Bed Risers & Headboard
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Attach the headboard to your bedframe or the wall to give it the height needed.
Put the headboard on risers also... that's what we did.
I sold my bed frame and completely got rid of it. Then my wall was free to be creative. Shiplap seems to be the go-to project (thanks Joanna Gaines!) but it is really cool when you stain pallet boards different colors and you can add floating shelves etc... Just a thought.
Sounds like your headboard isn't attached to your bed frame/platform. If you can attach it, then it moves up/down with your bed.
I have kind of the same problem/question. I just made a pallet bed with 26” legs and a trundle frame underneath. I used 2 pallets and attached them with 2x6’s on the outside and a few pieces of wood going across under the 2 pallets where they meet. It made the bed VERY BIG! I’m afraid that even with the wood supports as well as additional straight metal joint reinforcements, it isn’t supported enough.
So, how does this have anything to do with your question? Well, I have a beautiful sleigh headboard that I remade and I was wondering if I added 2x4’s to the back of my headboard, allowing the 2x4’s to both raise the headboard and then bolt into the bed, acting as additional legs for support??
Hi Vanessa, you can add the risers to the headboard as well, or you can hang the headboard on the wall. Hope this helps you out. You can pick up plastic bed risers at most any store that sells bedroom or dorm furniture (they come in a wide range of sizes), then just place them under each side of your headboard. If you've got a drill handy, you can turn basic wood blocks into risers by drilling a hole big enough to hold your headboard's legs.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O7bW2Nyvlpw
I attached my headboard to the wall so no matter what I did (I elevate the head of my bed due to sinus problems).