How to Make a DIY Channel Headboard in a Chic Art Deco Style

14 Materials

If there’s one thing I’ve learned over the past few years, it’s that I really appreciate a cozy and welcoming sleeping space. Who’s with me? For this DIY channel headboard project, I wanted to create a Pinterest-inspired Art Deco wall piece that looks chic but feels comfortable too.


This pink velvet headboard is actually for a little girl’s room, so it needed to be cute and girly for her too. Let me show you how to cheaply and easily make your own DIY panel headboard out of thin pieces of wood, foam, and fabric. Let’s go!

Tools and materials:

  • Measuring tape
  • Pencil
  • Long, thin pieces of wood
  • Jigsaw
  • String
  • Tape
  • Sandpaper
  • Scissors
  • Foam
  • Staple gun
  • Velvet fabric
  • Screws
  • Screwdriver
  • Drill
  • Plastic keys
  • Hammer
  • Nails
Pink velvet headboard inspiration from Pinterest

Here’s the inspiration for my DIY velvet headboard. This is somewhere between a channel headboard (also called a panel headboard or stuffed headboard) and a fluffy decorative wall piece.

1. Measure & mark

Take out your measuring tape and mark 30cm (11.8 inches) on each end, then connect the two marks with a straight line.

Measuring the wood

2. Cut

Next, take your jigsaw and cut along the line that you drew.


Repeat for the other pieces, making each piece 30cm (11.8 inches) shorter than the one before. Mine were 180cm (70.9 inches), 150cm (59.1 inches), 120cm (47.2 inches) etc. I had one tall one, then two of each smaller size, which will create a cascading effect.

Cutting the wood with a jigsaw

3. Create the curve

To get a perfect curve at the end, make a mark in the middle of your board, around 30cm (11.8 inches) from the end.

How to draw a perfect curve

Attach a pencil to a piece of string, place the pencil at the end of the board, and tape the other end of the string to the mark. Make sure the string is pulled tight, then draw the curve.

Drawing the curve

Cut it away with your jigsaw, then sand the edge.

Cutting along the curve with a jigsaw

To get the same exact curve for all the pieces, trace the shape, rather than use the pencil and string again.

Tracing the curve

Measurements

Tip: you don’t have to follow the exact measurements I give you. I based mine on the space that I had; you can do whatever you want. If you have a smaller space, maybe make the pieces thinner. If you have high ceilings, you can make the pieces taller. It’s up to you.

4. Add foam

You can use whatever thickness of foam you prefer, but as it’s on the wall and it doesn’t have to be comfortable enough to sit on, I just bought the thinnest I could find. Cut around your wood pieces, leaving a 2cm (0.8-inch) margin, so you can bend it on top of the wood.

Cutting the foam

Bend the foam over the edge of the wood and staple it in place with a staple gun.

Stapling the foam to the wood

5. Add the fabric

Next, roll out your fabric and place the pieces on them. I needed 4x1.5 meters of fabric (4.37x1.64 yards) for mine. Cut around the pieces. Leave 4-5cm (1.5-2 inches) around the edges, so you have enough to cover the foam and staple to the back.

Placing the pieces on the fabric

Staple the fabric in place. Pull the fabric so it doesn’t create folds on the front side. Once at the top, play with the fabric—folding and pulling—to get the curve right.

Stapling the fabric around the curve

Similarly, for the corners on the straight end, pull the fabric in slightly.

Stapling the fabric to the corners

You should have something like this.

Panel for the DIY channel headboard

6. Assemble the headboard

Now it’s time to assemble the headboard. To make the board look seamless from the front, I used scrap pieces of wood from this project as connectors at the back of the pieces.

Adding connecting pieces to the back

Then, with some screws, I stuck the panels together. I used two screws on either end of the connecting pieces.

Screwing the connecting pieces in place

7. Attach the headboard to the wall

After the pieces were connected together, I placed them on the wall where I wanted them, made some marks where I wanted holes, and drilled the holes. You want one hole and one nail for every connector that you have between the boards.

Drilling holes in the wall

Hammer in the plastic keys to the holes.

Hammering the plastic keys

Then pass the screw exactly between the connector into the hole on the other side.

Screwing the headboard to the wall

DIY channel headboard

This DIY panel headboard was so simple to make and the result looks so effective.


This may be for a little girl’s room, but I would totally have a similar design in my own bedroom. In fact, I’ve also created an arched headboard using a similar technique, with the help of some pool noodles!

DIY channel headboard

What do you think of this pink velvet headboard? Let me know your thoughts and feedback on this project in the comments below.

Frequently asked questions
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  1 question
  • Alice Alice on Apr 13, 2023

    Your headboard is wonderful and not just for a little girl's room! The matching pillow is a win, did you make that too?

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  • Donna Donna on Apr 04, 2024

    OUTSTANDING Job!!

  • Melinda Melinda on May 31, 2024

    Wonderful and cost effective cause you can change material as child grows and tastes and interests change high five from a mother of five🤑

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