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DIY Couple Create Stunning Corner Seat Worth £800 For Just £100

  • Matthew Scoby, 28, and Grace Shannon, 27, became DIY pros over lockdown
  • They watched YouTube videos and gradually built up their confidence
  • Their latest project is a corner seat worth £800 which they built with salvaged wood
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Lockdown was a trying time for the nation, and many of us found the time at home stressful, with nothing to do but bake banana bread or complete Netflix.

But Matthew Scoby, 28, and his partner Grace Shannon, 27, who live in Middlesbrough, caught the DIY bug when they bought their first house at the start of the pandemic.

Matthew, a plant operator and Grace, a primary school teacher, started off small, making a mantlepiece for their fireplace, and soon began tiling their own kitchen and fitting the floor.

Growing in confidence, the couple then salvaged old wood destined for the skip and built a beautiful storage corner seat unit.

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They spent just £100 on the project, and estimate it would have cost up to £800 to have built professionally.

Matthew told money-saving Facebook group DIY On A Budget UK: "We bought our first house right at the start of the first lockdown knowing it was going to be a long term renovation project for us.

“With neither of us having any real DIY experience we started off with having tradesmen come in to do everything but the actual decorating for us.

"Soon enough our budget ran out and we had to start getting inventive.

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"The first real DIY hack we did was making a mantlepiece for the fireplace - after pricing them up for over £100 we decided we could just make one ourselves which came out amazing.

"We then began work in the kitchen. We had a new kitchen installed by a professional joiner but didn't have the money to pay for someone to tile behind the worktops or fit our floor for us.

"So after watching a few YouTube videos Grace and I were confident we could do it.

"We bought a tile cutter and an angle grinder with some pads for cutting ceramic and Grace started planning it out.

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"After a few weekends of working and many incorrectly cut tiles we managed to get it finished.

"A professional might be able to point out a couple of mistakes we made but overall I think we outdid ourselves.

"Once the kitchen was fit and the floor was tiled we added skirting boards and began planning what we would want to do for our dining space which brings us onto the bench.

"Originally we had bought an extendable table and chairs from a charity shop to upcycle, which Grace had sanded and prepped for us to paint.

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“However, after taking a step back and looking at it again we realised the table wouldn't really go with the kitchen and it also took up too much space.

"So after a brainstorming session we realised we could also do with some extra storage, and Grace had seen a video on TikTok of a lady who had built her own bench with storage which we decided to make our own version of.

"We had a look at table sizes so that we could build a corner seating area to fit around it nicely.

“We wanted a six-seater table which was around 72 inches long so after doing some rough measurements on the floor, we stuck some masking tape down to mark out the area and decided we would go ahead with it.

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"We measured some chairs which we had to ensure the seats were deep enough to sit on comfortably and then added a little extra to leave room for the backrest.

"Other than this we didn't draw any plans up - we simply made the bottom frame for it and then just started working our way upwards.

"Once we had the full frame for the seat made, we ran some long pieces of wood all the way from the base up the back to make the back rest that extra bit more stable.

"We then cut the top of the backrest and the seats with hinges and fixed them on making sure that we left enough of a lip over the edge to allow for us to clad around the full bench and still have a small lip to lift the seat to get into the storage.

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"After this, all that was left to do was to pin and glue the tongue and groove cladding on to finish it off.

"As the bench was going to be blocking a plug socket we decided to add a socket onto one side.

"To do this we took the face off the socket and put the wires into connector clips and then ran a new longer cable into the back of the new socket which we had to cut out of the cladding and safely hid all of the cables behind the storage area.

"Once that was done it was just time to add some spare skirting board on, put wood filler in a few areas, sand it and then paint!

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"We managed to get quite a lot of the wood for free however all of the tongue and groove we had to buy and around eight 2.4 meter lengths of CLS wood we also had to buy.

"I asked about at first to see if I could find any spare materials and found that my barbers were having a refit and were taking an old stud wall out, so I asked if I could salvage the waste to use which they agreed.

"When I went to pick it up there was another shop that was being refit and they had a skip full of old bits of wood so I went and asked if I could salvage some of theirs which they allowed me to.

"Then I was also able to salvage an old wardrobe which was stored away in a family member's garage to use for the seat, the floor in the storage and the tops of the backrest.

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“My top tips would be to try and plan ahead the lengths you need to cut.

"If you buy 2.4-metre lengths of wood it's best to try and make use of as much of it as possible.

“We've now got a box full of pieces of wood 20 to 30cm long which were all offcuts.

"Looking back if I planned the cuts a little bit better I could have saved even more money!

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“The lengths of timber cost £50, the tongue and groove cost £30, the paint cost £8, the skirting board cost £8 and the hinges cost £4, so that made a total of £100.

"Without managing to get any freebies I would imagine it would cost closer to £150 or £180, however I do think it could be done cheaper as I think I went a little overboard with strengthening the frame up if I'm honest!

"I would imagine this would cost between £600 and £800 to be built professionally.

“Saving that money by doing it ourselves just opens up so many more doors for us to do more decorating and projects in the future.

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“If we paid £600 for one pre-made we wouldn't have been able to do anything else to the house for another three months or something, whereas now we are already getting started on our next project!

“We are both absolutely over the moon with it now it's completed.

“After we took pictures of it to show our friends, we looked at each other and high fived right away.

"Straight after we began planning how we are going to make our table now and are already on the lookout for some old scaffolding boards to upcycle!”

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Tom Church, co-founder of LatestDeals.co.uk, comments: “This is an absolutely stunning corner seat that looks like it cost thousands to make.

“Well done to Matthew and Grace for doing it all themselves, after never having done any DIY just a couple of years ago!

“What I love even more is how they hunted down wood destined for the skip.

“This means they saved loads of money, reduced waste and helped the environment too!"

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