Using leg hair as a fanny heater is utterly unhinged .

I, like many others, love to save money, so I try to fix things around the house myself. Do I know how to use a saw? Absolutely not. Have I tried to use a saw before, anyway? Absolutely. But, as a fellow amateur DIY-er, I admit that we sometimes need to recognize our limits, and that reigns true for these 16 do-it-yourselfers.

1.This person tried to build a fancy glass staircase and opted for a cut-up ladder and acrylic:

2.This tile job doesn’t even slightly line up right:

3.This woodsy bathroom filled with rocks, cork, and tree stumps:

4.This attempt at fixing a broken fence:

5.This door handle that doesn’t turn:

6.This door that probably leads to Wonderland:

7.This porch swing that looks like a deconstructed shopping cart:

8.This person who attempted to hang a toilet paper holder but gave up after nine attempts and bought a standing one instead:

9.This tiled outdoor staircase:

10.This toilet seat warmer made out of leg hair:

11.This “shower” head:

12.This…honestly I’m not sure. It looks like it’s supposed to be a heat and air unit but it also looks like a toaster:

13.This failed light switch installation:

14.This walkway of nipple lights:

15.This ramp that was meant to be wheelchair accessible but then quickly lost its intended purpose with the addition of stairs:

16.And finally, these bark-inspired cabinets:

the ladder leading to the acrylic short platform

tiles put on haphazardly

the floor of the bathroom is rocks

a wood plank in between the fence as a fix

door handle is a lego build

door extends to the ceiling

it's a wire swing in the same vain as a shopping cart

the holes on the wall

top of the stairs are tiled and the rest is exposing the cement

actual human hair shaved off and glued onto the seat

shower head is a faucet

a track of wires in the wall going to the wall unit

the outlets have a cutout through the door frame

hallway up the stairs has a lights that look like boobs

the ramp is raised from the street with no one to access

wood panels as the doors