Showing posts with label Furniture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Furniture. Show all posts

Some Sneak Peaks at what I've been working on lately.....

A dining table and chair set for the shop.  My biz partner here did the table while I tackled the chairs.

 Re-doing the older girls room which includes paint, bedding, curtains, blankets and possible new furniture...
A Union Jack buffet (inspiration from Miss Mustard Seed) for the shop.

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As you can see....its been a bit busy around here.  Plus summer is in full swing.  It seems that our summer is busier than the school year, if that's possible.  Will put up more picture and tutorials soon...I hope!

Painted Chevron Dresser {Tutorial}

What's a girl to do when her hubs leaves for a week and takes one of four children AND its spring break?  

Well, I painted.  
A lot!

All winter this lovely thing has been sitting in my garage begging to be painted.  We had a little warm weather and I had some free time, so I got busy.
My first step was to locate all my supplies.  After a long winter, it took awhile.  Turns out I'm not so great at cleaning brushes.  I'm the wrap-and-put-it-in-the-fridge/freezer-because-I'm-going-to-use-it-again-soon type of gal.  Then I run out of time and forget. 

Don't do this. 

Clean your brushed as soon as your project is done.  This way, when you finally get some time....you won't be looking EVERYWHERE for your brushes and can't find one....cuz they are all frozen in time with paint...and you have to resort to a small roller.

Supplies:
Annie Sloan Chalk Paint in Old White and Duck Egg Blue
Brush (not a roller! :)
Sanding Block
Painters Tape
Tape Measure and Pencil
New Knobs (optional)

I LOVE ASCP because there is no priming involved.  You just remove knobs (if applicable), clean your piece and starting rolling.....er, I mean painting.  In this case, using a roller happened to be a blessing in disguise.  This dresser has a wonderful texture and rolling preserved it.  
 Can you see it?
After two coats of paint, I let her dry as I went inside to fix three remaining children lunch, and put one down for a nap.
Then I tried on the new knobs I had chosen.  
Total sidebar....I took my girls on a little errand to Hobby Lobby to pick out knobs...what a fiasco.  There were way too many choices!  I couldn't make a decision and my barely three year old was "helping" (no sense of design yet).  I ended up walking out NOT purchasing anything because I was so overwhelmed and stressed out with three kids in a store that has a lot of breakable items.  (Remember...hubs was out of town, so I HAD to take them with me.)  Went back the next day with a clear head and walked out with these wonderful 50% off glass knobs.

Measuring and taping off the chevron was the next step.  First decide how fat or thin to paint them.  I wanted mine more on the fatter side for two reasons.  First...I think it looks better...less busy.  Second....completely selfish...less taping! :)

I marked off the top and bottom points of the pattern and equally spaced them across and down the dresser.  Then started taping...point to point, up.  Point to point, down.  Make sure you tape the outside of the stripes you want to paint, which means inside the ones you don't want to paint. (Which is why the taping looks uneven.)
I also took a razor and "cut" the tape above and below each of the drawers since I kept the pattern "framed" inside the dresser edges.  (Picture is out of order, but wanted to show the tape on the drawer supports.) 
Before I pulled the drawers out and started painting, I marked a tiny "X" on the spaces I was supposed to paint.  Just to make sure I did the right ones.  Then painted the drawers first, then the supports (see above.) 
Ahhh....not bad for a day's work.
 The next next is distressing a bit, so I went at it with my handy dandy block sander.  I hit some spots heavily and the also gave the front and all over light sand to soften the edges of the chevron.
 Finally, a coat of AS clear wax, brushed on and buffed off.
Adding the glass knobs was the finishing touch!


I'm so happy that you can still see the crackly texture.
 I wish these were the colors of my house, because I love this one.  Unless the hubs lets me redo the entire first floor....this won't fit in. :(  Oh well, it will go up for sale as soon as the shop is finished with its remodel in a couple of weeks.
What a difference a little paint makes! 
Soon I'll show you everything else I painted over spring break....

Oh...and its for sale here.

Dresser redo


I am LOVING this chalk paint stuff!!!  Besides the gorgeous finish, there is NO sanding and NO priming!  WooHoo!!!

I did a few repairs then painted it in ASCP Old White.  I lightly glazed it and put the original hardware back on.  


I know its a great piece when I want to keep it.  But alas....there is no room in my house, so it went up to the shop.


Here is what it looked like before.  Not too bad.  Some of the bottom had been chewed by....something?  I also had to do some veneer repair to the top.  Ugh.  First time, but it came out ok.






Hall Tree Makeover

This is a piece that has been painted and painted (before a certain *ahem* someone knew how to paint furniture) and painted.  And now painted again.  It has also been moved and moved and moved and moved.  It had been beaten up then stuck in room after room, then in the upstairs hall because there was no place for it.  I finally asked myself, "Why do you keep trying to make it work?"

So I attacked it with a light sand (only to clean up some of the bumps and bruises) and then some ASCP in Paris Grey.

See these hooks?  I took the bright silver ones off, since they didn't really fit.  I found these at an antique store.  I know they are supposed to be ceiling hooks, but they were the perfect amount of rusty and quirky so I put 'em on.
Then I waxed it and attacked it again to distress it.  There was no way I was stripping this baby and that's what it needed, so I figured I'd bring out the flaws rather then try to hide them.
 
And my dear friend hand painted this tile (since I broke the other one trying to get it out).
Here are the legs... 
Below the grey is black.  Below the black is white.  Below the white is wood.  They all make an appearance.

Here is the (almost) before and after.
Its up for sale in our booth SOLD.  I really like the after, but my entire house has a carmely-tan trim (which sets the tone for the entire house!), and grey just does not work with that!




Armoire Redo


(Sorry no "staged" picture, but this baby was too heavy to move around for pics, so I cropped out the messy garage! ;)

Found this baby on Craigslist (love CL!!!) originally for The Painted Paisley (the furniture painting biz I have with a friend).  
Then when I moved "B" to her own room, the room did not have a closet so I needed an armoire and decided I'd keep it.  I started painting it before the 115 degree 3 month heat wave set in and so  it sat, and sat, and sat in the garage with its base coat, but that's as far as I got.

We finally had a break and two of my kiddo's started school, so I had a little more free time and tackled the rest.

Ripped out the shelf inside and added a bead board backing.
Outside - ASCP Chateau Grey
Inside - ASCP Old White
Look at the pretty details on the front that are brought out with a little dark wax.
And the hardware that originally I was going to paint or replace, but looks perfect as is now!  

Before and After
Since I took so long I found another piece for the nursery.  This one is for sale SOLD here.

Chalkboard Sofa Table



Before...
After....
I'm still amazed what a little bit of paint can do.  But not just any paint....Annie Sloan's Chalk Paint (Old White.)  My new favorite kind of paint thanks to Miss Mustard Seed!
Still haven't decided what to write on it....

"Welcome"

"Your keys are here"

"Don't forget your lunch"

 Its for sale here. {SOLD}

Linking here:

Furniture Feature Fridays




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