Tiki Central / Home Tiki Bars
Exposed shelf brackets: help / suggestions, please
Pages: 1 10 replies
R
RichC
Posted
posted
on
Mon, Apr 2, 2018 7:31 PM
Hello Everybody. I am an admitted tiki amateur finishing up phase two of a home bar renovation. The small wet bar came with the house and it occupies an odd place just off the family room. It doubles as the corridor to our laundry room and garage. It makes a nice little bar, but as this space must remain a clear thoroughfare, I can't really build it out to any degree. In other words, the decor must all stick pretty flatly to the walls and I have done my best to give the space some dimension by building little arrangements on shallow shelves. I am dissatisfied with the shelf brackets I have found available on-line and hoping someone can suggest a source or DIY plans for bamboo and/or other tiki-tropical shelf supports. One of my shelves is a weathered, whitewashed board with metal brackets I hoped would suggest salvage from a Victorian pineapple plantation house. They just look like they came from the hardware store (which, of course, they did). The other brackets are special-order wrought iron from Etsy that are more convincing as shipwreck salvage but still not thoroughly satisfying. They'll look better when I black out the screw heads. Oceanic Arts sells great rattan hangers that I have purchased and put to some use and several sources provide excellent trim. Where have you all found some luck with good tropical / tiki hardware, though: Shelf brackets, door knobs, door stops, light switch plates, etc.? |
MAM
mike and marie
Posted
posted
on
Tue, Apr 3, 2018 10:05 AM
Amazon has some interesting stuff: [Nice bamboo wall plate for a light switch [Nice bamboo wall plate for electric outlet [Solid bamboo rail |
M
MadDogMike
Posted
posted
on
Tue, Apr 3, 2018 10:17 AM
You might torch those white brackets to burn off some or all of the white paint (after you take them from the wall :lol: ) There are pickling solution recipes on the web to accelerate rusting. Propane canister torches are available fairly cheap at Lowe's, Walmart, Harbor Freight, etc - plus they come in handy for making creme brule or seared salmon nigiri :D |
H
hang10tiki
Posted
posted
on
Tue, Apr 3, 2018 5:36 PM
you could cover them with tapa cloth. Worst sound ever, slurp of an empty tiki mug through my straw!!! [ Edited by: hang10tiki 2018-04-03 17:38 ] |
S
Swanky
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Apr 4, 2018 4:44 AM
Too late now, but for high shelves you can mount the brackets on top of the shelf where they can't be seen. |
R
RichC
Posted
posted
on
Thu, Apr 5, 2018 5:53 AM
Thank you for the tips. I like the wicker doorknob and will try wrapping the brackets in tapa cloth or some soft burlap. Cheers. |
M
MaukaHale
Posted
posted
on
Thu, Apr 5, 2018 6:45 AM
Home Depot has an assortment of wood brackets that you can stain or paint. Here are brackets I bought from Home Depot and just used a board for the shelf to hold a wooden figure. [ Edited by: MaukaHale 2018-04-05 06:45 ] |
RR
Rob Roy
Posted
posted
on
Thu, Apr 5, 2018 11:33 AM
Put a new skin on an Ikea floating shelf. |
TM
Tipsy McStagger
Posted
posted
on
Thu, Apr 5, 2018 7:13 PM
|
R
RichC
Posted
posted
on
Sun, Apr 8, 2018 5:48 AM
Love those shelves! He does great work and the prices seem reasonable. Thanks |
P
Polly_Nesia
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Apr 11, 2018 9:30 AM
OP let's see if I can describe this. I could see taking two pieces of wood, one on each side the bracket sandwiching the bracket between them, add a "trim" piece along their exposed edge (result of the bracket width) and stain them brown along with the shelf piece. Embellish with carved out designs using a router maybe. Suppose you could also do a more temporary similar solution using pink foamboard pieces, adhesive, heated foam cutter tool, latex primer and latex paint. Carve out the inner section of the side panels so you could fit the bracket inside for a more compact look. You could do the same using wood if you used a router. [ Edited by: Polly_Nesia 2018-04-11 09:32 ] |
Pages: 1 10 replies