PDF download Download Article PDF download Download Article

A log bed is a bed frame built entirely from logs that are cut and shaped to fit together without nails or screws. Early log beds were made with crossrails and topped with a mattress. Modern log beds hold a box spring as well as a mattress , and so have no need for crossrails.

Method 1
Method 1 of 2:

Preparing the Logs

PDF download Download Article
  1. Advertisement
  2. These are blades with 2 handles that you set against the wood and pull toward you. A curved drawknife removes bark and a straight drawknife shapes the log. [2]
  3. You can do this with a drawknife, but it's easier to do with a tenon maker, which attaches to a drill and operates like a giant pencil sharpener.
  4. Frostner bits drill flat-bottomed holes large enough to hold tenons. [3]
  5. Advertisement
Method 2
Method 2 of 2:

Assembling the bed

PDF download Download Article
  1. Place the eye hooks so you can stretch a cable between the right headpost and left footpost and the left headpost and right footpost. [4]
  2. Use turnbuckles in the centers to tighten the cables and hold the bed together. Adjust as necessary to make sure the bed is square.
  3. [5]
  4. Advertisement

Video

Community Q&A

Search
Add New Question
  • Question
    How do you fix a long cracs on a bed post?
    Community Answer
    Long answer short: you can't. However, you can use wood filler, then sand and wax. It will never look the same but it will add character.
  • Question
    How round do the cedar logs need to be for the bed post and the railing?
    Community Answer
    You could do this same build with square posts and it would be okay. However, if the logs are a lot bigger at one end than the other, you might have to change the length of a higher or lower railing to make it fit together correctly.
Ask a Question
      Advertisement

      Tips

      • You can buy a log bed kit that has logs that are already cut for the size of your bed, drilled and tenoned so you only have to assemble the bed.
      • Don't worry if there are cracks in the logs. This is a natural feature of dry wood. If you turn the logs so as to avoid drilling mortises into the cracks, the logs will be just as strong as those without cracks.
      • Consider using logs that have knots, aren't quite straight of have other unique characteristics.
      Submit a Tip
      All tip submissions are carefully reviewed before being published
      Name
      Please provide your name and last initial
      Thanks for submitting a tip for review!
      Advertisement

      Things You'll Need

      • Logs
      • Circular or hand saw
      • Measuring tape
      • Drawknives
      • Drill
      • Forstner bits
      • Tenon maker
      • Eye hooks
      • Steel cables
      • Turnbuckles


      About This Article

      Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 216,959 times.

      Did this article help you?

      Advertisement