The Worst Medicine Cabinets on Orcas Island

Do you want to see some ugly medicine cabinets?  I’m warning you, these are bad.

Yuck

Wasn’t kidding, was I?  Poorly fitted contraptions of stamped sheet metal, rusting in too many places to adequately fix, that look like they belong on a tug boat that takes barges to Severodvinsk every three months.

Old Cabinets

I suppose they’re nostalgic in a way.  When I arrived, on my first night here in the house, that light fixture had three of the only four working lights on the entire property.  Do you want to know how many places are open on Orcas Island at night that sell light bulbs?  0.

So, yeah, I’m thankful for that old light fixture so I didn’t have to go to the bathroom in pitch blackness in a strange house.  I’m quite fond of them…. NOT.  It’s at the dump now.  Good effing riddance.  I hated that thing.  The cabinets too.  I would have thrown knives at them but, you know, seven years bad luck and all.

Box

I drew up full plans to build new cabinets about one year ago, and they’ve been sitting (like many plans I draw) and waiting for me to start cutting wood.  I had a full cut list, dimensioned drawings from every angle, and even a materials itinerary of all the hardware and woodware I’d need.  I bought the hinges, the knobs, the little metal pegs that go into the holes that hold up the shelves, I even bought the custom cut mirrors !!! all about a year ago.  This is one very procrastinated project.  In my defense, I’ve been a little busy.

They Fit

I constructed the two boxes to exactly the dimensions that I had measured a year ago and they fit PERFECTLY!   How often does that happen in a woodworker’s lifetime?  Not often, for me at least.

Lap Joints

Once I knew they fit into place, I could start cutting the inner frame.  Everything is going to fit together with lap joints, like the ones shown above.  Nothing too fancy, just what works.

Shelf

I’ve had these pieces of wenge, which is an African hardwood, just lying around from another unfinished project from long ago.  I’ve probably had them for about ten years.  Finally found a use for them, they are going to be the shelves and bottoms of my bathroom cabinets!  Hooray for them.  I used to think of wenge as a poor man’s cocobolo (a central American hardwood) but since then the price of wenge has increased.  I only need a couple more pieces.  There goes my play money for the month of April.

Light

And yeah, I bought that light fixture about a year ago too.  It’s simple and it works well for the room.  I’m not terribly happy with the housing I made for it, I may have to re-do it at some point.  I intend to paint these cabinets, which will conceal a lot of defects, but I’m still not happy with this top part.

FrameSo after the boxes were framed in it was time to construct the outer frame that goes atop it.  The cabinet doors fit into this part, so it needs to be Perfectly Square and Flat. Lots of clamps and sand bags went into the making of this frame.

Improvement

Some people get all offended if you look inside their medicine cabinet.  Here I’m posting pictures of it on the internet!  Look all you want!  There’s tylenol, nyquil, deodorant, mouthwash, all sorts of embarrassing things in there.  But I know you just came here to see the awesome cabinetry and how well that frame fit into the wall.  Looks significantly better than the old Severodvinsk-bound cabinets.

Oh crap, I forgot to make cabinet doors.   Well, I guess there’s next week.

2 thoughts on “The Worst Medicine Cabinets on Orcas Island

  1. Looking good Jeff. Sure want to see finish product. Keep up the good work.

  2. Looks great, Jeff. The combined medicine cabinet / light backing ties the two elements together wonderfully.

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