Friday, April 16, 2010

Another Project...


I really enjoy refinishing wood furniture, it's a hobby that I picked up recently. My friend Rachele, that I have mentioned before, paints professionally and she taught me a few tricks and now I am hooked. Newell and I decided to try buying old, neglected beauties, and fixing them up and selling them. I found this old dresser at Goodwill for $25 and then bought about $12 worth of spray paint. When I saw it my heart skipped a beat. Sitting there, covered in yellow and gold paint and scarred by layers of dirt, dried makeup, and even a substance that looked like caked-on ice cream. There was crayon and nail polish and the paint was scuffed and the wood was even a little dinged up in places, but it was still a diamond in the rough. There was nothing on it that I couldn't cover or fix.

Some of the things I have learned that you must look for are:
  • If the drawers slide in and out easily. It's hard to fix the moving pieces of wood furniture. Not impossible, but difficult.



  • Avoid a plastic or even wood veneer if it's thin. This will give you limited ability to sand away scratches or nicks in the surface. It's not a deal breaker for me, but finding a solid wood, dove tail constructed piece like this dresser is a wonderful find.



  • If the basic shape is good. There is nothing you can do for an orange, oak, flat panel dresser with rounded edge pieces. It's ugly in any color. If I offend, I am sorry.
I love love love Krylon satin paint. I get it at Walmart for $2.79 a can, and it's high quality and the nozzle is incredibly comfortable to use. Most pieces need anywhere from 3 to 6 cans of paint, so it can add up in price and energy used to do the work. They also have a lot of colors. I stick with the ivory and, of course, the black mostly but there are many more to choose from.



There is also a special attachment you can buy that hooks onto a regular spray paint nozzle that works like a trigger. It's great for when you have to use a regular nozzle from a primer, for example. They are plastic and cheap at Home Depot (thanks again Rachele for giving me this tip!).

Ok, so go out and have a refinishing adventure of your own!

P.S.

Goodwill has an interesting structure for their sales. Items are assigned a "week" as they come in. I think this week is like week 17, or something close to it. When an item has been on the shelves for a certain amount of time, I think it's six weeks, it goes through a series of sales as the week progresses. This week the sale items were from week 11. So last Wednesday everything that was week 11 or before that was 50% off. Then Thursday all the week 11 items that were left were (drum roll please) .... ONE DOLLAR. That's right. One buck for sofas, head boards, dressers, DVD players, etc etc. The trick is browsing early. So if something comes out and the warehouse guy in the back priced it too high (like a beat up old dining table for $75) then chances are it will sit for the six weeks and not be purchased. Then, fifty percent off Wednesday comes, and even at $37.50 this table is over-priced. Well, show up at 9 am bright and early on Thursday and that beat up old table (aka diamond in the rough) is all yours for $1. This happens each and every Thursday at your local Goodwill.










3 comments:

YoungWomen27 said...

Wow Jessica, that is stunning. Are you going to sell it? You are becoming quite the pro...

Unknown said...

That is sooooo pretty!!! I wish I had the patience and gumption.

Unknown said...

Jessica, I just got on your blog for the first time and was so excited to see what you are doing. The dresser you just finished (the french provincial peice) looks simmilar to the bed room set I have in my bedroom. Kudos to you and your new hobby!! G'ma