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Make a Side Table Out of Free USPS Priority Mail Boxes

So over the weekend my roommates and I picked up a huge brand new corner couch for our living room and that forced us to completely rearrange things to make everything fit. When we did that, we realized we needed a table to go between the recliner and the end of the couch. You know what that means? Time to play with some free shit from the post office!

Backstory

A while back, I learned that you can go the USPS website and order a lot of mailing materials for free. A lot. For free. No shipping or handling. They bring you hundreds of boxes and envelopes for free. To your doorstep. Excellent.

So I’ve had these boxes in my closet for a  while now. I built a coffee table a while back but it has since been trashed pretty good from parties and get togethers and spilled drinks so we’re going to toss it. But today presented a perfect instance for building yet another piece of furniture out of free boxes from the post office.

What You Need To Build the Side Table

To build this side table, you will need:

(10) Assembled Priority Mail Shipping Boxes

10 Assembled Priority Mail Boxes

10 Assembled Priority Mail Boxes

 

(1) Tape Gun For Boxes

1 Tape Gun for Boxes

1 Tape Gun for Boxes

Another option instead of the tape gun is that you can use free USPS stickers. That’s a little bit more tedious and since it’s just a damn cardboard table, don’t worry about it and just gun it.

Building the Table

First of all, once you have all of the boxes put together, pair them off into sets of two and tape them together along the wide side with a strip of tape from the gun that wraps all the way around the seam, like in this picture:

Pair of Boxes

Pair of Boxes

Next, put together an “H” shape with the sets of two boxes, with the long side down, like in this picture:

The Bottom of the Table

The Bottom of the Table

You’re just going to have to eyeball to make sure things are even because if you even think to use a ruler on cardboard table then you’re trying too hard. I did this step by lining things up and then taping along the tops to get things held together, then I added strips along the inside joints to prevent twisting and to add some strength, like so:
Tape on the inside of the bottom of the table

Tape on the inside of the bottom of the table

Now, once you have that bottom part put together, tape together the remaining two sets of boxes to make a 2×2 top for your table:

Top of the table assembled

Top of the table assembled

After that, you’re going to attach that top of the table to the bottom. The best way to do that is flip the top of the table over and center the bottom on it, then use 6″ strips of tape to secure the bottom all the way around to the top of the table:

Attaching the bottom to the top of the table

Attaching the bottom to the top of the table

Once that’s done, chances are when you flip the thing over it’s going to rock around because it isn’t perfectly aligned. The best way to fix that is to stand the table up and slide pieces of cardboard under the legs as shims to level it out, then flip it back over and tape on those shims like so:

Shims on the bottom of the table

Shims on the bottom of the table

Now you should be good to go! Here’s what mine looks like in my house now, not bad for being free and taking 20 minutes:

Table in my living room

Table in my living room

These tables are surprisingly strong, most likely because the post office has to use tough boxes to protect what’s being shipped. Regardless, it’s a cool and tacky little way to add a conversation piece to your living room.

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  1. David Mogen
    November 12th, 2009 at 16:08 | #1

    Thank you for sharing this practical application; it is a fine use for these f***in boxes. I just got back from my local Post Office where I was totally insulted and made to feel like a crook for re-using an old Priority MAil box I had lying around to ship some Media Mail in. Even though that very Post Office allowed me to pay for $10.42 worth of Media Mail postage to send that very package in the first place–having no apparent issue with the box or anything; the dickhead mail carriers on the receiving end cried foul and decided it was now “postage Due” by the recipient (!) to the tune of another almost $20.00 bucks! well of course they “Refused” it, so it CAME BACK TO ME all marked up in pen reading “Priority Box” and “Refused” and “Postage Due $19.80″!!!! So, even though it doesn’t have any Priority Mail markings showing, the sharp eyes and noses of the HAcienda Heights, CA mail carriers spotted it and stopped it in its tracks ’cause it was the lowly “Media Mail” package wearing that glamorous, prestigious, blue-blooded Proirity Mail outfit, trying to sneek into the ball. The rag at my local post office said they were “cracking down on it”, “What?” I said, “..recycling??” She said, no people come in and take loads of these boxes and use them to ship non-priority mail, and it’s not right. She furthered that “…we wouldn’t want that to ruin it for everyone else would we?..” So, before I found myself climbing over the counter and throttling someone, I left. Saw this and it made me smile for a second. Cheers. I gotta go start a crusade now. Wish me luck, chumps.

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