publication croisée depuis : https://lemmy.world/post/48861413
Scrappiest of scrap wood projects.
The proportions are odd, but it’s designed to fit under the landing of the stairs going into the garage. Makes a good use of an otherwise awkward space. Like everything else in the shop, it’s on casters to allow for easy movement and cleaning around.
Most of this wood was from the big lifting tower I used to get the dust collector motor into place.
Bonus: when you run out of scrap from the box, you can use the box!

I’m hopeless with wood scraps - I can’t throw anything out. We burn wood for heat in winter so I put small pieces in the kindling stack, but the various racks and shelves I’ve built are overflowing and I have a huge pile on the floor next to my table saw. And it’s not even good wood - it was either hardware store building lumber or recycled from something else before it became an offcut and I still can’t throw it out.
Maybe you can inform people around you that you have extra wood in case they need some. It won’t empty your stock but from time to time you could get rid of some and help someone.
Seconding this! I also keep an eye out on my local Buy Nothing group, and offer up wood scraps when I see someone looking for something I have. It helps keep folks from buying new and if I need it in the future, chances are someone else will have a replacement for me. (I also get a lot of lumber this way).
I’ve given away stair treads, particleboard sheets, plywood, and dimensional lumber, sometimes cut or milled to whatever dimensions they need. I even used my scraps and part of a table to build a saddle stand for someone who was looking for a suitable piece of furniture for displaying a saddle once!
For a second I thought your scrap wood bin was shoved under a scrap wood baby cradle. I was beginning to question your parenting skills
It’s for the scrap baby; no one wants it






