The couple bought the base cabinet at a home center and adapted it to accommodate the beverage cooler. They made a countertop and floating shelves from pine boards they burned with a plumbers torch to accent the grain. “It created a unique look that you just can’t get with stains or paints,” Andrew says. Including the fridge, this bar cost Andrew and Zoe about $450 to build. Andrew and Zoe spent about four days building and installing the bar components from the bottom up. Fitting the setup from wall to window frame and to the ceiling slant gives it a polished, custom appearance. The Hunts framed in a standard door-and-drawer cabinet, adding a side support panel and a base for the freestanding beverage cooler to make it look built-in. A vent installed on the panel allows air circulation. Blue paint (Sherwin-Williams Naval SW 6244) unites the pieces. Three boards secured with glue and pocket holes along their long edges form the countertop. After sanding the top and practicing their burning technique on scrap wood, Zoe and Andrew scorched the grain by moving the plumbers torch back and forth, working in sections, and keeping the flame about 6 inches from the surface. After the wood cooled, they sealed it with spar urethane, a sealer often used on boats. The Hunts repeated the burnt wood finish on shelves. For one, they designed wineglass holders from square dowels and scrap wood then painted them black to match the metal shelf brackets. For each cabinet pull, Zoe glued together two leather strips and punched a hole at each end with a rotary hole punch, then she attached them to the door and drawer using screw posts.