DIY Chore Board For All Ages

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DIY Chore Board

I love my new chore board. My kids seem to like it too.

I am a firm believer in child labor chores.

Actually, I’m a believer in my children learning the value of hard work, being part of a team and how to carry their own weight. It just so happens that helping out around the house is a great way to work toward this goal.

The thing is, keeping five children organized and on task (and more importantly, inspecting their work) is a tough job in and of itself.

I’ve tried winging it. That didn’t work our so well. I’ve also tried store bought chore boards and more excel spreadsheets and custom tables than you can imagine.

I’ve also seen the elaborate DIY chore boards on Pinterest that are obviously meant for people with ALOT of time on their hands and who obviously do NOT have more than two children. (I’m joking. Kind of.)

While some of these worked for some of the time, we didn’t stick with any of them. We either outgrew them, they weren’t efficient or I wasn’t dedicated enough. Or I just didn’t have the  time to make them.

DIY Chore Board

Fast forward to about six months ago. I fell in love with my friend’s DIY Chore Board which she made based off of this original design and tutorial from  Today’s Fabulous Finds.  Love. at.  first. sight.

It only took me six months to get my ducks in a row and just do it, but I finally finished it (just in time for summer) and I love it!

What I love about this DIY Chore Board

  • It was an easy project – doable for even the most novice do-it-yourself-er.
  • The materials were inexpensive, some of which I had on hand.
  • This Chore Board is simple, efficient, customizable and will grow with my family.
  • It also looks great hanging on the wall.

DIY Choreboard

What I did differently on my Chore Board

  • I used a larger board – 6″ x 24″
  • I used scrapbooking letter stickers and then decoupaged to seal instead of stenciling.
  • I added more hooks to  mine to help me organize chores that needed to be assigned.
  • I placed all of my hooks on the face of the board instead of putting some on the underside.
  • I hand printed my chore tags with a fine tip sharpie.

How I saved money on supplies

  • I used a FREE paint sample I got from Lowe’s.
  • I bought the letters at 50% off at Hobby Lobby.
  • The bronze spray paint for the cup hooks was 40% off at Hobby Lobby.
  • The cup hooks, modge podge and  and ribbon to hang it with all came from my craft closet.

You can find the full tutorial at Today’s Fabulous Finds as well as grab the free printable template for the chore tags.

What tools do you use for assigning and tracking household chores?

 

 

 

Comments on this entry are closed.

  • lynn June 20, 2013, 10:34 am

    Wonderful – would nails at an angle work? or screws?
    What is your procedure for “inspecting what you are expecting” from their chores?

    • Amanda June 20, 2013, 4:03 pm

      Hi Lynn,
      I think nails at an angle or screws would both work. As long as you have something for your tags to hang on and not fall off easily.
      When the kids complete a chore, they move that tag to the bottom hook under their name. Most often, mornings are chore time so they are not allowed free time until all their chores are completed. On days where we have things scheduled first off, we assign an hour in the afternoons for chore time. If I see them taking free time before chores are completed, I add another chore. When all tags for one kid are on the bottom hook, I inspect and have them finish or redo as necessary. If they are dishonest and move their tags to the complete hook without actually doing the chore, I assign extra chores as consequences for being dishonest. I do not penalize for a less than perfect job, but rather focus on willing attitude and 100% effort.