Built with birch logs, birch stairs, birch doors, birch wood blocks, and white stained glass panes. Built with birch logs, birch slabs, and birch doors. The stairs beside the door give a sloping feeling.Ģ. Built with birch logs, birch stairs, birch door, and birch wood block. Stairs above the doors with walls on the top break up the brown tones.ġ. Built with spruce logs, spruce stairs, spruce doors, and cobblestone walls. The stairs hold up the slabs, making a window space.ģ. Built with spruce logs, spruce stairs, spruce slabs, spruce doors, and cobblestone walls. The walls give the feeling that the overhang is being supported.Ģ. Built with spruce logs, spruce slabs, spruce door, and cobblestone walls. The stairs at the very top are placed upsidedown for a larger indent.ġ. Slabs above the door add a small gap, maybe a window. Built with oak logs, oak stairs, and oak slabs. Built with oak logs, oak doors, oak stairs, and oak slabs. A slight overhang in the front gives the build a feeling of depth.Ģ. Built with oak logs, oak door, and oak slabs. (Black lines mean stairs // White lines mean slabs.)ġ. Using three of the main tree types, I built some doorways. (Yes, I am aware that I messed up on #1 and made a slab with a black line. There are probably many, many more ways to build arches and entryways, but these are the ones I came up with. Built with dark prismarine blocks, dark oak fences, and cobblestone slabs. A very medieval design used for a castleħ. Built with cobblestone blocks, cobblestone stairs, and cobblestone slabs. Gives a sort of cross shape, could be used in a church.Ħ. I like using this one for underground homes.ĥ. This would look nice on a farm or ranch.Ĥ. Built with cobblestone walls and oak fence gates. Could be used for an entry to a dog house.ģ. Built with oak wood blocks and oak stairs. Built with oak logs, oak slabs, and oak stairs.Ģ. (Black lines mean stairs // white/grey lines mean slabs)ġ. If you look closely, you can see there are stairs and slabs hidden throughout. Once you've got your basic survival taken care of, you can really get creative with things in Minecraft.I built some various entryways and arches. Dig out a lower floor beneath your house and you can spend your nights mining underground.Make a hoe and you can start planting any seeds you find next to your house to get some food growing.Add plenty of torches in the area around your house so enemies don't spawn nearby at night.Cook some sand in your furnace to get glass, and make some windows so you can see if there are any surprise enemies lurking outside.Find some sheep so you can get wool for a bed – this way if you die you'll at least be able to spawn back at your house.You can even create patterns in the floor with different wood colors. Replace the dirt walls, roof, and floors with something nicer, like cobblestone or whatever woods are handy.Once you've made it through that critical first night, there are a number of upgrades you can do to your house to make it function – and look – a whole lot better: I've survived my first night, but what do I build to upgrade my house? If you still have time you can cook logs in the furnace to make charcoal which you can then use to craft torches to place inside and outside.Make a door using the crafting table and use the door to seal your entrance.Create and place a crafting table on the inside of your house, and then use the crafting table so that you can create and place a furnace inside too.Pick a side for your entrance and then break a 1 block by 2 block entrance from your wall.You want at least a 3 block by 3 block footprint for the interior of the floor, so build a 5 block by 5 block outer wall for your house that is about 4 blocks tall and then seal the top in with a 3 block by 3 block roof, preferably you want to use dirt for the walls and roof to save wood and cobblestone.You have time to work, so find an open spot to build and then go and gather up some wood logs, cobblestone, and a bunch of dirt.
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