LIVING Index
Beauty
Budget Decorating
Children's Activities
Computers
Decorative Accessories
Doors
Entertaining
Faux Finishing
Finance
Fireplaces
Floors & Ceilings
Flowers & Plants
Food & Cooking
Furniture
Handles, Knobs & Hinges
Health
Household Tips
Insurance
Lamps & Lighting
Linens & Fabrics
Non-Traditional Housing
Outdoor
Painting & Staining
Pets
Recycling
Rooms & Furnishings
Accessories
Arranging
Bathrooms
Bedroom
Colors
Design
Foyers
Furniture
Kitchen
Office
On a Budget
Small Spaces
Themes
Walls
Other

Safety
Stamping & Stenciling
Themed Decor
Wall Coverings
Wall Decor
Window Treatments

BEST OF LIVING
Mold Quiz
Home Safety
Room Planner
Pet Care Guide
Weekend Projects
DIY to the Rescue
Sparkling Solutions
Organize Your Home
Ultimate Media Room
Picture Perfect Parties
Queen of Clean

SPONSOR LINKS

  • A Red, White and Blue Headboard
  • advertisement

    Click here to view a larger image.

    June 24, 2002 -- An easy-to-build, patriotic flag headboard. (SHNS photo by Matt Fox/ Courtesy HGTV)

    By Matt Fox
    Home & Garden Television

    With the Fourth just around the corner, Shari Hiller -- my true-blue friend -- and I thought it would be a good time to do a red-white-and-blue headboard. One of our favorite holidays is the Fourth of July not only because it's the birthday of our nation, but it's a special day to spend with friends and family. This little headboard would be great for a guest bedroom. It can be installed just for the Fourth or left up to show our colors all year long. Follow these simple steps and you'll be displaying your work in no time.

    Materials:

    Fifteen 1-x 4" x 6' pine boards
    Miter saw
    Wood and drywall screws
    Drill and drill bits
    Latex satin interior paint in red, white and blue

    Instructions:

    Step 1: Creating broad stripes

    Start by measuring the width of the bed and cutting the wood to that length (save your scraps; you'll need them later). Just a note: A twin bed measures 39 inches wide, so make the length of the boards 42 inches long. The extra length will allow for blankets.

    Using a power miter saw, cut the ends of the board into points, just like a picket fence. To do so, find the center of the board, not the length, but the width, and make a pencil mark. Measure down the length from the end 2 inches and make another pencil mark -- that's the angle for the picket cut. Make the cut with the miter saw along that angle.

    Step 2: Showing the colors

    Using latex satin interior paint -- red, white and blue -- wash the boards with the paint. Use an old T-shirt or sock to apply the paint; you want the wood grain to show through the paint. Since you're creating an American flag, do every other one, red then white. Now, remember those scrap pieces of lumber I said to hang on to? Those are the field of blue. Cut those to a length of 16 inches. Once they are cut, paint the boards blue.

    Step 3: Playing Betsy Ross

    Well, you're not going to sew the flag together, but close enough. Lay the boards on the floor, paint side down (do this on a drop cloth to protect the wood and the floor). The top board should be a red board, then white, and -- well, you get the idea. Cut two pieces of 1 x 4 to the width of the headboard minus 2 inches so they will be hidden behind the flag. These will be the back support. Attach to the back using 1-1/4-inch wood screws, making sure each board gets attached to the supports. For extra strength, cut a board that will be placed at an angle between the two support boards.

    Step 4: Bring on the blue

    With the stripes facing you, place a board that has been washed blue in the upper-left-hand corner. You may want a partner to help hold this board into place because you will be screwing in from the back. Attach the board and work your way across until you run out of boards.

    Step 5: Raising the flag

    Now attach the headboard to the bed frame, drill pilot holes through the back support boards and attach to the frame using lag bolts. If you want, the headboard can be attached to the wall. Just pre-drill pilot holes through the headboard. Place into position on the wall. Push an awl or nail through the pilot holes to mark the location. Remove the headboard and drive self-anchoring Mollys into the wall at the location of the marks. Hold the headboard back in place and attach to the wall using drywall screws. Touch up the screw heads with paint. Stand back and salute a job well done.

    There are many variations of headboards you can build. Experiment and you can come up with new and interesting ways to dress up a standard bed frame. One word of caution -- the hardest part is making sure the headboard is attached safely to the bed. That's why I strongly suggest mounting the headboard directly to the wall. Easy to do, and a lot safer.

    (Matt Fox writes this column with Shari Hiller. They also co-host the Home & Garden Television show "room by room." For more information, visit www.hgtv.com. Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service.)