Item is ready to go into service.

The first casualty of the design phase was the idea of "earthquake proof." Mama nature has a way of making bigger earthquakes later, so I let go of that idea early on.

Instead of a drop edge, each shelf features a shelf lip to both stiffen the shelf and to prevent canning jars from just sliding off the front edge without some pretty serious jiggling going on.

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So let's see. Pic one is the finished item upright and ready to be moved to the pantry room. Pic two shows a half pint jar of salmon and a pint jar of potato behind the shelf lip, lips are 1 9/16 tall.

Pic three is earthquake hangers. One of the metal bits gets attached to the wall, one to the back of the shelving, than the flexible wire with threaded connector to attach the two together. Once the unit is in the pantry room I want to find the studs in the wall blah, blah, the hope is to coil the wire through both brackets twice before closing the threaded connector.

Pic four was previously posted in the design section here, showing continuous vertical plywood casing, then 8 scale inch wide pieces of plywood as shelf supports. No dados were made in this project, but the pile of plywood in the overcrowded garage is much reduced. Having let go of "earthquake proof" as a design goal, further separating each shelf vertically so the labels on the jar tops could be read for elevated wife approval factor was accepted as a design constraint.

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