From beach to nail-biting


White woodland owl the road from the beach to our hallway is like this: I saw a nice, sweet-looking tree lying on the beach and thought I'd make something out of it. The old tree was heavy and long, so it required sawing into three (!) pieces on the spot. After a seemingly merciless sawing, the logs were shouldered and into the car.

Because the body there weren't enough branches to think about hanging coats on, so I had to add a few more. So a few extra branches were discreetly screwed to the frame and white paint was applied over the entire surface. The nail shack naturally includes a shoe rack and a hat rack. For them I had bought an old board from Pekola, a barn in the forest village. Although I had thought to use these boards as frames for the mirror in the future hallway, but sometimes the idea transforms on its way...

I wanted to The trunk of a nailing tree grows through the shoe rack, so my dad made a hole through the half boards. Similarly, a branch made it through the hat rack. This forest-like entrance to the apartment gives the first hint of the decorative theme of the entire apartment - Naked Forest.

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This lurking piece was to become a new product.
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The idea is first sketched out on paper.
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Excess branch fragments had to be sawed off.
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Runkon's leg is sawed off in firmer hands.
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The extras are in place and the second coat of paint is drying.
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Shoe rack piercing hole.
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This is where the hat rack is drilled.
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The wrought-iron tree leaves are screwed to the board, once the exact location has been found. Worm-eaten routes are an integral part of the look of the nail board.
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Serial screwdriving is faster.
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With one screw the hook is closed.

 

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Here's an exhilarating package in action.
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The styled coat rack.

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