Wine Barrel Adirondack Chair

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instructables

Wine Barrel Adirondack Chair

by GettingRad

Adirondack Chairs are comfortable, iconic lawn furniture that are timelessly popular. By using barrel staves you
can build a unique adirondack at an affordable price. Additionally, the compound curves of the staves themselves
generate make for a very comfortable chair.

Wine Barrel Adirondack Chair: Page 1


Step 1: Tools and Materials

Materials:

1. One wine barrel - both of my chairs used 25 staves - the hoops and heads were not used
2. .5 lb Stainless Steel Finish Head Deck Screws
3. Wood Sealer

Tools:

1. Pliers - End cutting pliers/nippers work well


2. Hammer or Mallet - for removing hoops
3. Chisel or screwdriver - for removing hoops
4. Drill
5. Measuring Tape
6. Pencil
7. Saw - I used a band saw and chop saw but a hand saw would work just as well though it may take
longer

Choosing a wine barrel

My preference if for red wine barrels with light or medium toast. The oak sucks up the color from the wine and
turns a beautiful purple. I didn't have any red wine barrels available at the time of making this so I used white wine
barrels. Whiskey, rum, tequila, etc. barrels will work as well but most are heavily charred on the inside. This means
you will need to remove the char in order to have a clean surface. A high buildup finish - like spar varnish - can be
used to seal the char so you don't turn black when you sit in your adirondack.

Finding barrels

The best way to get a barrel is to go straight to the source. If you have a local winery, call them and ask if they sell
spent barrels. Be honest about the use. They may have an old dried out barrel kicking around as a table or parking
barricade they may be willing to part with. Remember - you don't need anything that will hold liquid so it can be
super gross and old.

If you don't have any wineries nearby, try calling a Brewery or distillery. Many use wine barrels to impart different
flavors in their beer or spirits but, like at wineries, these barrels have a limited lifespan. At some point even the
best cared after barrel will become a 'garden barrel.'

If neither of these are options, some garden stores or home improvement stores stock barrels as garden art,
planters or rain barrels. There are also some online resellers but I would use them as a last resort. From what I
have seen, these last options seem to be the most expensive and shipping barrels isn't cheap.

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Step 2: Remove the Barrel Hoops

First, remove the hoop nails. These can be pried out You will not need the hoops or heads for this project
with end cut nippers. Stubborn ones might need but they may be useful for building something else
some coaxing with a chisel or screw driver. like a mobile, wreath or tiny Dyson Ring.

Once the nails have been removed the hoops should I plan on using the leftover hoops, staves and barrel
slide off with a tap of the chisel. When the last hoop head to build side-table to go with your chairs.
comes free the barrel will collapse into a heap.

Wine Barrel Adirondack Chair: Page 3


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Step 3: Choose Your Staves

Lay out your staves. Set aside one wide stave for the middle of the back. Set aside the the stave with the bunghole
for the face of the seat.

2 of the widest staves for the arms


2 wide staves for the front legs
2 wide staves for the rear legs/seat support. The more bent these are the more rounded your seat
will be.

The remaining staves can be paired up by width to make

6 staves for the backrest


5 to 6 staves for the seat
2 staves for the leg bracing
3 staves for the back support

The inside of the barrel may be cracked or blistered. It probably goes without saying but try to select the staves
with the best insides for the seat and back. It will save you time sanding and finishing later. The legs and supports
will be less visible and are a better use of less pretty staves.

Lightly sand the outside of the staves to clean up the exterior. I only used a quick pass of 120 grit sand paper. I
didn't want to remove too much of the staining from the hoops.

You may need to sand the inside more aggressively. On several very bad staved I used the wood eraser (Angle
Grinder with 24grit sanding pad). Working up to 120.

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Step 4: Cut Staves to Length

The approximate lengths for the legs, seat and to make the joints perfect and instead simply mitered
supports are in the photos. Since every barrel is the angles so they would be close. The gaps gnaw at
different, your lengths may be a little different from my joinery neurons but don't affect the comfort.
mine. I am about 5'11" and the seat fits me well. It
was, however, a little big for shorter people. When cutting the staves - ALWAYS BE SAFE.

The arms and back are full length staves. They will not lay flat like normal dimensional lumber
and can be difficult to support. When cutting the piece
The compound cure and inherent variation of the should be supported very close to the blade to
staves makes for nice lines and a comfortable seat prevent kickback or binding.
but it also make joinery difficult. In the end each joint,
cut and angle will need to be visually inspected to Lay out your pieces like an exploded diagram. Make
make sure it looks right. Perfect joints are not sure you have paired up similar sized pieces.
possible without lots of carefully cut curves. I declined

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Step 5: Assemble the Back

Lay out the back. Pre-drill holes at the intersections of the back and support. I put two screws in the outer and
middle stave for extra torsional support.

Screw the staves together. Add the second screw to the wider staves to help with torsional stability.

Step 6: Assemble the Seat

Arrange the staves for the seat. Start at the front edge of the chair and work your way back to where the seat
intersects the back. The last stave will rest against the back of the chair.

The seat should be about 16"-18" deep.

Pre-drill the holes and screw in place.

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Step 7: Join the Seat and Back

Screw the seat to the back by drilling through the leg and into the lower back support. Be careful not to split the
wood. The back and legs can exert a lot of torque on the screws until the rest of the supports are in place.

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Step 8: Add Legs and Arms

This is perhaps the most difficult step. I turned the chair on its side and dry fit the legs and arms on the ground,
marked the point to drill and then screwed them in place.

Drill through the face of the front leg into the end of the rear leg. Repeat the process on the other side.

Step 9: Final Touches

The last pieces to be installed are the face of the seat Make sure all your joints are sturdy and give your
and the leg braces. new chair a test ride. The oak is hard and you may
find that the corners are too sharp. If this is the case,
The face stave with the bung hole can easily be hit the edges with your sander to round them over a
screwed into place from behind. Make sure to use at bit.
least two screws in each side to keep the chair from
twisting. You will notice the stave in my hand still has char and
some yeast on it. I made sure to it up before using.
Hold the leg braces in place and scribe the angles in
the wood. Trim the pieces to fit the angles scribed
and screw in place.

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Step 10: Finishing

You will likely want to seal the chair to keep them looking nice. I used a rattle can of Clear Tompson's Water Seal
It slightly enhances the color and will help prevent water from soaking into your new chairs.

Since I got the barrels for free the total cost was about $13.

1 5/8" - Deck screws - $6

Thompson's Water Seal Can - $7

This is an awesome project. Any suggestions on where to get a barrel?

Wine Barrel Adirondack Chair: Page 11

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