Sliding Barn Door Pantry Makeover with Wood Slat Shelves

We love good-looking and functional pantries! I see soo many amazing kitchen pantries to drool over at the home shows I gawk at. But many homes, especially older homes, don’t come equipped with dream-worthy pantries, so inventive DIYers have to make their own solutions! Our guest today took a boring and awkward pantry and added some awesome wood slat shelving and a vintage door to create a fabulous barn door pantry!

DIY Pantry Makeover with Vintage Sliding Barn Door and Custom Wood Slat Shelving | Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic #beforeandafter #pantry #barndoor #diy

Inside a pantry, you can decorate with fun patterns:

organized pantry makeover, Craftivity Designs on Remodelaholic
Craftivity Designs on Remodelaholic

and reorganize (always reorganizing, right?).

reorganized pantry
Counting It All Joy on Remodelaholic

But then you can always hide the potential pantry chaos behind a pretty door like this DIY screen door:

pantry screen door how-to
The Handmade Home on Remodelaholic

and these lovely pantry doors:

Pretty Pantry Door Ideas featured on remodelaholic

And here’s Lindsey to show off her awesome pantry makeover — you are going to LOVE what she used to make that barn door hardware!

Sliding Barn Door Pantry Makeover + Wood Slat Shelving
by Lindsey of Girl Meets Carpenter

barn door pantry makeover, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

Hello:)  I’m Lindsey from Girl Meets Carpenter.  At first glance, my blog suggests that I’m your ordinary housewife with a talented carpenter husband, Jordan, and therefore I am lucky enough to be able to dream up designs and the hubby makes them happen.  But I hope that my blog is so much more than that!

When we were dating, I didn’t know the difference between a flat head screwdriver and a Phillips.  Ten years later, when my husband asks me to pass the jigsaw, I don’t bat an eye.  I have done things around my home that I never thought I’d have done (board and batten, tile cutting, trimming, dry-walling, demolition, etc.)  My hope is that my blog empowers men and women alike to step out of their comfort zones, out of the ordinary, and to try something new.

You CAN use a nail gun, you CAN draw on your closets, you CAN spill paint on your floors… and I have come to realize that I don’t need my master carpenter for every single job!  And I hope our blog teaches you how to do it yourself and on a budget!  Don’t get me wrong, there are many, many jobs that only he can do!  But why not try to add your own personal style into your home however possible?!  We just have an ordinary ’50s ranch but over time, we have made it special and unique.  It’s work but it’s achievable and it’s rewarding and you can do it too!  This pantry makeover is one example of how a minor change can make a big difference with just a little time and money.

When we bought our house, this is what this pantry looked like.

pantry before barn door and new shelving, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

It’s a terrible before picture, I know.  And here’s another one.  (Disregard the play-dough-muncher!)

pantry with bifold door changed to barn door, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

We used to have this bi-fold door and we replaced the top portion with chalkboard panels.  Which was really useful.  But we had been wanting to incorporate a sliding barn door somewhere.  We decided that this would be a great place.  We sought out a door from our neighborhood antique flea market and we also found some gliding wheels there.

The door was too short (most old doors are!) so Jordan bought a sheet of metal and wrapped it around the bottom to add some height.  He then distressed it with muriatic acid which made it look authentic.  We had a local steel supplier cut off a 1/4 x 3 flat stock aluminum, it was inexpensive enough at $30.  We purchased a certain magnet lighting system so that when the door slides open, a light comes on.  At the same flea market, we found wheels that were used in meat processing… we cut the meat holding hooks off and just used the wheels from them.  And this is something that can be purchased online for way cheaper than your normal barn door hardware.

use meat pulley for sliding barn door hardware, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

vintage pantry barn door with screen and automatic light, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

vintage door turned barn door for pantry, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

pantry barn door from vintage door and meat hooks, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

sliding barn door for pantry using old meat hooks, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

use pipe fittings to space a sliding barn door rail off the wall, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

We used galvanized pipe fittings to space the flat rail off the wall.  One inch cuplers.

make an antique door taller with sheet metal, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

vintage pantry barn door, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

Jordan also made some new shelving prior to the barn door project.  Previously, there was just this crazy space that was hard to make functional.  We had added some slanted shelves so that we could still reach towards the back.  Our house has some crazy nooks and crannies that are completely useless!  But we finally have a perfectly functioning pantry.  The shelving is pine, 1×4.  We ripped them to 2.5 inches wide and they’re 2 foot deep.  After the shelves were in place, I rubbed them down with poly-urethane and they continue to wipe down nicely.  Now, there was a time where I naturally stored our food in here, but it always looked like this.

new wood slat pantry shelving, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

pantry storage on wood slat shelves with sliding barn door, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

 Yuck!  Disorganized and not much to look at.  So I switched it up: plates/glasses/bowls into the pantry, food into the cupboards out of sight.  A simple solution that I wish I had thought of from the get-go!  And there is absolutely nothing special about my dishes.  Just think if you’ve got some great pieces to display.  It’s smart and good-looking!

use pantry wood slat shelves to store dishes instead of food, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

diy wood slat pantry shelves with dishes, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

store dishes in pantry with built-in wood slat shelving, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

wood slat shelving in pantry, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

use a hook for plastic bags, barn door pantry, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

underneath view of wood slat pantry shelving, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

detail of diy wood slat pantry shelving, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

wood slat pantry shelving diy, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

And remember those awkward shelves way back in the corner:

pantry before barn door and new shelving, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

Those shelves are still there.  It’s still kind of a silly space that doesn’t make sense.  But at least it’s not wasted space either:

use for awkward pantry shelves, Girl Meets Carpenter on @Remodelaholic

… or is it wasted? 😉

Overall, the cost for the shelving was less than $70 and it took an afternoon to complete it.  The total cost for our one-of-a-kind barndoor was $100  ($30 door, $20 hardware, $30 aluminum rod, maybe $20 more for miscellaneous screws and fittings) and it was done in a day.

I hope that this inspires you to do something creative with a forgotten space in your home.  ESPECIALLY if it’s a focal point of some sort or can be turned into a focal point!

Thanks for featuring the Girl Meets Carpenter blog, Remodelaholic!

——————

Thank you so much for sharing with us, Lindsey! Love your outside-of-the-box barn door hardware and those shelves are awesome!

Remodelaholics, check out Girl Meets Carpenter for more of Lindsey and Jordan’s projects, like her super cool craft room

Girl Meets Carpenter craft room

and their amazing half bathroom redo — LOVE that sink!

Girl Meets Carpenter bathroom makeover with wooden floating sink pedestal

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

9 Comments

  1. Thanks so much for featuring me! Go visit me at Facebook- girl meets carpenter! In going to try to get more active with the blog and Facebook:). Thanks for stopping by!

  2. I’m curious to know what kind of lighting you used in the closet and how much it was for the magnetic light turn-on mechanism you used. A pantry that’s lit is a GREAT idea! Very inspired !

  3. Great pantry, liked the meat hook use for the rollers, bought regular barn door hardware, really expensive. I’m going to be enclosing my carport so I can use it for my work area, between my storage buildings, made one and bought the other, will be looking for meat hooks now and old doors even if they don’t match, it will look great, save your hooks they will make a great plant holder or broom, towels. Love your blog and enjoy seeing other women in to recycling and be creative, so much better for the land fill, Cheers to you!