Hey there, MRL friends! It's Angie from Knick of Time, back with a tutorial to turn a worn out old picnic table into a decorative farmhouse barn gate.
I was at my parent's house and my mom saw me taking a photo of her old picnic table.
She wondered why in the world I wanted a photo of it, and I explained that I thought the chippy blue paint on the weathered wood looked so pretty, and I thought it would make a great photo backdrop (you can see how I used it here). She said she had planned to sand all the old paint off and repaint it. But now it was too old and unstable, so if I wanted it, I could have it. Heck yeah!
My husband took the picnic table and one of the benches apart. I wanted to keep the other bench as-is. We transported it on the back of our Jeep all the way from New Mexico to Illinois.
Reclaimed Wood Picnic Table
I knew right away that I wanted to turn it into a decorative old barn gate.
I see lots of old picnic tables at yard sales, but it could also be made with weathered fence pickets, or you could use brand new wood and give it a weathered paint finish (my tutorial is here), so it's doable for anyone, and the best part is, it's easy!
First I laid out all the boards that had been removed from the picnic table to see how tall and wide the finished gate would be, and which pieces I would use for the cross braces.
My boards were 59" tall, and I decided that would be a good height for the barn gate, so I didn't cut them down at all.
If you don't have space for a tall barn gate, just cut the wood down to your desired height.
Design decorative barn gate
Measure the width of all the boards lined up side by side, and cut 2 pieces of wood that size. These will be the top and bottom braces on the door.
Screw each long board at the top and bottom of both of the braces.
Next, cut another board to use as the diagonal cross brace.
I'm sure there's some formula that involves math to get the angle for the diagonal brace, but I avoid math whenever possible, so we just laid the diagonal board in place, and used painter's tape to mark the line where the cut needed to be made. It worked like a charm!
Screw the diagonal cross brace into the long boards (from the back, so the screws don't show).
Attach a metal handle on one side of the gate.
Attach handle
It took less than an hour to finish, with very few tools and minimal woodworking skills.
The former picnic table turned barn gate looks like it came straight out of an old barn. It is perfect in my entryway.
So, don't use your worn out old picnic table as firewood - repurpose it!
I hope you'll drop in and visit me at Knick of Time to see some of my latest repurposed projects, including a window sill frame turned into a handled tray, overalls turned into a wall pocket, and an antique typewriter than became a charging station.
See you next month!
Susanne Jolley
Hi,
Just found your site and really like how you are informative and to the point.y husband and I have bought a farm that came with a run down, old house on it and a huge barn....a huge score for people like you and I... Ok to my point...I found a old ( talking OLD) wooden fence gate in the back of barn burried in foot of Lord knows what and I rescued it.. . it's in really rough shape but I want to persevere it....just not sure how...can you give me some pointers? I will send a pic so u can see what my husband just looked at and shook his head, then walked away.. Ha..I need a good wood preserver....and?????
Thank you for your time and your showing your work!
Mindi
I LOVE this Angie, chippy perfection!! Awesome job!
gail@myrepurposedlife.com
Angie,
I am totally in love with your new barn gate wall decor! The chippy blue paint reminds me of some easy 2x4 benches I made from my daughter's old deck to use on her new deck. There's something about the history in reclaimed wood that makes me smile and wonder what stories it could tell.
Thanks for sharing a great tutorial, and I LOVE the hint about the painter's tape-I am so math challenged!
gail
Pam
Hey Gail! Not been blogging much but hoping to get back to it. Great job on this project.
Wendi @ H2OBungalow
I love this and especially that you kept the pretty blue chippy paint! Pinned!
Val Manchuk
I love how your door turned out, and your No Math Tip is awesome!
Val
Christine
yer killing me, this is genius! I want it!