Artikel-Schlagworte: „Anleitung“
Möbel selbst bauen – Tipps und Tricks

Individualität ist der Trend des 21. Jahrhunderts – auch, was Möbel angeht. Sind sie es auch müde, überall dieselben IKEA-Modelle zu sehen? Ist ihnen ihre Wohnung zu unpersönlich? Dann müssen sie nicht unbedingt in einen teuren Möbel-Handel oder zum Antiquitäten-Händler gehen und Unmengen an Geld ausgeben: Denn mit ein bisschen Muße und handwerklichem Geschick können sie ihre eigenen Möbel ganz einfach selber bauen. Hier ein paar allgemeine Tipps und Hinweise.
Als Ausgangsmaterial eignet sich für Anfänger am ehesten Holz, da es sich am leichtesten zuschneiden, montieren und weiter verarbeiten lässt. Optimal ist es ebenfalls, zunächst mit einem einfachen und kleinen Objekt wie einem Mini-Schränkchen oder einem Schuhregal zu beginnen. An Handwerkszeug sind Stichsäge, Akku-Schrauber, Bohrmaschine, Hammer, Schrauben, Nägel, Holzdübel, Leim und Schleifpapier von Nöten – und das sollte sich eigentlich in beinah jedem Haushalt finden lassen. Keine Sorge also, zum eigenen Möbel-Bau braucht es keine komplette Werkstatt!
Zahlreiche Anleitungen für verschiedene Modelle finden sich im Internet oder entsprechenden Fachzeitschriften. Oder sie erinnern sich an ihre Geometrie-Stunden zurück und versuchen sich selbst an einem Bauplan. Wer selber nicht sägen will, kann sich gegen geringen Aufpreis auch im Baumarkt das Holz millimetergenau zuschneiden lassen. Die Kanten können dann auch direkt mit einer so genannten Kantenumleimung verschönert werden. Im Baumarkt lassen sich ungewöhnlichere Werkzeuge auch kostengünstig ausleihen, etwa Kreissäge oder Schleifgeräte.
Wenn sie also bald wieder Besuch bekommen und dieser sich darüber wundert, wo denn dieser wunderschöne und so individuelle Schuhschrank herkommt, dann werden sie mit stolzer Brust und frohen Mutes verkünden: “Den habe ich selbst gebaut!” Sie glauben gar nicht, wie gut sich das anfühlt!

![pmorgan hat ein Foto gepostet: "Armand Vaillancourt is a Québécois sculptor, painter and performance artist born on September 3, 1929, in the city of Black Lake, Quebec, Canada."In 1971, a publicly commissioned fountain entitled Québec libre! was installed (San Francisco, United States). One of his best known sculptures, Québec libre! is representative of the relationship between Vaillancourt's art and his political convictions. It is a huge concrete fountain, 200 feet long, 140 feet wide and 36 feet high sitting in the city's financial district at the Embarcadero Center. The night before its inauguration, Vaillancourt inscribed Québec libre! in red letters, to note his undying support for the Quebec sovereignty movement and more largely, his support for the freedom of all people. The following day, seeing that the city's employees erased the inscription, he jumped on the sculpture to reinscribe the sentence many times."Some years later, the fountain became the object of a polemic involving U2's singer Bono. During a free concert, Bono climbed the sculpture to write Rock & Roll stops the traffic, referring to the power of rock.[2] 20,000 people were in fact in attendance and blocked some of the neighbouring streets. Reacting to the act, the city's mayor declared that she deplored the sculpture's vandalism and that this kind of act could be punishable by a fine and/or imprisonment. Vaillancourt was then contacted to learn if he supported the gesture, which he answered by going to U2's concert in Oakland the following day, where he wrote "Stop the madness" on the stage, in front of 70,000 people. He defended Bono's gesture, after a speech on injustice, declaring that graffiti is a necessary evil as young people do not generally have the same access to newspapers, and media in general, as politicians do to express themselves.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armand_Vaillancourt(the sculpture seems to have been renamed the Vaillancourt Fountain) pmorgan hat ein Foto gepostet: "Armand Vaillancourt is a Québécois sculptor, painter and performance artist born on September 3, 1929, in the city of Black Lake, Quebec, Canada."In 1971, a publicly commissioned fountain entitled Québec libre! was installed (San Francisco, United States). One of his best known sculptures, Québec libre! is representative of the relationship between Vaillancourt's art and his political convictions. It is a huge concrete fountain, 200 feet long, 140 feet wide and 36 feet high sitting in the city's financial district at the Embarcadero Center. The night before its inauguration, Vaillancourt inscribed Québec libre! in red letters, to note his undying support for the Quebec sovereignty movement and more largely, his support for the freedom of all people. The following day, seeing that the city's employees erased the inscription, he jumped on the sculpture to reinscribe the sentence many times."Some years later, the fountain became the object of a polemic involving U2's singer Bono. During a free concert, Bono climbed the sculpture to write Rock & Roll stops the traffic, referring to the power of rock.[2] 20,000 people were in fact in attendance and blocked some of the neighbouring streets. Reacting to the act, the city's mayor declared that she deplored the sculpture's vandalism and that this kind of act could be punishable by a fine and/or imprisonment. Vaillancourt was then contacted to learn if he supported the gesture, which he answered by going to U2's concert in Oakland the following day, where he wrote "Stop the madness" on the stage, in front of 70,000 people. He defended Bono's gesture, after a speech on injustice, declaring that graffiti is a necessary evil as young people do not generally have the same access to newspapers, and media in general, as politicians do to express themselves.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armand_Vaillancourt(the sculpture seems to have been renamed the Vaillancourt Fountain)](http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7057/6907299869_90b5012410_s.jpg)



