Sunday, June 14, 2015

The Planter Ladder

In the beginning of spring this year, we decided it was time to venture into the art of wood-making. We - my husband, Tyler, and I - planned out a few projects we wanted to complete. A coffee table, two side tables for our living room, a sofa table-turned buffet table for our dining room, a three foot clock, four shutters, a blanket ladder, and a planter ladder. We also have come up with a few other project ideas, but we are starting with this list right now. We finished one of the projects - the planter ladder!


It isn't exactly what the plans called for, but we realized that the plans we have been going off of, are - I hate to say this - always wrong, and honestly, this error turned out for the better. The plans we used were from ana-white.com and we used the plans from the Cedar Vertical Tiered Ladder Garden Planter --- sort of. The plans are not well written, so when the hubs started cutting the boards, which is what the plans say to do, it ended up being the incorrect measurement, so the ladder is shorter than it should be. It should have five planter boxes on it, but they wouldn't all fit. Three boxes were fine with me. We are going to use the materials leftover to make planter boxes for a deck that we are probably going to build next year. It all worked out in the end however.

We bought everything the site lists, but instead of cedar boards, we just bought stud wood and stained it.

You'll need:

3 - 2"x6"x8'
5 - 5.5"x6' dog-ear fence boards
Nails
Screws
(estimated cost of project $20.00)

For the boxes:
Cut one of the 2"x6"x8' boards into ten (10) - 8 ⅛" pieces (cutting a 15 degree angle at the corners, making a trapezoid)
Cut the dog-ear boards into ten (10) - 23 ½" pieces and five (5) - 20 ½" pieces
Nail together the trapezoid pieces and the 23 ½" pieces to create the sides and front and back of the planter boxes. Next, nail the 20 ½" pieces on, creating the bottom. Make sure to drill drain holes in the bottom of the planted boxes so the water will drip out.

For the ladder:
Take the two remaining 2"x6"x8' and cut a 15 degree angle at the top, and at the bottom in the opposite direction so it leans on whatever you decide. Choose the distance you want between the boxes - usually anything more than 8" will work - and screw the boxes to the sides.

To finish, I used a dark brown stain and matte polyurethane finish, one coat of each.


I waited for everything to dry overnight, and planted flowers the next morning. Where the planter ladder sits, there isn't much sunlight that hits the area, except for a few minutes during the day. So I decided to get shade-only/morning-sun-only flowers. I love how it turned out, and it was pretty simple.


Let me know if you have a creative way to plant flowers besides in the typical flower pots - but there's nothing wrong with that either.

Until next time,

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