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Hi everyone,
I need a bit of guidance from this amazing community.
So, I made a promise to my wife that I’d build a beautiful Indian home temple for our house — something serene and traditional. As a base, I’ve picked up the IKEA PAX wardrobe (pictured in white below), and I’ve also purchased four white corner shelves from ANKO.
I’m using the second image (the warm-toned wooden temple) purely as inspiration. I know I can’t recreate that exactly, but I want to capture at least some of the essence and bring in key elements:
🔹 Plan so far:
🔹 Challenges:
🔹 What I need help with:
I've got the motivation (and pressure 😅) to make this happen — I just need some practical ideas to get it to a stage that will meet my wife’s expectations. Thanks a ton in advance!
Inspiration for the temple:
Current State:
Corner shelves (4 in number):
Cheers
Abh
Hi @diy_abhi,
What a fantastic project, I'd love to help out where I can.
Unfortunately, Bunnings does not offer any kind of laser cutting or intricate cutting services. You would have to look into a laser cutting service or maybe a woodworking or cabinet making shop with access to a CNC router for this part of the project.
Outside of this, there are a few reasonably simple solutions to your issues.
For the back of the cabinet, I would replace the thin backing sheet with a sheet of CUSTOMpine 16 x 2400 x 1200mm White Matt Carcass Particleboard MR. At 16mm thick, there is plenty of holding capacity to support those shelves. Our cutting service can be used to cut sheet stock to the nearest 100mm. Therefore, unless the cupboard is sized to the nearest 100mm, you will need to cut it to size yourself. To do this, you can use How To Cut a Laminate Benchtop as an example of the technique you would use.
Once cut to size, it could be screwed to the back of the cupboard using Zenith 8G x 30mm Countersunk Rib Head Chipboard Screws. You should use a Sutton Tools 3mm Viper Jobber Drill Bit to drill pilot holes in your material before driving in the screws.
For the plinth to support the deity, you could use the same particleboard; you may even have some off-cuts that would work. Simply cut 5 strips and a panel to sit on top, 2 for the width and 3 for the depth, with a sheet on top.


You would use the same screws and drill bit to put pilot holes in the material. You could also use a countersink bit to drive the screws below the surface of the material. They can then be covered with Taskmaster 15mm White Self Adhesive Screw Caps. If there are any exposed sides, they can be covered with iron on melamine edging.
Let me know what you think and if you have further questions, please don't hesitate to ask.
Jacob
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