Friday, January 31, 2025

Replacing My Electric Fireplace with a Custom Built-In

If you’ve ever let “resale value” dictate your home improvement decisions, it’s time for a reality check. Your house should work for you, not for some hypothetical future buyer who may or may not love your style choices. That’s exactly why my wife, Nicole, and I decided to kick our barely functional electric fireplace to the curb and replace it with something way more useful: a custom-built wooden insert that houses a proper center channel speaker.

The Problem: A Fireplace That Did Nothing

Our basement family room had a lot going for it—except for one glaring issue. It wasn’t wired for surround sound, and there was no good place for the all-important center channel speaker. The main culprit? A cheap electric fireplace that:

  • Made more noise than heat
  • Looked realistic… but only when it was turned off
  • Took up prime real estate where my speaker should have been

One day, curiosity got the best of me, and I tugged at the fireplace. Surprise! It wasn’t even secured. It was just sitting there, mocking me. That unexpected discovery gave me the perfect opportunity to run the speaker wires I needed. But it still left me with a dilemma—where would the speaker go?

The Solution: A Custom Wooden Insert

Enter my brilliant wife, Nicole, who suggested the obvious answer: get rid of the fireplace entirely and replace it with a built-in wooden insert. And thus, a project was born.

Designing the Insert

I jumped into SketchUp to design a simple but sturdy box that would fit snugly into the alcove. Nothing fancy—just a well-constructed plywood case with a walnut face frame to class things up.

Choosing Materials

For this project, I treated myself to some high-quality materials:

  • ¾” and ¼” walnut plywood – Pricey, but hey, sometimes the cobbler’s kids actually get shoes.
  • Solid walnut for the face frame – Because if I’m doing this, I’m doing it right.

Building the Insert

  1. Cut the plywood pieces – Two long pieces for the top and bottom, plus shorter side panels. And one piece of 1/4″ for the back.
  2. Assembly – Glue, brads, and 90-degree clamps kept everything square.
  3. Face frame – I used my Domino joiner for extra strength and alignment.
  4. Finishing – A classic combo of Seal-a-Cell and Arm-R-Seal for a rich, durable walnut glow.

Installing and Wiring

With the insert finished, I took care of some bonus upgrades:

  • Ran speaker wires and installed a low-voltage bracket for the center channel
  • Added extra electrical outlets because future me will thank past me
  • Secured the insert in place and even threw in an LED smart light strip for a little extra flair

The Final Result

The new insert fits like a glove (cue the Ace Ventura reference). It’s sleek, functional, and—best of all—it doesn’t pretend to be a real fireplace. Now the center channel speaker sits exactly where it should, and our home theater setup is finally complete…

…except now the built-ins next to the alcove look terrible. But hey, that’s a project for another day.

Until next time—happy building!

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What else would you like to see?

It’s Katrina (Paul’s daughter in law here). Since 2021 Paul has been sharing the journey of making all the furniture for his Oxfordshire home at Woodworking Masterclasses, in our series Sellers Home. The idea behind the Sellers Home series is that if you were to follow along and make every piece of furniture you would...

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Sunday, January 26, 2025

Hand Tools on Wood

We all have creative ways of entertaining ourselves, but it might be a little more unusual for us to see the contrast between watching as a spectator and creating our way out of one world into another by the doing of things creatively, working with our hands. In my early days, as a new and...

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Friday, January 24, 2025

Writing On a Lived Life

In past years, like many of us, I’ve had to recover from different things. The most recent of these was recovering from three busted ribs after a man, an athletic runner, chased after me and with no warning, rammed into my back. I felt my ribs pop on impact, before I even hit the ground...

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Wednesday, January 22, 2025

Card Scraper Question

Thanks Paul. I have recently picked up a cabinet scraper. However, I seem to get a better finish with my card scrapers. Is that normal? When do you use a card scraper over a cabinet scraper? I need to revisit your cabinet scraper video as well. These scrapers are amazing. I don’t know why more...

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Friday, January 17, 2025

Another Perfect Scraper Solution

I come up with them all the time and this one should knock your socks off . . . Or at least take incredible shavings for you. New to woodworking or a seasoned machinist, I often get woodworkers lamenting that they sometimes get a good edge to Card Scrapers, but mostly not. I put this...

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Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Things New

Something stirs deeply in new beginnings. The gestation of an inspired possibility in the ordinary of life prompts us to think of things beyond our capacity for a thought is nothing more than the expansion of a small cell, a pulse of oxygen, of blood and our brain reshaping, refolding itself with valleys between ridges,...

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Friday, January 10, 2025

The Easiest Way to Handle Plywood Without Breaking Your Back!

For all of the great benefits of using plywood in our projects, it really is a pain in the butt to deal with. Every aspect of working with sheetgoods presents challenges, including purchasing it, transporting it, maneuvering it around your shop, and even cutting it down to the sizes you need for your project. In this video, I’ll show you what I think is the easiest way to handle plywood in a one-man shop. With some planning and knowledge, perhaps we can make the prospect of dealing with these big sheets a little less daunting. And most importantly, we can keep our backs safe while we’re at it.

Items You Might Be Interested In:

Looking for a great way to store plywood in a small shop space? Check this out! 

The post The Easiest Way to Handle Plywood Without Breaking Your Back! appeared first on The Wood Whisperer.



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Wednesday, January 8, 2025

It Came Out Right

I remember when #4 Stanley planes would sell on eBay for around one pound, or even less if it was an English version. There are remarkable differences between some UK Stanley models and US versions. Oh, it’s not really in functionality or quality where the difference lies, none of that, they both work exactly the...

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Tuesday, January 7, 2025

Dual-Purpose Card Scraper

When you master hand tool methods, developing real skill beats all else. Nothing will better mastery if not for speed and efficiency alone. That’s why my advocacy is to take the path of greater resistance because through resistance training you develop muscle in the whole of your body––along with the ever-important mental acuity too. Don’t...

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Saturday, January 4, 2025

Happy Birthday, Paul!

Hello everyone, and Happy New Year to you all! It is my dad’s 75th birthday today. I hope you will all join me in wishing him a very happy birthday. He has shown great resilience this last year. Three broken ribs would have set a lesser man back further than it has him. He has...

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