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IKEA hacks Australia: DIY built-in HEMNES cabinetry how-to

Would you love built-in cabinetry in your living room but balk at the cost? Well, you know we love an IKEA hack and this one, part of Naomi Findlay’s Carrington House reno, got us excited! So we asked her to share all the details!

Armed with some IKEA HEMNES glass door cabinets ($499 each), some trusty trades, pretty floral wallpaper and a whole lot of creativity, Naomi created a very expensive looking built-in cabinet in her design studio space for a fraction of the price of custom joinery. Here, she walks us through just how she did it (with a little help from her friends!).

The room before
Before
During
After
Naomi walks us through it with her builder Josh Ferris

Naomi’s detailed step-by-step:

1. First up you need to measure and then measure again. What is the width, height and depth of the space in which you want to install the cabinetry?

2. Find cabinetry you want to use and then look at how many units you can fit across the space. In my case, I didn’t have walls in place so had to account for all the extra centimetres that would be created before I could install the cabinetry.

3. Make sure to include a small amount of space (an extra 2cm onto the width of each unit) as you can always pack it out, but you cannot shrink your cabinets!

4. Prepare your walls. In this property, one wall was framed out and then gyprock was installed. For the wall on the other side, I had compressed cement sheeting direct stuck to the exposed brick. Why you ask? Well, I wanted four cabinets across the wall but wasn’t sure I had enough width. By direct sticking one of the walls it gave me the extra 30mm that I needed to get what I wanted. A great reminder that, when it comes to renovating, there is always a way around things.

Naomi with her builder

5. Get it wired. Light gives life to everything! And these cabinets were always going to be beautiful but functional too. So, I had our electrician wire up four library lights to sit above the top shelves and illuminate the cabinets.

I also wanted to minimise clutter in the rooms, so I had GPOS wires put into the locations where the bottom shelves are sitting.  When the cabinets were installed, I was then able to pull these through the back wall of the cabinets. This is a great way to have charging docs and devices tucked away from sight, along with all the cords and mess.

6. Build the cabinets and set them in place along the wall.

7. Frame down the bulkhead from the ceiling to provide the support and opening needed for open shelves above the cabinets. Make sure you chat with your builder to check if you need a central support across the opening. You want to make sure that the shelves can support lots of your favourite heavy books and magazines.

8. Block out in between the legs of the cabinets (if they are on legs), with some simple framing timber to make sure you have something solid to fix your skirting board to.

9. Get the plasterers back to gyprock, set and sand the open shelving above the cabinets.

10. Attach the skirting board to the front of the cabinets and fix it into the framing timber blocks inserted as above. I used Intrim Primed FJ Pine 135mm x 18mm SK498 profile skirting board for this job.

11. Putty up the nail holes in the skirting to ready it for sanding and painting.

12. Get some gold metallic spray paint and spray each of the handles gold. Once they are dry fix them in place on the cabinets.

14. Next step is to deal with the small gaps between each of the units. To do this you have to make sure that whatever you use does not impede the doors opening and closing. I chose a simple D mould that was glued and tacked in place.

15. Paint, paint and paint! I used a low sheen option to match the walls on all the shelving, except for the timber trims where I used a semi-gloss oil-based paint. I find the latter takes the wear and tear of heavy use that little bit better.

16. Adding wallpaper is the final touch that will give that real wow factor and a truly personalised feel. Remove all the shelves from the inside of the unit, then following manufacturer’s instructions, apply your favourite wallpaper to the back surface of the glass door section. Replace the shelves and you are done!

For more on Naomi’s Carrington House reno

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Design Furniture

Furniture hacks: the essential roundup of products to hack your IKEA pieces

Who doesn’t love IKEA’s budget-friendly, simple, timeless designs? But sometimes you’d like your piece to look a little less mainstream. Well, we have some great news! There are plenty of brands in Australia (and shipping here from overseas), who offer clever accessories to hack your IKEA favourite into something truly unique and much more expensive-looking.

An IKEA Besta unit hacked by @saltyinteriors with Pretty Pegs’ brass knobs and Elsie adjustable legs

From doors, drawer fronts and sofa slip covers, to decorative panels, legs and handles, we’ve done the legwork and rounded them all up for you here. Some are designed purely for IKEA products and others can be used to customise different furniture too.

An IKEA Söderhamn sofa with Bemz covers and replacement legs, by Coco Lapine Design

Ren Studio

Based in Brisbane, Ren Studio make affordable doors and drawer fronts for IKEA’s Metod, Pax and Besta collections. They also offer a range of cover panels that can be used to create custom kitchen islands and bulkheads.

There’s a choice of four finishes (plywood, supermatte, renwood and customcoat) with a large range of colour choices as well as four door profiles that accommodate both modern and classic styles.

Cover panels and plinths using the Dot door profile on an IKEA Metod kitchen

Their lead time is around six weeks.

Timbermill

Timbermill is a Sydney timber furniture company founded in 2013. They recently launched a new sub brand doors&drawers, offering hand-crafted solid timber fronts for IKEA Metod cabinets and drawers, at a fraction of the price of a 100% solid timber kitchen. They’re even offering our readers 15% off until the end of July 2020 with the code interiorsaddict.

Timber fronts in the Recycled Harwood finish on IKEA’s Metod

You might want just your upper cabinets to have timber fronts, or for just your cover panels to be timber. Lead time is around four-to-six weeks and they’re currently only delivering to NSW.

A combination of doors&drawers’ Birch Plywood and IKEA White

Superfront

Based in Stockholm, Superfront have some of the coolest IKEA-specific products we’ve seen. Sadly they only ship their handles and legs to Australia (not their fronts, sides and tops), but the website is a great place for inspiration nonetheless.

Captains Grannie Pink/Copper Legs

And they do have one of the best selections of IKEA-specific replacement legs; definitely worth the import!

Golden/Super White sideboards with Mini Balls handles and Big Balls legs on IKEA Besta
Illusion sideboards, Wire handles and Slender High legs on IKEA Besta

Legheads

Legheads is an Australian company with a small but colourful and affordable range of replacement legs for IKEA and other furniture.

Pretty Pegs

A Swedish company that ships worldwide, Pretty Pegs offer a large range of stylish legs, knobs and self-adhesive fronts to add extra va-va-voom to the bestselling IKEA Besta range.

Their front covers are super thin, self-adhesive wooden layers that you stick onto your existing IKEA Besta doors, without the need to actually replace them.

Bemz

Bemz is a Swedish company shipping worldwide, creating custom slipcovers for IKEA couches using high-end fabrics as well as a range of furniture legs, allowing you to transform your sofa beyond recognition!

IKEA Kivik sofa in a teal velvet cover

Whether you want to take a basic new IKEA piece next level, or give an old and tired one a new lease of life, this is an excellent solution.

IKEA Söderhamn sofa in a loose-fit linen cover

Machine washable and sewn to order with a three-year guarantee, Bemz produce covers for a huge range of IKEA sofas, armchairs and bed frames, with countless styles, fabrics and colours to choose from. Prices start from under $200 for a two-seater sofa cover. There’s even free shipping on orders over $150.

IKEA Stocksund sofa in a navy velvet cover

Their range of replacement legs starts at $9 each.

A BEMZ Kastell leg

Comfort Works

Comfort Works is an Australian company that custom makes slipcovers by hand for sofas and armchairs from various furniture brands. Expect to pay from around $300 for a two-seater sofa cover.

A Comfort Works Urban slip cover on an IKEA Stocksund sofa

They also make covers for Pottery Barn sofas and can even do made-to-measure.

Personalised and functional, their slipcovers even provide the option of adding a built-in USB port and wireless charger that can transform your sofa into a charging station.

Comfort Works have the option to turn your sofa into a phone charging station!

They ship free worldwide and have made it their personal mission to continuously upcycle and not waste in their design process.

A Comfort Works cover on an  IKEA Brathult sofa

Lux Hax

Australian designed and made, Lux Hax creates overlay panels that perfectly fit and customise popular flatpack pieces from IKEA, including the Hemnes, Besta, Malm and Kallax ranges.

Our contributor Kathryn Bamford transformed her IKEA Malm bedsides with Lux Hax stick-on panels and some fancy new handles

Lux Hax’s Styl-Panels are as simple as it gets: easy peel-and-stick panels that can give you numerous, unique combinations when paired with new handles and/or legs. They also sell a variety of handles as well as overlays to hack Kmart’s popular $40 Arch Mirror.

House of Bamboo

House of Bamboo’s rattan webbing sheet is a great furniture hacking solution. We love this recent DIY project from Adore Home Magazine editor Loni Parker, who used the sheets with an IKEA Ivar cabinet painted white.

Some places to buy replacement handles, knobs and hooks online

LO&CO

LO&CO is a design-conscious Australian brand that creates beautiful, architectural hardware.

T-Plate Pull handles in Brass

Hepburn Hardware

Hepburn Hardware aim to design and provide Australian-made hardware that is both high in quality and different from what’s on the market.

Halifax Hooded Cup Pull in Burnished Brass and Bronte Knob in Burnished Brass

igrab

Igrab.com.au is a Sydney-based online handles and knobs store established in 2012, designed for those who are looking for handles and knobs for their homes or a renovation option.

Contemporary Kitchen handles in Matt Black
Reader Janika Dias from Mood Collective hacked her IKEA Pax wardrobes (Grimo door) with brass-look pulls from igrab

The Block Shop

The Block Shop has a great range of hooks and handles for furniture and walls!

We hope this roundup has inspired you and we’d love you to tell us about any other suppliers we might have missed!

‘IKEA hacking’ is something of a global movement and you can find so many examples online. In particular, we’ve been inspired by lots of examples of people hacking IKEA’s Billy bookcases to look like expensive built-in cabinetry.

Click for a Billy bookcase ‘built-in’ how-to from 11 Magnolia Lane

If you have an IKEA hack you’re proud of, we’d love to see it!

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Furniture

The cheap & effective new product to hack your IKEA favourites

Listen up, Ikea lovers! There’s a new kid in town to easily make some of your most bargain furniture look expensive.

Stylkea offers fretwork overlay panels to make luxury-inspired furniture available to everyone. The panels are purposely designed to effortlessly customise classic Ikea pieces, including Malm, Kallax and Besta (coming soon). Similar products have been available in America for some time, but we now have our own version, right here in Australia!

The idea came to Kylie Hughes a couple of years ago while working on a home renovation with her husband. “I literally spent hours trawling through design sites and interiors magazines looking for stylish and affordable furniture,” says Kylie. “Ikea has such a great Scandi-inspired range, but I wanted to make their pieces more personalised – and they are the perfect blank canvas.”

A copywriter by trade, designing the panels while juggling her day job with being a mum hasn’t been without its challenges. “There have been a lot of late nights and weekends – and the self-doubt always manages to creep in. But I knew that I wanted: to build a product-based business doing something creative and artistic, so chipping away at Stylkea has been worth it.”

She looks to other designers for inspiration (with Jonathan Adler being at the top of the inspiration list) and utilises a range of materials built to withstand both trends and practical use. “I aim to create panels that capture very classic design styles – be they Moroccan, quatrefoil or Art Deco – that will look very sleek and sophisticated for ages to come.

“The PVC panels are UV stabilised, meaning they won’t fade in the sun, and are also completely paintable. Or you can leave them naked, because they will match your white IKEA furniture perfectly. And if you want to add glamour, we have a range of metallics in our aluminium composite panels.”

The best part about the panels is that you can be completely DIY inept and still pull off the luxurious look perfectly. The measurements and guesswork have been taken care of – it is literally as easy as wiping the furniture surface clean, peeling the sticky backing off the panel, and sticking it on to produce your own luxurious statement piece.

The panels are designed in-house on the Gold Coast, and Kylie hopes to extend that to the manufacturing process in the future.

“In the long run, I would invest in my own machinery and control the whole process from start to finish. I would also love to extend the range to include more designs as well as knobs and handles that pair perfectly with the panels.

“Ultimately, I want Stylkea to be a one-stop-shop for achieving the designer look on a budget. People deserve to live in beautiful, personalised spaces, whatever their budget.”

Shop online with prices from just $9.95.