You could make these any shape you wanted–you could do letters, names, shapes, animals, whatever. I LOVED how these turned out and I love how simple this project is. Since the neck was leaning, it kept falling over, so I flipped it over and leaned it against the other bookend so it would stay in place until the glue dried.Īnd once the glue dried, they were ready to use! Once the glue was dry on the bookends, I added a small drop of glue to the parts of the guitar that will touch the bookend and set it in place.īecause the glue surface is small and these are hard to clamp in place, I found it easiest to set it in place so that it kind of stayed on it’s own and didn’t touch it again until the glue dried. Step 4: Glue Guitar Shape onto Scrap Wood Bookends Once the glue is dry, finish the pieces as desired–paint, stain, etc. I glued the 5″ boards onto the bottom edge of the 6″ boards to make two identical L shapes like shown. a 1×6) and I cut two pieces 5″ long and two pieces 6″ long. The boards should all be the same width (ex. Next, I cut four pieces of the poplar scrap board to make the bookends. I used my jig saw again to cut along this line. (Also that mark on the far right was a mistake…ignore that haha)īasically, whether you’re working with a scrap wood guitar or something else, you just need to kind of divide it how you want between the two bookends. Everything on the left will be on one bookend and everything on the right will be on the other bookend. Then I used a pencil to draw a line across the neck of the guitar where it stuck off the side of the square. I used a speed square and placed my guitar on top like shown. Ana White has a free bookshelf plan that will get you this beautiful rustic wood bookshelf made of solid pine boards. Now, since there is a left and right bookend, this guitar has to be divided. I then, sanded it and used a drill with a large bit to drill a hole in the middle of the guitar. Get creative □ Once I had my template, I traced it onto my cherry board and cut it out with a jig saw. You can make these bookends be anything you want them to be. On that note, this doesn’t even have to be a guitar at all. Then you can print it out and use it as a template. I like Word because it allows me to resize the image to the size I want with the rulers along the top and side of the page. If you aren’t familiar on how to do this, simply find an image shape you like and copy paste it into a Word document. (I also used it to cut a practice guitar as you see here haha) I’m terrible at free hand drawing, so I did a quick Google search and printed off a pattern to cut out and trace onto my board. If you are good at free hand drawing feel free to draw your own guitar–or any design you prefer. Step 1: Cut Out Scrap Wood Guitarįirst, I cut down a piece of my scrap cherry wood to about 11″ long. But if you like the two tone look, you could just stain whatever wood you’re using two different colors for the same effect. NOTE: I made these out of poplar for the actual bookend parts and cherry wood for the guitar. What you need to make scrap wood bookends:
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