror would be the perfect size for our little double vanity. So I ordered another mirror the exact same size from the same company where we have ordered all of our doors and windowsย without really having a plan.

rustic bathroom decor ideas

You could easily make this same style frame with new wood, a 2 x 4 would be a similar dimension. But what I did was take an old 4″ x 4″ post … and you know it was really old because it actually measured a true 4″ by 4″ … nowadays they measure 3 1/2″ x 3 1/2″ … and ran it through a table saw to rip the post down to 1 1/2″ thick slices.

Actually, a couple of friends helped me because the blade on my table saw didn’t come up high enough so they let me borrow their heavier duty table saw to make the cuts. And by “let me borrow” I mean they let me bring my post to them to cut. Our friends are the best.

Speaking of friends, I emailed my friends at Ryobi and told them my idea to make some frames where I wanted the mirror to be set into the frame so the chunky reclaimed wood would sit flush on the wall so they sent me over their router to try out. Here is an aff link to the router that I have and this is the same size as the router bit I bought for this project.

diy reclaimed wood frames

I had never used a router before so I started by clamping a straight edge to a scrap piece of MDF (I’d use real wood if I were you, sawdust from MDF is the worst and pretty much a router is a sawdust making machine.) and giving it a test run.

I made some marks for where I wanted to router out on my test piece and measured how far from the actual cut the router guide sat to know where to clamp my straight edge in place.

diy reclaimed wood frames

For the top and bottom pieces of each mirror frame I couldn’t router straight from one end to the other, I needed to stop so the ends of the wood would sit flush with the sides of the frame. You could miter the corners of the frames and then you could router from end to end without the cuts being seen, but I really liked the idea of just all straight edges so based on the size of my mirrors I used my miter saw to cut the reclaimed wood into pieces for the frames.

diy reclaimed wood frames

It didn’t take long to feel comfortable enough to make the actual router cuts on the reclaimed wood. I set the router bit so it cut 1/2″ deep so the 1/4″ thick mirrors would fit and also a 1/4″ piece of plywood would fit behind. I was thinking I would need the plywood to screw in some brackets of some kind to hold it all together. I was wrong … but we’ll get to that in a second. Routering (not a word?) only the depth of the thickness of your mirror would work just fine.

I even gave it a go without a straight edge as a guide because I knew these cuts would be safely hidden from the world behind the mirrors never to be seen by anyone at anytime.

Unless I decided to show you the madness that is me trying to router without a straight edge. ๐Ÿ™‚

diy reclaimed wood frames

So, um, yeah. The guide was helpful. ๐Ÿ™‚

For the 4 boards that would be the sides of the mirror frames I just ran them each through the table saw cutting out a little rectangle of wood. Each piece had to be run through twice, make sure to lower your table saw blade so it only cuts into the wood as much as you want to cut out. One cut was just a 1/2″ cut to match the 1/2″ depth of the router cuts on the top and bottom frame pieces and the other cut was 1 1/4″ so make the cut out wide enough for my mirrors to fit in place.

diy reclaimed wood frames

Then just line up each frame, with the front side facing down, and mark where to drill your pocket holes. Since this is reclaimed wood this part is important because the wood is not exactly in perfect shape all around. I avoided any spots with old nails in it or holes and drilled two pocket holes in each end of all of the side pieces of the frames.

diy reclaimed wood frames

And remember how I was wrong about needing the 1/4″ plywood? I used these flat, square brackets (I can’t find a link to them online but I bought them at my local Home Depot) and just screwing them into the reclaimed wood and overlapping them behind the mirror and plywood was enough to hold everything in place. I had to add the plywood since I had cut my frames 1/2″ deep, but if you only cut yours 1/4″ you can use the same brackets just overlapping the mirrors to hold them in.

diy reclaimed wood frames

Two of these heavy-duty D hooksย worked great to hang each mirror and then the hardest part was just centering and leveling everything. You know … centering and leveling everything just enough. There’s nothing perfect around here. ๐Ÿ™‚

diy reclaimed wood frames

For a hand towel hook I found a great galvanized grab hook in the nautical supply section of our Home Depot. It’s similar to this one, and I bought the back plate at HD too but can’t find anything similar to link to online for you.

I love it. ๐Ÿ™‚

diy reclaimed wood frames

And the mirrors are my new favorite things. I adore them. It doesn’t hurt that they only cost me the price of the brackets and D clips. An upcycle and a bargain, that’s a recipe for love around here. ๐Ÿ™‚



complete master bathroom renovation including this awesome DIY vanity and reclaimed wood framed mirrors, so many more beautiful details on this site

What’s the recipe for love around your place?

Get caught up on our entire home renovation here and read details about the master bathroom tile and all of the other free, rustic elements.

just some photos of our new rustic bathroom

September 25, 2014

You know what I learned about myself during this specific renovation?

And I don’t know why I didn’t know it before. I’ve never really put too much thought into what my personal style was I guess. I know I’ve just always veered toward the rustic and collected versus the contemporary and trendy. But I never really knew exactly how I would define how I pull it all together. And now that I’m typing that, I still don’t know how I would define it … so that’s not what I learned. ๐Ÿ™‚

rustic bathroom

Turns out I do like a little bit of trendy, because I think that Carrara marble is all the rage right now, but I also think it’s got a classic look about it and for anyone who likes a white, light, bright or neutral color palette it is potentially the perfect backdrop to build on. If if you want to build on it with a chair and galvanized bin found on the side of the road.

rustic bathroom

And even the sinks I picked are described as “modern style”. Here’s an aff link to theย the exact sinks I bought. So I like more modern elements than I thought I did.

master bathroom vanity area

But me and rustic, we’re besties.

rustic bathroom vanity and mirrors

We stay up at night giggling and I find myself staring lovingly into her eyes. Seriously, I was just standing in the entry to the new bathroom yesterday and Joel walked by and said “Are you just staring at it all again?”. Ummmm, maybe. ๐Ÿ˜‰

Turns out I like a lot of rustic in small doses, if that even makes sense.

All the way down to using a simple, cleaned out dog food can as a plant pot and an old galvanized metal tray that was in our shed when we bought this house to hold the everyday bathroom necessities. Here’s an old post about ways to use things you have around the house in new ways, you know, upcycling ideas.

This chippy old cabinet is something my mom was giving away. It had chipping white paint on it already, looked like someone had maybe used oil based paint and then latex paint and they didn’t mix.

Instead of working hard to make it perfect, I worked much less hard to make it more imperfect.

rustic bathroom decor ideas

And that sign … well there’s some household controversy over the sign right now (read: Joel doesn’t like it because apparently he has something against cheerful sayings on old pieces of metal) … but that old piece of V crimp roofing metal came out of our crawl space. I kind of love it. Joel kind of hates it. We’ll see what happens. ๐Ÿ™‚

And those reclaimed wood mirror frames are my new favorite thing for now. I love when I can take an old post out of my neighbor’s garbage (Yep, it was with these old planks I turned into art for the guest bedroom.) and actually use it for something functional. Spoiler alert – those frames are super easy to make so keep your eyes peeled for old wood in your neighbor’s garbage.

I have a complete source list coming your way when all is said and done, we haven’t even discussed the most amazing faucets known to man (and how seriously easy it is to install a faucet) and no bathroom is complete with a toilet … which we still don’t have.

rustic bathroom decor ideas

But I couldn’t resist sharing a bit of what the bathroom is looking like these days in between the more meaty posts about tiling a bathroom.

And that sheer curtain you may have spotted is just an effort to deflect your eyes from what is really going on out there.

master-bathroom-renovation-tub-side

That is a tub and plumbing that still needs to be installed, a few extra accessories waiting for their time to shine and cleaning supplies where there should be a toilet, an unfinished half wall and a side yard that functions as a work shop and storage for furniture not yet in use. Oh yeah, and a big hole where a new window should be.

But, do you remember what that spot looked like before? Here is the same window before demolition.

master bathroom before

And the wall where the vanity is now …

master bathroom before

Amazing how quickly I can erase these images from my memory. ๐Ÿ™‚

rustic bathroom vanity and mirrors

So, yeah, I learned that if loving rustic is wrong I don’t want to be right … but I also like balance. I am so much more well-rounded than I gave myself credit for. (Hopefully you can hear the sarcasm there.)

Update: ย You can now read the tutorials for installing rolling door hardware, making the reclaimed wood mirror frames and the DIY wooden vanity.

What about you? Do you have a defined style? Love rustic or hate it? Want to come hang out with me and stare at the bathroom?

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