Published on July 13th, 2012 | Materials: 2x FJELLSE, SULTAN LADE, 1 shelf 200×30, 140 cm of 2×3 pine, outdoor heavy duty stain, SULTAN FAGERAS Description: Looking for quality outdoor furniture and not finding what I am looking for, I came up with this in the mean time. I only bought the 2 beds and the slatted base. Everything else I already had. I assembled 1 bed but with the headboards on either side. You then have 2 end pieces and 2 side pieces left. The 2 end parts are cut in half and each with a Dremel at one side (top) made to fit into the slid where the 3 smaller pieces are placed.They fit in very snug, place next to the 3 smaller bits and secure it with a screw or metal corner. You could place another piece here to close it all up. Cut 2 pieces of 50 cm and 2 pieces of 20 cm from the 2×3. Place the 2 pieces of 50 cm at an angel that is comfortable for you on both sides and screw in to place. Screw the 2 side pieces as backrests onto them, make sure that the mattress still fits underneath.
At the top back end screw the 2 pieces of 20 cm to rest the shelf onto. In this case the shelf just rests on the 2 side pieces and on the top backrest for easier winter storage. But could easily be secured with some screws. Stained it 2 times. It took an hour or so to assemble the bed, another 2 hours to screw the pieces of 2×3 into place and use the Dremel for the side pieces and 2 days to stain because of drying time in between layers.Tidigare annonser till salumadrass Togs bort 4 år sedan Togs bort 3 år sedan Togs bort 6 år sedan madrasserSultan Huglo resårmadrass 160x200SultanmadrassbottenSultanIKEA160x200madrass Togs bort 5 år sedan IKEAikeaSULTAN HUGLO MadrassikeaSULTANMadrassikeaikeaIKEA madrass SULTAN HUGLO 160x200 IKEA resårmadrass SULTAN HUGLO160x200Home » Culture and Criticism Submitted by Sarah D. Bunting on July 8, 2008 – 11:24 AM62 Comments If you've ever visited an Ikea, you know that one of the rituals of the trip — along with the sweet reward of meatballs after a deflating hour of comparing countertops, and the despair with which you greet the packet of wooden dowels found after you "finished" "building" that highboy — is the repetition of the product names for your own amusement.
You may think it is just you who takes such consonant, stentorian pleasure in snapping off "Dacke" and "Udden" — that nobody else would admit to it, anyway, because it's childish and disrespectful to Scandinavian culture. It is not just you.The next time you shop at Ikea, pause for a moment.Listen.It is happening all around you.Couples, siblings, long-time roommates, wandering through the cavernous warehouse, using chewy-named bookcases as a form of bat sonar for locating one another. Or perhaps, because of the many children running around, it is substituted for more severe language. "Fläng, where's the rod that goes with this?" "This Järpen pencil keeps breaking." "That little Trollsta just cut in front of us." "They're out of DVD shelving? If you do not participate in this behavior — if you have not struck a General Sherman pose beside the candle display and bellowed to your companions, several rooms over, "Tindraaaaaaaaaaaaa!" — perhaps it's because you feel unsure;