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10 Steps to Create a DIY Puzzle Board with Drawers Tutorial

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Have you heard that jigsaw puzzles are all the rage again?? I absolutely love puzzles and have been addicted to making DIY puzzle boards out of wood lately. So when I saw this meme popped up on Facebook feed, it drew my attention:

“Hot girl sh** sounds exhausting. I want to do old lady sh**: a puzzle, knit a sweater, sit in a chair while I shower.”

While I laughed at first read, the more I thought about it, that meme is actually pretty insulting. It also conjures up generalizing images of older folks and senior citizens being the only ones who enjoy knitting, falling into a good jigsaw puzzle (or even needing to shower sitting down!). 

In fact, because of the pandemic, people of all ages have fallen back in love with the joy of jigsaw puzzles (and I’d been known to shower sitting down while in my 30’s when I had a tiled ledge to do it in my old condo)!

(By the way, did you know that many companies can’t even keep puzzles in stock because of this increase in demand?!).

One of the most satisfying phenomena is finding a puzzle piece that fits perfectly. Ahhhh….!  That’s a pleasure that everyone can enjoy. And I’ve been telling everybody and their mama that they, too, should jump on this satisfying, stress-free bandwagon. 

 

This is how I am usually doing puzzles: taking up the entire dining room table!

 

But along the way, though, I realize that there are some very real challenges that go along with having a puzzling hobby:

  • Puzzles require space to stretch out, especially if you’re doing larger puzzles.
  • Pets and little kids can wreck havoc on a puzzle, so leaving it out unattended may not be an option.
  • You may live in a small apartment or home that doesn’t have a large enough space to do puzzles.
  • Where the heck do you sort and store all the pieces while you’re working on it?
  • What if you want to do puzzles on your bed and not at your dining room table??
  • Ready-made puzzle boards can be too expensive for people on a budget.

All these challenges I have either experienced or heard from directly from my friends and family as I tried to spark their love of puzzles, too. Which lead me to researching how to make a DIY puzzle board. 

Puzzle boards are hard, stable surfaces with raise edges upon which you can do a jigsaw puzzle anywhere and everywhere without your puzzle pieces sliding off. When you’re done working on the puzzle, you can easily store the puzzle board under the sofa or your bed (or anywhere out of the way). Some puzzle boards even have drawers to house the loose pieces or a cover to secure the top.

On Amazon, puzzle boards with drawers range from $80 – $139 (I’ve seen them as much as $200 in puzzle specialty stores!). If you’re on a fixed budget, spending that much on a puzzle board isn’t economical.

Making your own DIY puzzle board with drawers is completely possible, with just a few tools that you may have in your DIY toolbox! And if you don’t know how to use tools, or don’t own tools, go ahead and forward this tutorial to your handy friend or spouse and drop the hint that you’d like them to make you one as a gift. 🙂 Believe me, it’s pretty simple!

So let’s jump into this tutorial now!

 

 

Tools and Materials to Make a DIY Puzzle Board

  • 3/16″ tempered MDF
  • Pine boards
  • Wooden trim
  • Jigsaw or other cutting tool
  • Nailer (or hammer and nails)
  • Speed square
  • Tape measure
  • Wood glue
  • Miter box for angled cuts (optional)
  • Clamps (or something heavy to hold things in place while the glue tries)
  • Wooden knobs
  • Handle (optional)
  • Power drill with a drill bit (or drilling hole to attach knob)
  • Pencil
  • Top coat (2 coats, to protect the MDF board; optional)

 

 

Watch the Tutorial Here!

If you’re a visual learner, you can watch the tutorial on my YouTube channel. 🙂

 


 

DIY Wooden Puzzle Board Tips!

Before we go through the 10 steps of this tutorial, let me point out something that is the biggest problem you’ll run into when making a DIY puzzle board with drawers: YOU MIGHT MAKE THE WRONG SIZE.

It would be great to think that all 1000-piece puzzles are the same, but it really depends on two things:

  • The brand.
  • The size of the pieces.

Check the brands of puzzles that you like doing before making a DIY puzzle board to ensure it fits. The first puzzle board I made was 20″ x 24″ and was perfect for this 1000-piece puzzle.

However, for Ravensburger puzzles (one of the most popular puzzle brands) or for White Mountain puzzles, this was too small. 

I had made this for my mom, only later to realize the brand of puzzles she was most interested in doing, this wasn’t going to work. 

 

 

General Rules of Thumb for Puzzle Board Sizes

Although it depends on your specific favorite brand of puzzle, here are some good generalizations for puzzle board sizes”:

  • 20″ x 28″ size = 1000 piece puzzle puzzle board
  • 24″ x 32″ = 1500 piece puzzle board
  • 27″ x 39″ = 2000 piece puzzle board

 

How to Make a DIY Puzzle Board Tutorial

Now, let’s just into the steps to create this MDF board.

STEP 1: Cut Two Pieces of MDF

The top and base of your DIY puzzle board will be exactly the same length and width. The big question is, how big of a puzzle board do you need for 500-, 1000, or 2000 piece puzzle?

As I mentioned before, it really depends on the brand of puzzle you tend to love and put together. 

Whatever size of puzzle board you decide to make, make the top and bottom MDF pieces the exact same measurement.

 

STEP 2: Cut 2-3 Pieces of Center Supports

The center supports will be 1″ tall. The easiest way to cut these pieces was with my track saw, but not everyone has a track saw. These pieces can be cut with a jig saw, however. If you’re using a jigsaw, it will be easier to buy a wider piece of pine board and simply cut strips from it in 1″ tall strips the width of your puzzle board.

 

STEP 3: Glue Center Supports to Base

Inside of the puzzle board, there are center supports that attach not only the top and bottom of the puzzle board. But they also create cozy little places for the drawers to slide in and out of the puzzle board.

Use a little bit of wood glue and align the edge of the center supports along the top, bottom, and in the center. The spacing will depend on how wide you want your drawers to be.

For this puzzle board, I added 3 supports, which allowed me to create 4 drawers (two on each side).

 

 

STEP 4: Cut the Drawer Bases

Depending on the size of your puzzle board, that will determine how wide your drawers will be. Mine were 9″ x 13″. And because my puzzle board was larger at 28″ x 34″, it was large enough to have two larger drawers at 9″ x 13″ and the smaller drawers were just over 6″ x 13″.

Cut the bottoms of the drawers using the 3/16″ thick tempered MDF.

 

 

STEP 5: Cut, Glue, and Clamp the Puzzle Drawer Sides

For this project, you don’t have to cut your own small pieces to use for the drawers. You can use ready-made trim that can be bought from The Home Depot in the LUMBER section. It’s easier to buy it ready-made than to cut it yourself with a jigsaw. You’ll get a cleaner finish. 

Thankfully, I used my track saw to cut them (you can use a table saw, too, but honestly–table saws scare the daylights out of me, LOL). A track saw is super easy to use and get accurate, safe, clean cuts.

I cut all the side pieces that I needed for the drawers, which were 5/8″ thick and 3/8″ wide.

 

 

You also don’t have to cut the ends of your drawer sides at 45-degrees. Instead, you can use butt joints (which is just butting the flat ends up against each other). While this isn’t completely fitted, this gives you an idea of how you can try to plan your butt joints. With butt joins, you’ll need to make your side pieces a little shorter in order to fit properly.

 

 

If you’re doing mitered corners, you can use a square with a 45-degree angle on it. And then use a miter box like this one for easily cutting them.

(NOTE: If you have a miter saw, you can cut them quickly and accurately instead).

 

 

With all the edges cut at 45-degrees, you can easily join the edges together to created mitered corners. Again, you don’t have to miter these corners–you can easily create a butt joint to make it easier. But I love the look of mitered corners. 🙂

 

 

If you’re creating a larger puzzle board with 6 drawers, you’ll end up with:

  • 12 longer pieces
  • 12 shorter end pieces

 

 

STEP 6: Nail Drawer Slides to Base

Next, glue the wooden frame on top of the puzzle drawer base. Use a nailer with short brad nails (or with small nails and a hammer) to secure the wooden frame to the base. (Be sure that you don’t shoot the nails through the wood crookedly so that they blow through the other side through your wood).

 

INSERT PICTURE HERE OF NAILING DRAWER SIDES TO BASE

STEP 7: Attach Drawer Knobs

You’ll need a drill bit and a power drill to create a hole in the front of each drawer so that the drawer knob can fit through. I happened to have these small knobs from a small dresser project, but you can order some similar small craft knobs on Amazon.

Use a screwdriver to tighten the knob to the puzzle board drawers.

 

 

STEP 8: Attach Stopping Blocks

Stopping blocks behind the drawers will prevent the drawers from falling inside of the puzzle board. It doesn’t have to be very thick–just thick enough for the drawers to stop.

Use wood glue to glue a stopping block into place between the drawers, making sure the block is positioned so that the drawers are even.

 

 

In the other puzzle board I made for my mom as a gift, I used a piece of the MDF to create the stopping blocks. From my experience, I prefer a thicker block so that the drawers can’t accidentally slide over the stop. 

 

 

STEP 9: Glue the MDF Top to the Puzzle Board

Once the inside of the puzzle board is complete and you know that the drawers fit, it’s time to attach the MDF top of the puzzle board. 

Use wood glue on the wooden supports, and then place the MDF top on top of them, lining up the edges as best as possible.  Use clamps to secure the top to the puzzle board, wiping up any excess wood glue that seeps out the sides.

 

 

Once the wood glue has set, use a brad nailer (or a hammer and small nails) to nail down the top to the puzzle board. On the sides, ONLY shoot nails where you see the wooden supports, and do not shoot nails into the drawers. (See red arrows below, for example). If you shoot nails into the drawer areas, you won’t be able to open or close the drawers. Yikes! 🙂

For the top and bottom of the puzzle board, it’s safe to apply nails along the entire length, spaced 4″ to 6″ apart.

 

 

STEP 10: Cut and Glue Border Trim on Top

A puzzle board needs borders to prevent your puzzle from slipping off. That’s where border trim comes in handy! Again, you can either cut your own or you can use ready-made trim and glue it on top.

Another option is to miter the corners at 45-degrees or do a butt joint.

I got so excited that while the glue was drying, I started testing out the drawers! 🙂

 

 

Add an Optional Handle

The handle isn’t necessarily for carrying (although it does allow you to carry it…) but the handle is helpful for giving you a way to pull the puzzle board in and out from underneath of your sofa or bed. Especially the heavier it is, you’ll need to be able to get a grip on it. Adding a handle is a good idea!

A Puzzle Board for Your Favorite Puzzles!

The larger of the puzzle boards I have made was for my mom. While this is a 1000 piece puzzle, the pieces on this White Mountain puzzle are larger, so this puzzle is huge!

My mom loved her homemade DIY puzzle board and sent me these pictures to show me how she’s already gotten started!

 

 

The last puzzle I enjoyed was this 2000-piece Antique Market puzzle by Buffalo Games. It was sooooo much fun! Difficult, but not too difficult to cause frustration. And yes, I glued that baby in place. No way I was taking this apart! LOL

 

 

If you enjoy puzzles as much as I do, but you really need the flexibility of being able to do your puzzle from anywhere in your home, whether at your table or on your bed or the floor of your living room, a puzzle board really does help with keeping everything neatly together! And the best thing is that it slides right under your sofa or bed! 

Loved this tutorial?? Click here to save it on Pinterest!

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26 Comments

  1. I am in Victoria. Can you get these down here or do you know. Although my family is from Cobble Hill I only get up there for Rememberance Day at the church. Let me know if you can
    P.Kelly

  2. this probably won’t answer your question, but just looking at table u would guess 2-8′ 2×4 and 1 sheet of the mdf (4’x8′) would be enough.

    1. wow that was some Grammer I had there. lol

  3. I want to make this but wondered if you have a more detailed supply list, i.e. how much trim, how big of pine board, etc. Or a printable of the instructions to be able to reference easily. Thanks!

    1. Hi Larissa! Unfortunately, I only have what I posted in the blog post. I’m here to answer any questions about any of the materials, though! Let me know. You can also print the blog post out from your computer. Best of luck!

  4. My wife LOVES puzzles and although I don’t have the patience for those for some reason I really love Nanoblocks and even the more adult Lego sets (Nanoblocks being about 1/4-1/2 smaller than lego makes their titanic or Hogwarts a bit more challenging than the same structure from Lego, however I digress, my apologies. Recently my wife got her first 3,000 piece puzzle and we ordered a plastic folding table with the metal legs that fold out 3 times from a certain chain home and construction supply store but all 3 times although the tables were different lengths and brand names they were all advertised as being 3 FT Wide. After the third returned table due to its width being only 30” which is maybe close enough for family dinner to 3 FT but not close enough for the exacting standards laid out by a pre made puzzle that is basically 34” W x 42” L. So after getting upset after our third return I looked online and ALL the folding tables advertised 3 FT are actually just 30” no matter where you get them. So I have rigged up a card table and cardboard to get her through this puzzle but since she does so many 1,000-2,000 piece ones on a normal basis I have been scheming up trying to make one of these combining your drawers included type plans with legs that actually will fold or come unattached from the table and a tabletop that tilts from flat to pretty much a painters easel tilt in case she wants to do it upright. (I plan on using felt only for this purpose so the pieces won’t slide when she does them at easel angle.) Anyway, I know I may be biting off far more than I can chew since the last thing I made with saws and wood was a Pine Wood Derby car as a kid but I have a friend with the tools I need and between common sense and helpful posts like yours to guide my amateur hands I think I can at least conquer the basics if not the whole grand design schemed up in my mind. I was just curious if you could ballpark me about how much it was to DIY like you did since I have no idea at all of the actual cost of lumber or rails for drawers or molding etc? I would greatly appreciate it!!! I know yours is smaller than the dimensions I gave for her 3,000 piece but I think since it’s a first I will be making it with the dimensions for safely doing 2,000 and I also will have to figure in my mounts to allow the tilt and the felt and the legs and the wood stain she would want it colored in but if I had an idea of what the basics would cost me prior to showing up at the hardware store I would feel much more comfortable when I started asking the employees the dumber questions I have like “How would get legs to fold up into a table?” Lol. Sorry long winded I know but I SSSOOO want this to be right for her. She moved to the US from Norway and even before moving puzzles were her go to release. Even more so now that she has me and my 15 year old daughter keeping her hopping most of the time lol

  5. I love puzzles too, but now I do them online. No space requirements, and my cat can’t destroy it, LOL.

  6. Currently working on “Murder She Wrote” gameplay. Will pass on to my adult children and hey will pass between themselves. Read the story, work the puzzle. Not as easy as I thought. Found the 550 piece puzzle at local consignment/flee market for $3.00!!

    1. Oh my, that sounds REALLY fun! What a great buy. Puzzles are so expensive, so $3.00 is a steal!!!

  7. I love doing puzzles, but never do because of space! But, with this puzzle board DIY I can get back into it.
    Putting together a puzzle is what got me through my radiation appointments. There was a community puzzle in the waiting room and I would go extra early so I would have time to work on the puzzle! I found it to be very mentally healthy to do for me.

    1. Oh, Diane, that is SUCH a touching story of the community puzzle!! Oh wow…… I truly hope that you can either make one of these for yourself, or buy one online so that you can get back to doing puzzles. I gave this large puzzle board to my mom who absolutely LOVED it. She also didn’t have space to stretch out to do a puzzle but she does now. And I’m so happy for that. Thank you for commenting!!

  8. My favorite brand is White Mountain Puzzles because I love their collage puzzles, of which they have many. Galison is another nice brand. I personally don’t like doing scenery, mountains, sky so I search for vignettes within puzzles.

    I definitely want one of these puzzle boards but there’s no way I’ll be making one. 😅

    1. Yesss…I love White Mountain Puzzles! I went in to their site recently and so many good ones were sold out. I’ve never heard of Galison. I’ll look them up! 🙂 And I’m with you. I don’t like doing scenery for the most part because it’s too challenging. I like ones with bright colors and identifiable pieces. LOL

  9. I was so tired of moving my big piece of cardboard with a puzzle from my kitchen table. So last year I painted an old (already painted) Gate leg table. The main purpose of it is for Puzzles. I really like your Puzzle board idea. For the 1000+ piece puzzles a good idea would be to have some sort of small legs at the top. This way the puzzle board would be at a “slant” to be able to see the top of the puzzle better…. maybe a way to slide them in and out. Just an idea for you to “Puzzle “ over.

    1. HAHA! Love that pun, Kathy! 🙂 Yes, I’ve seen puzzle boards with the tilt and legs. I’m always into perfecting something, so I am going to try one with that little tilt. 🙂 What brand of puzzles do you recommend? I’m on the hunt for more brands! 🙂

      1. I don’t have a”brand” of puzzles I like more then others. I get some as gifts, some from friends. Our Library Friends groups has them donated by someone for our Book/Media sales. I get some there also. I don’t care to use felt under my puzzles. The pieces don’t move around smooth enough for me.

        1. I agree–I think felt would make them “stick” to much, and I like to shift and move pieces.

    2. Wondering if you’ve thought about adding felt to the table surface?

      1. No, I’ve never thought about adding felt to the surface. I like having a harder (instead of softer ) surface for doing puzzles. Felt inside of the drawers would be nice, though! 🙂

  10. Ann Lee S says:

    those are gorgeous puzzles!! and a super idea. Up here we have some wonderful puzzles by Cobble Hill Puzzles Canada; I like The Edwardian Lady …. and also Butterflies. Vancouver Island, BC, Canada

    1. Thank you, Ann! I wonder if I can find those on Amazon… I’ll have to look! I bought about 15 puzzles since Christmastime! LOL. One brand that I bought (the one you see on the puzzle board) was a lot of fun (and very difficult) to put together, but I didn’t like how the piece felt! They were waxy and it felt gross doing the puzzle when I first started putting it together. Not sure why those pieces were like that. I can’t remember the brand. I’ll have to look! Thanks for sharing!

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