Invite a DIYer to help you design and build a simple wooden birdhouse, measure and assemble parts, sand and paint safely with supervision.



Step-by-step guide to invite a DIYer to collaborate on a wooden birdhouse
Step 1
Ask a grown-up to help you contact a DIYer and invite them to collaborate on building a wooden birdhouse.
Step 2
Sit with the DIYer and draw a simple birdhouse design on paper showing where each piece will go and where the entrance hole will be.
Step 3
Use a ruler to measure and mark each wood piece on the wood according to your drawing.
Step 4
Ask the DIYer or an adult to cut the wood pieces along your marks using safe tools.
Step 5
Lay out the cut pieces on a flat surface to check that they fit together like your drawing.
Step 6
Apply wood glue to the joining edges of the pieces that will connect.
Step 7
Have the DIYer or an adult hammer nails or drive screws to secure the glued joints.
Step 8
Put on safety goggles before you start sanding.
Step 9
Sand all rough edges and surfaces with sandpaper until the wood feels smooth.
Step 10
Wipe away dust from the birdhouse with a cloth so the paint will stick well.
Step 11
Paint the birdhouse with a base coat using paint and brushes.
Step 12
Decorate the birdhouse with patterns or details using small brushes and let it dry completely.
Step 13
Share a photo and a short description of your finished birdhouse on DIY.org.
Final steps
You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!


Help!?
If we don't have a saw or nails, what can we use instead to build the birdhouse?
If you don't have a saw or nails, use pre-cut wooden birdhouse kit pieces or thick cardboard for walls and join them with strong wood glue or hot glue and small screws where the instructions say to 'cut the wood' and 'hammer nails or drive screws'.
What should I do if my measured pieces don't fit together like my drawing when I lay them out?
If pieces don't fit when you 'lay out the cut pieces,' re-measure each mark, sand or trim the edges a little, and ask the DIYer to carefully re-cut along your marks and dry-fit with clamps before you apply the glue and nails or screws.
How can I adapt the steps for younger children or older kids?
For younger children let them focus on the drawing, painting, sanding with coarse sandpaper, and decorating while an adult or the DIYer does the 'measure and mark' and 'cut the wood' and handles hammering, and for older kids have them practice measuring, marking, and driving screws under supervision.
How can we personalize or improve the birdhouse after painting?
Add a small wooden perch nailed under the entrance hole, seal the outside with outdoor polyurethane once the base coat is dry, and screw a hanger into the roof so your weatherproof birdhouse is ready to photograph and share on DIY.org.
Watch videos on how to invite a DIYer to collaborate on a wooden birdhouse
Facts about woodworking for kids
📏 A common small birdhouse floor measures about 4×4 inches, but larger species need bigger floors and entrance holes.
🐦 Many songbirds (like bluebirds, chickadees, and wrens) will use a well-made birdhouse year after year.
🪚 Sandpaper grit tells you smoothness: low grits (e.g., 80) remove material quickly while high grits (e.g., 220) give a fine finish.
🎨 Use non-toxic, water-based paint and paint only the outside of the birdhouse so baby birds stay safe inside.
🪵 Woodworking is an ancient craft — people have been shaping wood into tools and homes for thousands of years.


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