Things You Should Buy on Craigslist

Well my friends, I am sad to say I will not be posting about a finished project today. I am currently in what could be described as hoarding buying mode. As in stalking craigslist for stuff I can restore/upgrade and sell at the Lucketts Spring Market. I’ll post pictures of some of those acquisitions later tonight or tomorrow.

Because I’ve filled our dining room with antiques and currently have a dresser in the back of Fiona, I am trying to pull myself away from buying right now so that I can, you know, actually repair/refinish/paint/upholster all the projects I’ve already acquired. But I am still seeing amazing deals on craigslist, and someone needs to know about them. Because Apartment Therapy’s craigslist roundup is not cuttin’ it these days. So here are some listings I want to hit up but can’t right now on account of my self-imposed buying stop:

Retro Metal Lawn Chairs – 4 – $25 (Arlington). They need work but seriously, $25 for all 4 of them??? Amazing deal.

Antique Cane Bottom Dining Chairs – $50 (Shirlington). These have been up since 9 am this morning so they might be gone. But again, you could pick up just one of these for $60 in an antique store, so $50 for 6 of them is a really great deal. These are the kinds of chairs my grandpa would refinish. They are classic and great craftsmanship.

Antique Children’s Desk – $40 (Gainesville). This is a bit of a hike for me, but kid furniture is so cute. I wish I could snatch this up. I try to “respect the wood” as the boy would say, but this could look soooooo cute if you stenciled the desktop a la my desk, or if you used chalk board paint on the desk top so a kid could literally write on the desk top. Seriously though, am I the only one who is smitten with kid furniture? Yay for selling at a market and getting the excuse to buy stuff like this while I’m (thankfully) sans children.

6 Drawer Dresser – $25 (Hyattsville).  I don’t know that it’s really my style or I would have it in my house, but I can definitely ride the wave and appreciate this retro-mod Madmen dresser. You could definitely do something cool to it. Just google “mid-century dresser redo” and check out the beautiful image results that come up. Or you could restore it to its former glory. And it doesn’t have to stay in the bedroom. This could be used as a buffet or TV stand.

1 dresser 6 drawer – $30 (Camp Springs). Me-oh-my, it appears that people are just giving away mid-century dressers today. Here’s another one. $30? That’s less than I spend on most of my shirts that would go in this dresser.

Antique Wood Dresser – $75 (Arlington/Clarendon). This is a gorgeous dresser and you probably wouldn’t have to do anything to it. In fact, please, please don’t do anything to it. This poor soul appears to have a heartless girlfriend who is making him sell all his family heirlooms now that they are living together. Silly woman, do you not realize how lucky you are to have a bf whose grandparents let him inherit such beautiful things? I am kidding. A little. Perhaps she had a good reason and grandparents who give her prettier antiques. Did I mention that I’m pretty sure this would sell for close to $300 in an antique store?

Round, Solid Wood Table – $35 (Arlington/Clarendon). But seriously, does this guy not sound go sad? There is just no room for his dad’s favorite table. Also, is he in his 30s or 40s? Because no boy I know would manage to own stuff so nice and not ruin it playing beer pong or something. Or I guess in this case quarters would be a more reasonable assumption.

So, none of these things may be available anymore. In fact, I just caved and emailed the guy about the table. Although now that I think about it, I don’t think that table will fit in my car. But you get my point. You don’t have to spend $200 on an antique dresser when people sell them for $75 on craigslist. You just have to shop often, email quickly, and be able to pick up that day or the day after. And you will snag a dining room worth of deals.

OK, time to head off to date night!

Update: Omgosh! I emailed the sad man about the table and dresser and got an email back from the gf. And it turns out, I ALREADY BOUGHT STUFF from the happy couple. Yes, I bought two chairs from them last week! I wish that I had known 1) about these other beautiful things that were available when I bought the chairs and 2) the sad conditions upon which I acquired the chairs! I wonder if they recognized my email address. 

Update on the Update: The person who was going to buy the dresser from them was a no-show. That means this dresser is allllllllll mine. And sorry friends, I think this piece might be a permanent fixture in my house instead of an addition to my collection of market furniture. I just don’t know that I can part with it. Oh, and I did reveal myself as a previous purchaser. It just seemed like disclosure of that fact ahead of time would be less awkward. 

The Un-Caned Chair

A while back I acquired this chair at a thrift store. I liked the lines of it and knew it could look really cool with new upholstery, so I took it home and let it sit in my dining room all winter. At this point, that shouldn’t be a surprise to you.

I have to admit that I twinge a bit when I watch people remove cane from furniture and replace it with upholstery. It seems like they do it with such enthusiasm, like cane is this terrible trend in furniture that we need to remove from antiques across the country. I think part of the reason for the slow extinction of cane furniture is that, at least most of the time, the cane is damaged, and few people know how to replace it. I realize that this is kind of an unreasonable rant about cane furniture, but humor me for a minute. My grandpa knew how to weave cane furniture and often repaired chairs for friends. My grandparents’ house was full of cane chairs, and I associate that craft strongly with my interest in refinishing furniture. So to remove cane from a piece almost seems sacrilegious to me.
But, I am a heathen and so I replaced the cane on this point chair with upholstery. *GASP*. I know, I feel guilty, but hear me out. There are two ways to apply cane to furniture. One is by weaving the cane yourself through holes in the seat, and the other is by using pre-woven cane that you shove into a crevice. Based on the technique used on the chair, the replacement technique will be different. Well, my grandpa was really good at the actual cane weaving, but I don’t remember seeing a ton of furniture in their house that used the newer technique, so I didn’t feel as bad replacing the cane with upholstery. Plus, getting the cane out of the crevice was going to take forever, this chair didn’t seem worth the effort.
To makeover this chair, I first removed the seat by unscrewing it from underneath the chair. Then I removed the cane by running my flathead screwdriver through the holes and ripping the cane close to the frame. Once I had removed the cane piece, I took pliers and removed as much of the cane left over as I could. I knew it didn’t have to be perfect because fabric wouald be over it.

 I decided to paint this chair because the shiny look of the finish made it look a little too 80s for my taste, and I didn’t have the patience to refinish it after my last chair refinishing endeavor. So I took my chair down to the basement where I sanded it with 80 grit sandpaper, getting it nice and scuffed up. I decided to spray it with a light coat of primer outside because I planned to paint the chair white and didn’t want the wood to bleed through. I also wanted to make sure that the paint bonded to the still a little bit shiny frame. I guess I forgot to take a picture of this step in my haste.

Once the primer was dry, I brushed on two coats of Glidden flat paint in Picket by Martha Stewart. While the paint was drying, I took apart the old seat cushion and found a gross piece of foam completely falling apart. Yuck. I also found a ton of staples in the wood seat, which I used my screwdriver and pliers to remove. Luckily the Christmas Attic uses lots of staples to hang things in their store, so I had plenty of experience removing staples. It took quite a bit of work to get the wood seat clean, but I got it done.

At this point it was late on Sunday night, so I let the paint dry overnight and hung out with the boy for a while.
The next morning I used some 80 grit sandpaper to distress the edges of the chair. I used a cloth to dust off the chair and then brushed a coat of Minwax Polycrylic over the entire chair. I let the chair dry while I was at work and got back to it when I came home in the evening.
Then came the upholstery. This was my first try at upholstering something with a picture back, so it took longer than I had hoped, but that always seems to be the case when I’m learning a new technique. Again, I used instructions I found on Design*Sponge to upholster the back, except I only used layers of Dacron instead of foam because the foam was just too poufy for this chair. I used my parents’ electric stapler to attach all the layers. It sucked. No matter how hard I tried to keep the staple gun straight, the staple went in sideways. I finished off half a box of staples and had to go to the store to get more. And after I thought I was finished, I realized that somehow the pattern wasn’t quite straight, so I had to fix it a little the next day. So a recommendation for you: If this if your first try, I recommend using a floral or something more abstract that is forgiving in terms of pattern placement.

Upholstering the seat was much easier. Notice that this seat has a hole in the base. I didn’t really want to cut a new piece of wood, so I used another set of instructions I found on Design Sponge to attach some new furniture webbing to the wood base. Then I added a thick piece of foam and then covered the foam and seat in Dacron, stapling on the underside of the seat. I made sure not to obscure any of the holes for the screws to attach the seat back to the frame.
Next I cut a piece of fabric for the seat, made sure I lined it up centered, and stapled it in place. I improvised a bit with the back, which had room cut out for the back of the chair.
Finally it was time to sew my cording. I used this tutorial from Centsational Girl to make my double welt cord for the back of the chair. Double welt cord is great because it hides all the imperfections of the staples. Sewing the cord was easy, but a bit time consuming. I also didn’t have a zipper foot, so the cord is a little wider than normal. That was fine by me. Once I had finished the double welt cord, I attached it to the chair with a hot glue gun. Then I sewed a single welt cord and attached it to the bottom of the chair with a glue gun. I screwed the seat back onto the frame, and my masterpiece was done.

On Going for It

Source: imgfave.com via Sarah on Pinterest

There are very few things that I can do for eight hours at a time and not get bored. But for some magical reason I can spend 8 hours sanding and be disappointed that I need to stop, shower, and, you know, be social on a Saturday night. I have the hardest time dragging my butt out of bed in the morning, but the prospect of snagging a great piece of furniture at a yard sale will get me moving.

I’ve always maintained that I will not be the person who spends 40+ hours of my week in a job in which I’m not content. I know that’s a huge departure from many mindsets, and that it’s a little entitled—many people don’t have an option and do what they can to put food on the table, and I respect that.  But it just seems to me that if I can somehow do something that I love instead, I should do everything to make that happen. And I should do it while I’m young, before I have a family and my priorities change. And keeping a family in mind, I should set myself up with something that could allow me to work and do something I love even when I do have a family.
No, I’m not quitting my job. No, I’m not going back to school to pursue a dream career. I don’t even know what that would be at this point. I do know this: I am completely happy when I am acquiring, fixing, refinishing, and painting furniture. I am so, so, so content to make things. So happy that I had this conversation with the boy, who had a (very good looking, ladies) friend coming to town on Friday:
Me: Soooo…what are you guys doing tonight?
Boy: Not sure, picking up [good looking friend], getting some dinner, and then probably going out.
Me: So you guys probably want to have a guys’ night, right? Because you can totally have a guys’ night if you want to have a guys’ night. I know you haven’t seen each other in a while.
Boy: Uh, yeah maybe. Did you want to go out this weekend?
Me: Uh yeah, sure, I just, you know, wanted to give you guys some time together tonight because I figured you would want a guys’ night and then maybe I’ll see you tomorrow night after my brother’s play.
Boy: What are your plans for tonight?
Me: Well…I was kind of going to sew some curtains. 
Hi, my name is Sarah, I am almost 25 years old, and I want to rush home from work on a Friday night so that I can start a project. It’s a good thing I already have a bf, because I think my chances of picking up a new stud muffin would be pretty low if I continue along this trajectory.
My bf is sweet. When I go home after work and debate between going to the gym and painting furniture, he tell me,“do what makes you happy.” That is almost always furniture/crafting/sewing (which I reason burns some calories and has me in some very muscle-straining positions sometimes anyway). His advice makes me more aware of what I enjoy doing, and prevents me from feeling guilty about letting the floor of my room become overgrown with dirty clothes and my letting my butt get a little bit bigger.
When friends from college ask me what my plans (for life?) are, I don’t generally have an answer. I saw an old friend last fall and told him that I didn’t quite know what I wanted to do with my life, and that I had some ideas but didn’t know how to pursue them and blah blah and I was being mega wishy-washy about it. And he wasn’t having my wishy-washiness and told me that I could do a lot, I just needed to be more confident in myself. I knew he was right.
This blog has helped me gain more confidence. The wonderfully positive comments on my projects, which have been featured on other sites, made me think, “Hey, I might actually be good at this.” I’m participating in a community of bloggers and furniture people, which makes me feel more professional too. I am by no means an expert, but when friends ask me how to refinish something, I find myself spouting off tons of information to them.

via The Old Lucketts Store

About two weeks ago I came across some information about the Lucketts Spring Market. Lucketts is a really cool “Vintage Hip” store near Leesburg that sells antique furniture from the likes of Miss Mustard Seed and other people who I unfortunately don’t know. I highly recommend a visit if you haven’t been there already. Anyway, Lucketts was selling booths for their spring market for $75 apiece, first come, first served. I decided on a whim to fill out the application and mail in my check, thinking that they were probably full of vendors already, but who knows? Friday night, while I was sewing my curtains, my roommate said, “Oh yeah, there’s this big envelope for you that came in the mail.” It was from Lucketts; I’m in! Mark your calendars to come see me at Lucketts on May 19th and 20th!

I have a little under three months to do enough furniture to fill a 10×10 booth and–oh yes–prep for all the businessy stuff that comes along with it. It feels amazing. Finally, for the first time since I was in college, I am working towards a concrete goal. I’m also taking a risk on myself, which I haven’t really done in a while either.

I don’t know if this is the beginning of a selling-furniture on the side thing, whether I could turn it into a full-time gig, or where my career is going. But I know that at least I’m taking a professional step into doing something that makes me incredibly happy, and that’s worth something, right?

Source: etsy.com via Sarah on Pinterest

Have any of you sold at the Lucketts Spring Market before? Any tips? Does anyone have a 10×10 tent they need to get rid of? I better stop writing. I have SO much work to do. 

Herringbone Side Table

Update! My furniture restlessness continues, and this table is now for sale in my shop

Wayyyyy back when, I showed you that the nightstands I planned to use in my room were majorly small compared to my big beautiful grownup bed. I replaced the tables with bookshelves, which are still there. One of those little tables has been sitting in my dining room (also known as Sarah’s furniture storage space, sorry roomies) for a while.

I haven’t been happy with the side table (which I refinished) next to our sofa for a while, so I decided to nix it and move my ex-nightstand into our living room. Only, white painted furniture looks kind of odd in our living room because we have an ugly rental neutral on our walls, and the white looks a little dirty. And I kind of rushed to finish a paint job on this little guy (girl?) before I moved out of my parents’ house, so it needed a new paint job anyway.

Ummm this corner is really dark, so please excuse the hideous attempt at photo editing.  

Read more after the jump!
Even though I didn’t want to go with white, I still wanted this table to be neutral so that it didn’t compete with our beautiful pink TV console. I decided to paint the table gray. I used Glidden flat paint in Cobblestone, which is actually a Martha Stewart color. When choosing a gray, I made sure that it went with the fabric I bought recently, which I plan to make pillows out of soon.
I sanded the table somewhat lightly, and then used a paintbrush and a roller to apply three coats of paint onto the table. Once the gray was dry, I decided that the table needed something…a paint treatment perhaps? I decided to add a herringbone pattern to the tabletop with white paint I had on hand. Oh, and I did all this at night, so excuse these blurry and off-colored photos. 

To paint the herringbone pattern, I marked up the tabletop and taped it off for all the stripes. I used the tutorial from this beautifulceiling as a guide. This process was not as easy as I thought it would be. It actually made me feel kind of stupid. And not to brag, but I took calculus as a junior in high school so things like this are not supposed to be difficult for me. But I also think my math skills have declined over the years, so that could explain it. Meh, oh well. I digress.
So like three episodes of Sex & the City later, I finally had my table taped off. Check out the pile of failed tape in the corner of this pic. Yep, it was a trial and error process indeed.

Once I had the table taped off, I used a brush to get the edges, and then rolled on three coats of white paint. Oh, funny thing…it was the white paint that was already on the tabletop. Shortly after I put the third coat on (before it was dry), I pulled off the painters’ tape to reveal beautiful lines. This was the point in time where I rejoiced at the discovery of Frog tape, which many other bloggers love too.

There was only one problem with this pattern: I didn’t really like the gray line down the middle. And I realize as I’m writing this that, oops, I didn’t take a picture of what that looked. Well, anyway, rather than trying to continue the individual stripes through that middle stripe, I decided to paint it white. After the white paint dried, I put down two more strips of painters tape and then used a brush (the roller was too wide) to apply three coats of paint. Like the herringbone stripes, I pulled the painters tape off shortly after I finished the last coat of paint.

Ta-daaaaa! Now our little gray table has a herringbone “inlay” you might say.

I’ve got to be honest with you. I can’t decide how I feel about this pattern.  Part of me wants to get rid of the stripes and add a more feminine design, something akin to my stenciled desk. Part of me sees an arrow every time I look at it.  So I didn’t put a protective coat on it yet. I want to live with it for a few days before I make a decision. If I decide to keep it, I’ll brush on a couple layers of Minwax Polycrylic in satin to give it a little sheen and protect the tabletop design.

But whatever I decide to do, this tabletop will likely stay painted. I like the way a design looks on a table that has raised edges like this.
And, of course, the before and afters:

Have you guys painted any furniture lately? Embraced this oh-so-popular chevron/herringbone trend? Come on peeps, I know you’ve got some cool stuff to show me.

Linked to: Saved by Suzy, Savvy Southern Style, Someday Crafts, The Shabby Creek Cottage, Primitive and Proper, Domestically Speaking, aka design, Somewhat Simple, The 36th Avenue, Miss Mustard Seed, Mom 4 Real, 504 Main, Chic on a Shoestring Decorating, Beyond the Picket Fence, Thrifty Decorating,  2805, At the Picket Fence, Primp, The Artsy Girl Connection, Southern Lovely, The Vintage Farmhouse, Common Ground, Decorating Insanity, Embracing Change, Redoux, The Shabby Nest, Homemaker on a Dime, Creations by Kara, Blue Cricket Design, WhipperBerry, Tatertots and Jello, The Scott’s Crib, Jillify It, Remodelaholic, The Crafty Blog Stalker

Helping My Desk Chair Grow Up a Little

Confession: When I posted pictures of my desk last month, I was kind of embarrassed about the blue and green desk chair. The patterns in the fabric and on my desk competed with each other, the blue didn’t connect with anything like I expected it would, and the whole ensemble looked childish. I knew I needed a change.

Let me refresh your memory. Here’s what the chair looked like when I first showed you my desk:

And here’s what it looks like no that I’ve helped it grow up a little:

I thought about painting this chair other colors, but I just couldn’t decide what color would work. I didn’t want white because I wanted the chair to have some contrast. I thought green would probably end up looking the same way the blue did.

So I decided to stain this piece. I knew it would be hard work, but what can I say? I had a vision. And part of me knew it would be a challenge that would make me very proud upon completion. I was right.

First, I removed the seat, which was easy because I never actually screwed it down. Then I took my chair downstairs to our basement and set it on top of two drop cloths and a piece of cardboard. Sure, it was overkill, but I knew the process would be messy and we live in a rental unit.

I applied a layer of Citristrip to most of the chair and let it sit for about 30 minutes. I thought that would be enough, but it really wasn’t. So my first attempts to strip this chair were  quite time consuming. I decided to put a layer on right before I went to bed, and then come back to it after work the next day.

Clearly, letting Citristrip sit for a while is a good idea, because I was able to get much more of the paint of that way. Still, the job wasn’t nearly as thorough as I wanted. There were just so many crevices that were hard to get paint out of.

I left the project for the night and decided to investigate other tools and options that would make the job easier. That’s when I stumbled  upon a website that didn’t so much recommend taking the chair apart as it did give instructions for putting a chair back together. I wish I could remember what that website was, because I’d love to give them credit.

Talk about a light bulb moment! I decided the best way to thoroughly remove paint and finish from the chair was to take it apart and then strip and sand it. So I bought a $5 rubber mallet from Home Depot and went to work gently knock the chair apart at the joins. Everything came apart pretty easily, minus the seat support pieces that I had actually glued in myself not very long ago. But I was still able to get 3 out of four of them disconnected.

Once I had the chair in pieces, it was way easier to strip. I worked on it for the rest of the evening and then washed down all the pieces with steel wool dipped in mineral spirits. Here’s what the wood liked at this point in the process.

As you can tell, the wood was definitely not clear. That’s was OK because I knew I would have to spend a lot of time sanding anyway.

Did anyone see that episode of Dear Genevieve recently where she got that crochet artist to cover a chair for Genevieve’s client? And the woman said it took her “four movies” to do a project that large? Well, sanding this chair took me four movies and the entire first season of Sex and the City. No joke, I literally spent 6 hours on a Saturday sanding pieces, and then another 6 or 7 hours after work sanding the pieces of the chair so that there wasn’t any paint on them, and they were nice and smooth and ready to soak up some stain.

First, I sanded the chair with 80 grit paper, then 120 grit, and then 220 grit. To get in the look those down the front of the chair, I wrapped sand paper around my 5 in one tool and rubbed it in the detail of the chair. The sanding was hands down the longest part of this process.

Note: I wore a mask during this whole sanding process, and I’m glad I did. You should see the amount of dust in our basement and on the front of the mask itself. I always wear a mask when sanding, even when I’m hand sanding.

When I was finally done sanding, I wiped down each piece of wood with a damp rag, and then a dry rag. Then, I set up shop staining in my basement. I was able to stain the entire chair with three coats of General Finishes Java gel stain in one Saturday. I applied stain with a foam brush and buffed it off with some lint-free rags my nurse roomie snagged for me. Oh, and I kept the basement door open a lot because this stuff is fumey.

I let the stained pieces dry for 24 hours, and then went to work putting the chair back together. I used a cotton swap to apply wood glue to the holes and joints of the chair. I put the pieces together by laying one side of the chair on the floor and putting the connecting pieces in their joins. Then I placed the other side of the chair on the connecting pieces.

Once the chair was together for the most part, I used clamps to tighten all the joints. I like to use a bar clamp with a screw-like piece that allows you to gradually tighten the clamp, and easily release it as well. I think they tighten better than the ones that tighten by pulling on a lever. I actually used a collection of clamps for this piece while letting it dry, once all the joints were secure.

As you can see, I went a little overboard with the clamps. I let the wood glue dry overnight with the clamps in place, and then took them off the next morning before work.

After the chair was back together, I used a paintbrush to apply some Minwax Polycrlic in satin that I had on hand. I used brushed on three coats of poly to the chair, sanding each previous layer with very fine sandpaper between layers. The finish looks cloudy after you sand it, but once you wipe the dust away and apply another layer of finish, it looks clear again.

Once the chair was done, I had to recover the seat. I used my parents’ electric staple gun to staple four layers of batting over the chair so that it would be cushy and fit snugly on the chair.

Then I covered the layer of batting on the seat with a mossy green corduroy fabric from Jo Ann fabrics. I actually wanted that color green in velvet, but this fabric was only $8.99/yard, and I had a 40% off coupon.

With the fabric attached, I attempted to attach the seat to the base, but was unsuccessful. Right now my seat is just sitting on the chair, which isn’t much of a problem really. But I should figure out how to attach it.

I am so smitten with this little corner of my room now. I guess you could say I am kind of crushing on my handiwork. This finish on this chair looks great if I do say so myself. I love that I was able to pull it from its spray-painted sadness and make it look grownup again. I also love that the chair and desk do not match at all yet I feel like they work together. I absolutely love contrast between dark and light, and masculine and feminine in decorating, and I feel like I’ve somewhat unintentionally captures that with this piece.

I’m fully aware that plenty of people will look at this and think that this chair’s “after” looks more like a before. And if this chair was just sitting by it somewhere in my house, I might have stuck to the painted route and added a patterned fabric. But because this chair’s home is pretty specific, I didn’t want to head down that street.

Here’s a fun before and after for you:

Annnnd another.

What are your thoughts? Have you ever attempted to strip and refinish a chair before? Do you prefer painted or stained chairs?

Linked to: Miss Mustard Seed, Saved by Suzy, Savvy Southern Style, Someday Crafts, The Shabby Creek Cottage, Crafty Scrappy Happy, Finding Fabulous, Primitive and Proper, aka design, The 36th Avenue, My Repurposed Life, Beyond the Picket Fence, Thrifty Decorating, 504 Main, Chic on a Shoestring Decorating, Wayward Girls Crafts, The Shabby Nest, A Potpourri of Life at 2805, At the Picket Fence, Southern Lovely, The Vintage Farmhouse, Common Ground, Primp, The Artsy Girl Connection, Mom 4 Real, My Uncommon Slice of Suburbia, Hope Studios, Shine Your Light, Creations by Kara, Blue Cricket Design, WhipperBerry

Street Rocker

Good morning lovelies, Happy Thursday! I’m quite disappointed that I won’t be able to show you another successfully completed project today. My desk chair is still very much a work in progress. I’m hoping to finish sanding it tonight and start staining on Saturday. If I keep up the good work, I should have something to show you by this time next week. The chilly weather and my insistence on using oil-based stain may pose a problem. We shall see.

Still, my morning is off to a great start. Why, you ask? Well, for starters I made a delicious smoothie for breakfast. Yum!

But most importantly, I snagged this beautiful antique rocking chair from my neighbors’ curb!

Some people get their morning kicks by getting in a run before work, some people consider the morning a success when they have time to read the paper and enjoy a cup of coffee, and some might even complete a Sudoku or crossword puzzle before they head into the office. But I…well, I consider the morning a success when I acquire a new project before 9 am and manage to blog about it.
I’m sure my roommates are 1) just finding out about this now, 2) not remotely surprised because they saw the chair on the curb when they all left the house before I did, and 3) wondering where this will fall in my getting-to-be-quite-lengthy list of furniture projects. But I just couldn’t resist. Finding furniture on a curb for me is like finding a little lost puppy. I want to find it an owner asap before it gets taken to the dumpster…or something like that. And if I can nurture it and provide it a good home myself, even better.

My neighbors actually had two very nice chairs out last night that I considered snagging, but I would’ve had to reupholster them completely, and let’s be honest, that type of a job is beyond my realm of expertise at the moment. This rocker, however, is a bit less of a commitment. It has a wood frame, a pretty basic upholstered front and seat, and it won’t involve complicated sewing and cording and such. It does have coils in the seat, but I think I’m ready for them. Baby steps.

I hope to be back tomorrow with more pictures of my works in progress. But if you don’t hear from me, it’s because I’m working tirelessly on my other chair that I am determined to finish over the next week. Wish me luck! And if I don’t talk to you, have a great weekend!

And that’s why I never get anything done

Happy Friday everyone! Did you like my blog post yesterday? It only took me, ooohhh, six hours. Why? Because trains of thoughts like this happened (cue dreamy flashback music):

Pinterest screen shot modified by yours truly
“Now what is that name of this little eye hook thingy? I better google it to be sure.” I open an internet browser, which is already open to Pinterest. 

“Oooh Pinterest, what’s new tonight? Oh wow, Centsational Girl pinned something about using a dryer sheet to clean an iron. I really need to clean my iron because my attempt to use the cool setting on a wool sweater just melted wool fibers to my iron and made it all gunky, but I’ve been too lazy to actually clean it so I just rub it on a far away place on my ironing board to get anything loose off and then roll the dice and put it on my clothes. I really need to get that sweater dry cleaned before winter is really over and I have no chance of wearing it again and then I’ll have only worn it twice this year.”

“Oh wow, a pink chalkboard painted door! See, pink can be girly and playful and grownup and sophisticated all at the same time! I’m totally glad I painted that dresser for our TV pink. What is this blog? I’ve never heard of this blog. Why haven’t I heard of this blog? Why is it at a .org website? I should read the “about me” section and maybe it will make sense. Hmmm, it doesn’t say anything about .org. Oh well. There are no ads on it, but it still seems popular. Interesting. Hey, there’s a recipe for donuts on here that doesn’t require frying. Yum. I bet I could make those. Hey they have apple cider vinegar in them. Does that mean they’re like apple cider donuts? I loved those ones at Carter Mountain Orchard. I should go back there again.”

“Why is so much wedding stuff coming up on my Pinterest? If the boy saw this page he would be thoroughly freaked out. Oh dear, it looks like I inadvertently followed a website that is totally about weddings but I thought it was about all kinds of things because it doesn’t have a wedding specific name. Oh well, they have cute cocktails. Not that I ever actually make cocktails because they tend to be pricey and involve more work than I like my drinking to involve. This is making me thirsty.”

“Ooooh Photoshop actions. Those look cool. Why do I still not really know what those are? Maybe this link will show me. Nope, it doesn’t really. I think it’s like a Macro. But how does it work on everything? I should download some of these actions. No, I really shouldn’t tonight, I’ll just repin the pin.”

“Omgosh, it’s after midnight already. How am I up this late again? I really need to get back to my blogging. I have to finish this post tonight. I better close this browser and write more.”
Close internet browser, open word document and read sentence I was originally attempting to complete.
“Oh yeah, I was going to look up the name for that hardware.”
Open up browser and cross my fingers that my attention span is a little bit longer this time. But it’s not, because instead, I just realized how ridiculous it is that this happens to me all the time, and I decided to write this blog post about it.
Grow up, Sarah. 

Our TV Console Gets an Upgrade

I’ve always been intrigued by the ways that some people modify furniture for different purposes, and I’ve always wanted to take on a project of my own.  But I also have a tough time taking a nice, solid wood piece of furniture and modifying it a ton. So when I came across this decent but not super nice dresser at the Goodwill near my house and discovered that one of the drawers wasn’t in the best of shape, I knew it was a great candidate to be repurposed.



The plan? Make it into a TV console to replace our blond Ikea (maybe, might as well be) TV stand in our living room. I would take the middle drawer out, add a shelf, and then convert the drawer front into a door that closes when we’re not watching TV. Perfect!

Like many of my other projects, this one only took me almost a year to complete.  
OK it didn’t really take me a year from start to finish. But it did sit in a corner of our dining room accumulating crap on top of it because the drawers weren’t really in the shape to put stuff in yet.
Around Christmas I decided that this piece would be one of my first projects to tackle in the New Year. it was already upstairs and I didn’t really feel like lugging it all the way downstairs and out our back door to sand. So first I tried to sand it upstairs by hand, but the more the light changed and the more I tried to sand, the more I realized that I needed to take my power sander to this thing. So instead of taking it all the way downstairs, I took the drawers downstairs and hauled the dresser out to our very small front step and sanded it quickly out there.
Once I was done sanding, I wiped the dresser down and took it back into the dining room where I had set up shop. I used a putty knife to apply wood filler to the dings that I couldn’t quite sand out, and to a place where I got a little too ambitious with my power sander. I also filled the hardware holes on the fronts of both bottom drawers. I let the filler dry overnight and sanded it down the next day. In some spots, I had to use to coats to get a really smooth finish.

At some point during that whole process I made it over to my parents’ house, where I had planned to use a power tool to separate the drawer front on the bum drawer so that I could make my door. My dad took one look at it and determined it didn’t need any power tools, and he took the front off in less than 10 minutes with a handsaw. Thanks, Dad! I happily tossed the other pieces of the drawer and took my new-ish door panel home with me. 
Once I had it home, I used my power sander to sand down the back edges where the drawer pieces had been connected, and filled the gaps with wood filler.
 In order to make my shelf, I removed the middle drawer glide from the dresser frame. Then I measured the piece, went to Home Depot and had a thin piece of plywood cut to make a shelf. I wanted to keep the drawer front as a door on the front of the shelf, so I needed to get the shelf cut so that drawer front could still sit inside. I used a very light piece of wood because I didn’t want the shelf to be heavy, and I didn’t need something super sturdy since nothing heavy would sit on it. I was also able to get Home Depot to make all the cuts for me, which was super helpful.  I nailed the shelf down in the front and then got to painting.
I planned to paint the dresser a raspberry so I used grey primer, which is meant to go underneath dark colors. I used Glidden because, well, that was the only grey primer that Home Depot had in stock. I rolled it on with a mini foam roller and brushed the parts that couldn’t be rolled.

After I let the primer dry overnight, I got to painting the color. First I used Very Berry from Glidden. After two coats I knew it wasn’t gonna work. It was just too bright for our living room. So, even though it was going to cost me another $10, I knew I had to change it. I went back to Home Depot and bought another quart of Glidden flat paint in Martha Stewart’s Beet – the same color that I used to stencil my desk. I got Glidden because apparently Home Depot isn’t selling Martha Stewart regular paint anymore? I had no idea. Anyway…

It was MUCH better. I ended up putting another 2 coats of the second color on there, but there were a few spots that weren’t covering well and were making me majorly regret not doing two coats of primer in certain places. The wood seemed to bleed through no matter how many coats of pink I put on, so I went over a couple of spots with primer, sanding the edges after it dried so that the finish still looked smooth. Then I put another coat of paint on the whole dresser and touched up over those primed-again spots.  Then I went over the entire dresser and drawers with two coats of protective finish, and 5 (yes, 5, I’m a little obsessive) on the surface. I used a satin finish that gave the piece just the amount of sheen that I wanted.
Now I had to decide on hinges. I learned that cabinet hinges are tricky things. Depending on how your door lays within a cabinet, there are different types of hinges that you can buy. My dresser door was basically like a full inset frameless cabinet door mount. Here’s a picture so you can get a better idea:
via
If you need to buy hinges for cabinets or for a project like mine, I recommend you check out Rockler’s article on understanding hinges. I know, that sounds like a thrilling read, but it is quite useful. 
Home Depot only sold one hinge that I could use on my dresser. It was a hidden hinge, but it was kind of industrial looking and I knew that whenever the door was open, I’d see the ugly hinge. Plus, it seemed really strong, almost too strong. And, I wasn’t sure it would work with the slight height the shelf added to the mounting. So I kept looking. I went to a local hardware store where they suggested I just use basic flat hinges, so I bought some, took them home, and realized that they added too much height to the door, preventing it from folding into its cubby hole. Back to square one. Finally, I found some full inset, oil-rubbed bronze hinges on the Woodcraft website and was able to get them in my local Woodcraft store. Which, by the way, is one of my favorites stores to just browse. It has seriously cool stuff.
When I got home and went to put them on my door, I realized that the door wasn’t quite wide enough to fit into the wrap around section, and the door would be just a smidge too far into the cabinet. I decided to fashion some shims out of a wood paint stirrer (not the first time I’ve used a paint stirrer for furniture repair). I didn’t have a saw, so I drilled a hold of little lines, snapped each piece off, and sanded the rough edges. Then I used wood clue and clamps to secure the shims to the back of the door where I wanted to attach the hinges. I painted the shims the same color as the dresser, since they would be visible when the door was open too.
To attach the hinges, I used the hinge as a guide to mark spots where I needed to drill shallow pilot holes. After drilling the pilot holes, I attached the screw on the side of the door first, and then on the shims.
When I went to put the hinges on the shelf, I had a small problem – they were deeper than the lip that I left on the shelf, so they either stuck out or didn’t fit. No worries – I pulled up the middle nail in the board slightly and was able to slide the hinges under the shelf.
Now that the hinges were attached, I needed to take two more steps: install something that would keep the door closed, and install supports that would prevent the drawer front from dropping and damaging the bottom drawer. I used a small oil-rubbed bronze magnet as the door closure. Initially I attached a magnet to the left and right side of the door, but when I tried to close them, only one side of the drawer would close at a time. Evidently the drawer was ever so slightly crooked. So I removed both magnets and opted for one in the middle, which works great.

Seriously, the sound of that little door closing onto the magnet is so satisfying. Every time I close it I think, “Yessss, I made that.”
I decided to use two eye bolts and ribbon on either side of the shelf and door to support the door and prevent it from smashing down on the other one. I pull the bolts on the door in the same holes that I had put the magnets in originally, which is why they aren’t on the very edge. I’m considering attaching actual drop door supports if I can find some reasonably priced ones in oil-rubbed bronze. Oh yeah — I also drilled new holes in the lower two drawers and attached new knobs from anthropologie to the piece. 


We all agree that this piece adds a lot of personality to our living room. I like watching TV even more now because 1) I don’t have to put my hand up in the air and point the remote down to get the cable channel to change and 2) I get to admire my work the whole time too.

I’m Sorry, You’re Gonna Have to Find Somewhere Else to Sit

Remember this pretty little chair that I pictured last week with my desk?

Well, now look at her:

Excuse the smart phone-quality photo above. 

She was pretty by herself (yes, it’s a she) and might have looked better in another room, but I thought she 1) didn’t connect well enough with my room in her deep turquoise state and 2) looked childish next to a borderline, could-go-both-ways desk that some people thought would look nice in a little girl’s room. It would, but that’s not exactly the look I’m going for at nearly 25. I’m all for feminine, but I want it to be sophisticated too. So in an effort to make this chair grow up a bit, I plan to refinish it. Not paint it, but actually sand and stain it. And that required me to strip all the paint off.

My first attempt, with the chair fully assembled, was mildly successful. Still, I had a really hard time getting in all the crevices to remove paint. After all, if I’m going to go to this much trouble to refinish a chair, I’m going to do it right. I also think there is part of me that knows my grandpa, who did an amazing job refinishing antique furniture all the time, would do a nearly perfect job, and there’s some romance and nostalgia in trying to emulate his old-school, high-quality craftsmanship.

After doing quite a bit of googling, I found one website that gave instructions on how to disassemble a chair. Duh! Why didn’t I think of that before? It’s the same strategy I used when I refinished my coffee table last fall. So I bought a $5 rubber mallet from Home Depot and used it to knock all the pieces out of their joints.

And boy oh boy did that make my life easier. I know that this “chair” is going to be so much easier to sand in pieces too, which is important because I need to do a very thorough job. Tonight I’m going to make one more attempt at stripping some stubborn residue off the pieces, wash it down with mineral spirits, and start sanding. Oh yes, I’m also going to write a blog post so you can see our new, pretty TV stand. Fingers crossed that I don’t stay up till 2 am doing it!

Update: I just linked up to Shine Your Light’s “Before” edition of her February’s Before and After link party. So I have to finish this by the end of the month! Although I’m hoping it will be sooner 🙂