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

Monday, January 30, 2012

A Transformed Vintage Mantel Find A Home In My Master Bedroom


Remember the mantel that I revealed in "How To:Vintage Mantel Gets A Makeover" last week?  Was that two weeks ago? Oh well, whatever...I revealed it.  (throat clearing noise)  Well, I have finished installing it to the wall in my Master Bedroom and have thrown together the beginnings of a vignette.  Still working out the kinks, but I wanted to show it to you as it stands now.

Here is the before and after...but of course before installation.  
My Master Bedroom is not outside in my backyard!!!  



I bolted it to the wall, like a good little ole DIYer using two "L" brackets and wood screws that I tapped straight into the bead-board on the wall, making sure to touch up the brackets with leftover paint from when we painted the bead-board.  Here is the mantel sitting on the wall to the right of a built-in, recessed television cabinet.



I found the neat enameled tub with stand a few years back at an outdoor flea market.  I love keeping my extra throw blankets piled up in it.  The little vintage suitcase has been altered with an antique finish, including a few french style decoupaged motifs and is filled with a few things I don't want laying around.                                                                                                                                          The top of the mantel has a variety of treasures including a neat pair of babies shoes, a vintage door knob, an iron dove finial from a antique iron bed that is sitting off to the right beyond the image, my great grandmother's white chamber pot and a self-portrait sculpture I made a few years back out of terracotta.  I'm holding a blue bird in my hands. Always rescuing something or someone.
I plan on taking a little more time to dress this mantel. I am thinking the addition of some dried hydrangea flowers in the chamber pot would look pretty.   I would also like to paint a 3 by 3 foot abstract landscape for the wall above it.  But for now, it is just okay with me.  
-The End-
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Tuesday, January 17, 2012

How To: Vintage Mantel Gets a Makeover


I have owned a vintage fireplace mantel for over a decade.  I bought it at an outdoor flea market during the year we lived in Atlanta. Getting it home on the top of my SUV while driving the Perimeter Highway in Atlanta was a harrowing experience to say the least!  It's a miracle it made it home without flying off and causing a 50 car pile up!

U G L Y.  Oh the things you do for your kids!
I bought it for my daughter's then-vintage pink and white little girl bedroom. It had shabby, chippy white paint and looked sweet set up with a little table and tea set, baskets of books and a few blankets.  But, as she grew, her love affair with this mantel didn't grow and when we moved into this home 7 years ago, she would only keep it in her room if we painted it to match the crazy purple, pink and black decor of her room.  We painted it and added a cork board to the fireplace opening.  This past Spring when she decided she needed a more grown up teen room, she came to me and carefully let me know that the mantel was, well...too girly for her new sophisticated design sense.  Kids grow up and do things like having their ideas. Sigh.  We removed it from the wall and placed it in the garage.

This past summer, I completed a huge transformation on our master bedroom and I decided to bring this mantel back to it's good ole shabby, vintage condition.  The walls are white bead board and yellow paint, so I wanted to give the mantel a slight contrast to the white and add an accent of yellow that would help it make sense in the room.


I first clean and lightly sanded the surfaces, taking care not to sand too hard because I didn't want that rough, chippy surface to be sanded away.  I started by painting the turn leg portions of the mantel with a mustard yellow.  I used Americana Craft Paint in Mustard Seed. Yep, that's right...a craft paint.  I liked the shade and knew that two coats of this as an accent would be perfect.  Here is what it looked like at this point. Don't get too worried, this is all going to work out!!  (Sunglasses required)
Notice that I did a real messy job getting paint all over the background surface?  Well, I didn't spend a lot of time trying to be neat because I knew that I would be covering up those spots with the main paint color.  I let this surface cure for a few days and then came back with two coats of ASCP in Creme.  I chose Creme because I wanted that slight warm, cremey tone to create a little contrast to the stark white of the bead board.  I waited a full day between coats.  I then finished it off with a good smattering of Fiddles and Sons clear soft wax.  Here are the results.


Love how that yellow peeks through showing off the little details in the surface!

I haven't gotten a chance to get this monster set up into my Master Bedroom. I really wanted to show it to you finished.  When I get it in place, I promise to come back and show you what it looks like against the white bead board and  painted yellow wall!

Here's a little before and after...


What an improvement!  This mantel is finally made it's way back to yummy-ness!!  Hope you like it!  I haven't showed it to my daughter yet.  Wonder what her reaction will be?  Who cares...it's mine now! (wink)

-The End-
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Tuesday, November 15, 2011

The Homeless Finch Joins in With Habitat Heros. You Can Too!

551 East Furniture DesignHave you heard of Habitat Heros?  No? Yes?  Well...I am just now waking up to this event that has been going on since October 20th.  I'm late to the party, but it's not too late! AND it's not to late for YOU to join in too!  So here is the idea.  Julia of 551 East Furniture Design came up with this totally cool concept for those of us who restore furniture to give back to our communities.  I found out about the event from Cassie of Primitive and Proper who is also one of the organizers along with Jacqueline from Simple Home Life, and Katie from Wildwood Creek.

Pick out a piece of furniture that you have restored, rescued, whatever....you gave it awesomeness.  Then you donate it to your favorite hometown charity.  Blog about it. Post it to the Habitat Heros Party.  Done. Easy. Simple.  A great thing to do especially during the giving season. 

So I am donating my Nightstand that I rescued and restored a few weeks back.  I almost sold this little princess, but I am glad that I didn't.  It became kinda a celebrity when it was featured on several blogs, including Beyond the Picket Fence, the website RoadKill Rescue and was even picked up by Apartment Therapy.  I have chosen my local Goodwill to donate my nightstand to and I am headed over there today to do it! 

Do you have a piece of furniture that you have restored that you are willing to donate?!  If so, do it and then come back over to the Habitat Heros Party and link up. You got until November 20th to join in.  Hey, I understand that they are offering some sort of bonus too.  Giveaways or something. Check it out!

Now I gotta get going.... I want enough time to drop off the nightstand and maybe even take a peek inside to see if they have any treasures today for me.  Get donating people!

-The End-


Wednesday, November 2, 2011

How To: Vintage Cabinet Gets A Chippy Finish

As a part of my Master Bathroom Makeover, I decided to hang a vintage cabinet on the wall that was previously on the floor in my dining room.  This particular space is pretty large and I needed something that would take up the space visually, and also provide function in our bath.  I am doing a farmhouse style makeover in this previously contemporary bath, so it has been a challenge, dragging on for months of projects.  Last week, I showed you the White Shutters that I hung to the sides of the windows.  The bathroom has been missing the cabinet doors for two weeks as we re-style them into something more appropriate for my style. 

I am going to show you the progression of what happened with this cabinet.  I have people ask me how I pull off this look, so I thought I would show you step by step. The technique is a layering of sorts of different colors with a solid coating of a final color before sanding back to reveal the color changes in specific areas.

 First I started with the green cabinet mounted safely on the wall.
-Before-
This bath is a lemon yellow and white to match the Master Bedroom.  If you missed the bedroom reveal click, here for that post.  Since the walls were yellow, I decided to add a significant amount of a bright yellow on the first layer.  I didn't cover the entire piece with this yellow.  I am just going to want it to show through in the areas that I painted it.  Also, I realize that this yellow is garish.  It will not be once I am finished.  This is a special mix that Sherwin Williams makes for me.  (I have the formula if you are interested.)


I am messy about this, it helps later by adding texture that my stain will pick up and highlight.  I even let some of the paint drip.  I don't care at this point.  No perfection here.  I let the yellow cure for a day or so. Next I added accents of barn red.  This red is a Valspar Signature Satin Finish Color in Heirloom Red.  I usually use Sherwin Williams Duration, but I had this, so I used it.  No waste.

I also made sure and got a few spots of the paint colors on the hinges and the vintage lock in the middle. You can see how I just kinda dabbed paint there too.  The accents that were laid up on the yellow parts, needed two coats to cover the yellow effectively.

After waiting a few days for that layer to cure, I came back with one of my favorite paint colors, Sherwin Williams Duration in Creamy.  Why my favorite?  I find it to be the most versatile white shade and is easy to alter with stains if needed.  So here is the cabinet with a nice layer of Creamy.
I let this sit for a few days, not because I needed to.  I was just busy.  So I came back with a sanding block and it wasn't rough enough to begin to removed the white.  So out came my Black and Decker Mouse with an 80 grit pad.  I sanded back the layers, having to change the pad out three times to get the finish I was trying to achieve.  Here is what it looked like at this point.  You can see the colors peaking through.


At this point, I gave the cabinet a thorough cleaning, removing all sanding dust.  The room was a mess, so I stopped and gave it a deep cleaning.  I was also pretty tired from all the manual labor, so I stopped for the day.  Notice in the image above you can see that the yellow is still bright and garish.  It is the next step that tones that color down to more of a brown mustard color.

I want to age this patina and the way I achieve this is to rub on a stain by hand.  I use a clean shop rag and MinWax Wood Finish in Dark Walnut.  I always where latex gloves for this process.  I don't like losing the touch I get with bare hands, but it just isn't worth the horrible clean up that is required on my hands and nails if I don't wear gloves.  On this particular piece, I rubbed so hard that two of my fingertips became exposed.  That alone was a thirty minute ordeal of scrubbing.  

The process is a wipe on wipe off type of application.  As I work, my rag becomes more saturated, so I must grab another clean one for the rubbing off part.  After I get the overall cabinet done, I come back with a throw away brush and concentrate stain in the cracks and crevices in key areas of the cabinet and gently remove the excess on the other area around the cracks.  

So here is the near completed cabinet.









Just scrolling through those final detail images makes my heart race!  Aren't they yummy??!! 

I will let this piece sit for a week or so to cure completely before coming back with my favorite of all favorite waxes, Fiddles and Sons for a nice top finish.  I never rush this step.  The stain takes several days to completely dry and harden.  I don't want the chemicals in the wax to lift a thing.

If you are still reading...thank you for taking the time to stop and hang here at The Homeless Finch.  This was a pretty lengthy post.  We are all super busy and it means a lot to me when people take the time to check out my projects.  Don't be afraid to leave a comment either.  It lets me know you were here!!   Now let me go and rest my tired little ole right arm...Phew! All that rubbing!  Guess this gets me out of cooking tonight. Well.....probably not...


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