Letitia Bigelow: Why not just buy another one? By the time you have a carpenter or cabinet shop modify your existing cabinet you would probably be out the same amount of money.
Cristopher Gavalis: until now attempting something to do away with the ink, ask the mummy and father. the furniture would be further broken by using your schemes at hiding the mess. lock all chemicals, etc in a cupboard out of attain of the child.
Hunter Beech: Fishtank.
Morris Olexy: If it has doors where the TV goes, line it with cedar & use it as a place to store quilts & blankets.orDIYMeasure the depth & width of the TV opening. Go to a lumber yard & have them cut the best looking wood in those dimensions. Buy some metal dowels with flat ends for shelves, stain & varnish. Take a picture of the entertainment center, or if a small piece from the entertainment center that can be easily removed & put back, take it with you. Have a salesman help you select a stain that will most c! losely match your entertainment center.Stain and varnish your shelves. Drill holes half way trough for the shelving dowels on the inside walls of the TV opening at the heights you want the shelves. Insert the metal dowels & put the shelves in place.I used one without any modifications to hold my computer in when I first got my computer. The computer tower & monitor where in the TV hole. (I have a wireless keyboard & mouse, so I sit in a recliner instead of a desk chair.) I eventually filled the stereo shelves up with software boxes. The printer was in the bottom behind the doors. My computer & printers are now on a home recording studio desk & the software is in a video tape cabinet.Thigpen it's a $1,500 entertainment center. It would take an awful lot of modifying to spend $1,500 on modifications. You could have someone turn it into a giant powered subwoofer for less than $1,500. lol...Show more
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