So I finally decided to set up my own workshop at home last month. Always wanted a place to fix stuff or build small projects without tripping over the garage junk. Here’s exactly how it went down.

Clearing Out the Disaster Zone
First, I stared at my disaster garage with old paint cans, busted lawn chairs, and random cardboard boxes everywhere. Felt overwhelming honestly. Spent a whole weekend just hauling crap to the dump. Protip: wear gloves when handling mystery garage junk – found a dead mouse in one box. Gross.
The Big Floor Mess-Up
Thought floor paint would be smart. Bought epoxy coating without reading directions properly. Poured it right over dirty concrete like an idiot. Woke up to sticky peeling patches everywhere. Had to power wash it all off twice before redoing it right. Lesson? Clean surfaces until they shine before painting.
Workbench Wars
Almost blew $700 on some fancy pre-made bench. Thank god I checked Facebook Marketplace first. Snagged a solid used workbench for $80 with minor rust. Took me 3 hours to sand and repaint it with rust-proof spray. Added locking wheels so I can shove it around when I need space.
Tool Shopping Nightmares
Wandered into Home Depot like a lost puppy. Immediately felt tempted to buy every shiny tool. Stuck to my list though:
- Basic cordless drill (Ryobi – cheap and works)
- Actual toolbox instead of my old plastic buckets
- Good clamps because tape just doesn’t cut it
- Multi-tip screwdriver set
Spent about $150 total by avoiding the mega-kits.

Lighting Saves My Eyes
My single garage bulb made everything look like a murky cave. Almost drilled through my finger twice. Grabbed four LED shop lights on sale. Mounted two above the bench and two near the door. Game changer – can actually see screw heads now without squinting.
Where Safety Went Wrong
Forgot safety gear initially. Got sawdust in my eyes on day one. Next morning bought:
- Clear goggles that don’t fog up
- N95 masks for sanding
- Fire extinguisher ($20 peace of mind)
Wish I’d done this before the eye incident.

Storage Wins & Fails
Bought a cheap pegboard for tools. Bad idea – hooks fell out constantly when grabbing stuff. Swapped for slatwall panels instead. Hung coffee cans for nails/screws with labels scribbled in Sharpie. Works way better.
Final Setup & First Project
Took about three weeks total from junk pile to functioning space. My starter project? Building simple shelves from scrap wood. Messed up the measurements twice, but hey – that’s what workshops are for. Still stoked I can finally fix my wobbly chairs without begging neighbors for tools.