Today, we are continuing with instructions for making a hidden storage area in your bedroom closet.
Temporary Wood Screw Handles
Again, the two long wood screws, which are protruding about 1-1/2 to 2 inches, will be your only handling devices. Go easy with them. They both recently finished a remedial bite-back class for wood screws lost in the big city.
Free the Piece of Drywall
Hold one of the two wood screws continually, while you finish the cutting and finally free the piece of drywall. Gently re-position the cut-out piece of drywall out of the way and on the closet floor leaning against the wall. Do not lay it flat where there could be a danger of anyone stepping on it. Make sure that the visible portions of the wall studs are clean and free of any old drywall mud.
Measure Between Wall Studs
The next step is to carefully measure the top and the bottom distances between the two now-partially-visible wall studs. Write the numbers of the measured lengths in pencil with very large easy-to-read numbers on the back side of the existing drywall, forming the other side of the wall.
“Nervous” Part of Project
Now we will do what is most likely be the single most “nervous” part of this entire preparedness project. Do not worry. Following these simple directions will/might/should/could/maybe, we hope, enable you to be successful and quite proud of yourself. You will need to trim/cut the two 24-inch pieces of 2 x 4’s to the exact lengths you measured earlier. Mark the top piece with the old “top” on a narrow side of the piece. Mark the bottom piece as a bottom the same way. (If you actually measure these pieces, they will be slightly smaller than 2 x 4, because 2 x 4 is the measurement for rough cut untrimmed/unfinished lumber. They work just fine for most of us, and I know of no reason it will not work for you, I think. That’s unless you have a sad history about being left alone at a construction site. Do you?)
Continue reading“Hidden Storage For Strategic Tools and Security Items- Part 2, by Old Bobbert”