Shoe Rack Gaffney SC

This simple shoe rack uses five pieces of 2" x 2" x 36" poplar (which is actually 11⁄2" square) for the uprights, feet and rails; six 5⁄8" x 48" poplar dowels for the crossbars; and one 3⁄8" x 48" poplar dowel for the pegs. Read and get more info on how to build a pegged shoe rack.

Shope's Shoes
(704) 482-8653
602 S Lafayette St
Shelby, NC
Ann Taylor
(864) 627-3857
700 Haywood Road
Greenville, SC
Ali's Bootshine
(803) 787-4936
4963 Fort Jackson Blvd Ste E
Columbia, SC
West Lee Shoe Repair
(864) 292-8399
15 W Lee Rd
Taylors, SC
Oscar Thompson Shoes
(843) 722-4666
322 King St
Charleston, SC
Ann Taylor
(843) 839-0965
3061 Howard Avenue
Myrtle Beach, SC
Ann Taylor
(843) 722-8231
265-267 King Street
Charleston, SC
Anderson Shoe Repair
(864) 209-8970
406 S Main St
Anderson, SC
Muse Shoe Studio
(864) 271-9750
2222 Augusta St
Greenville, SC
Dixie Shoe Shop
(864) 879-3651
119 E Poinsett St
Greer, SC
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Shoe Rack

Pegged Shoe Rack

October 21, 2008
by  Megan Fitzpatrick
strong> This cheap and simple-to-build shoe rack can be easily customized to fit any space or shoe-storage needs. And, it’s a lot more solid than the plastic ones you’ll find in most home-storage stores.
Vertical shoe storage. This cheap and simple-to-build shoe rack can be easily customized to fit any space or shoe-storage needs. And, it’s a lot more solid than the plastic ones you’ll find in most home-storage stores.
In this “I Can Do That” column, we introduce the use of pegs instead of hardware to hold the project together.

This simple shoe rack uses five pieces of 2" x 2" x 36" poplar (which is actually 11⁄2" square) for the uprights, feet and rails; six 5⁄8" x 48" poplar dowels for the crossbars; and one 3⁄8" x 48" poplar dowel for the pegs.

A good lesson when working with dowels is that not all of them are created equal. Before you start, measure your dowel diameters then select the drill bit to match the smallest one. (Although I bought 5⁄8" dowels, three of them were actually closer to 9⁄16".)

First, cut the crossbars to length. I decided on a 36" span, long enough to hold five pairs of women’s dress shoes. With six dowels to cut to the same length, measure and mark one, then set up a stop-block on the miter-saw fence and cut each to 38". The additional 2" is to seat the dowels 1" at both ends in the uprights.

While at the miter saw, cut your two 12" feet and two 5" rails – again, with a stop-block. Then, pencil a line on the right-hand side of your fence at 21⁄2", and cut 16 21⁄2" pegs from the 3⁄8" dowel (only 12 are needed, but extra is never bad). Holding the dowel in place against the fence on the left side and cutting these short pieces to the right side of the blade keeps your hands safely away from the blade. Once your pegs are cut, slightly taper one end on each a bit to make them easier to drive into place. An old-fashioned pencil sharpener on its largest setting works well for this task.

The uprights are 36" in length so no cutting is needed on these.

Next, align the two feet and clamp them together to lay out the locations of the four uprights and the dowels to join them. First, measure 2" from either end and use a combination square to mark a line across both pieces; then measure 11⁄2" from those marks and strike another line across both pieces. Mark a diagonal line from corner to corner of the resulting squares on each foot. I eyeballed the placement (along the diagonal line) for each of the four 3⁄8" pegs t...

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