Archive for homes and garden – Page 2

Furniture Restoration for the Lazy Martha Stewart

Last summer I took on a major furniture restoration project – it was only two pieces but by the time I finished that one little damn chair it felt like 4. It about did me in and I have been very hesitant to do another one. Except that this year I am buying a house and need LOADS of furniture, no really we’re talking hippy chick maybe I’ll just sit on bean bags status here. And of course many pieces I find need to be restored, then I think back to that damn chair and just give up.

So imagine my giddiness when Apartment Therapy dropped this little article in my lap today. So this is how the next project is going to go – lazy cheap restoration attempt take one – stay tuned.

For full article go here http://www.apartmenttherapy.com/boston/how-to/how-to-quickly-and-easily-spruce-up-wood-furniture-154404

Have a Seat

So here’s how this project got started. I decided I wanted a vanity. I found a great buy at the Round Rock Antique Mall. It’s gorgeous and not too fru fru, in my opinion. But no chair. So the hunt was once again afoot.

Found a cute little chair at the Austin Antique Mall but it had a horrible upholstery on it and was painted a jello pudding shade of brown, to put it nicely. I already had the supplies purchased and in effect for another project, so I thought what the hell, add it to the list. Unfortunately, once I started stripping this paint I found about 4 layers underneath. I should have known better but I wasn’t thinking clearly. I was on a high from the first successful project…or the fumes.

I must interject that I finally succumbed to the strongest paint remover I could find, out of sheer desperation. However, that came at a price. My flesh. The stuff was so strong that if a tiny speck hit my skin it felt like acid eating through my flesh – not exaggerating. You know that feeling of one fire ant, then a hundred fire ants. Same feeling – times 10. I don’t recommend it – it’s the one that takes paint off in 10 minutes. Don’t get it, you’ve been warned.

THIS project quickly became known as “that damn chair”. The damn chair I loathed!!!! I finally got it down to the bare wood – minus a few spots that I just couldn’t get or just lost interest. And the staining began. It’s an ok job, lots of spots where it gunked up etc. But it serves it’s purpose.

Honestly I didn’t love it – until – the most gorgeous fabric on earth graced us with her presence. That damn chair has miraculously become the chair I love.

For the inner old southern lady

I love this fabric so much I want to wrap my house in it, or maybe just re upholster a couple of chairs with it.

Junk Store Finds

Cruising Burnet road, I saw this sad little cutie sitting on the sidewalk. Though it looked awful it was in pretty good shape. The drawers worked and it was sturdy. I thought it would make a great TV stand for now, and would have multiple other uses down the road. The hoarder proprietor of the shop offered me a great price on it and I couldn’t pass it up.


Honestly, it just needed a little love which included:

1. Sanding – note a power sander is a must when you are restoring furniture. The only time I use chemical stripper is when its been painted (which I just finished with on another project). But you’ll never live through hand sanding when something has been through hell and back.
– Sanding Tip – start with medium texture paper for stripping, then finish up with fine textured paper. Skip the coarse unless you are trying to smooth out some pretty brutal gashes in the furniture.

2. Pre treat the wood before staining. I like Minwax’ wood conditioner. It’s very easy and makes a big difference.

3. I use the stain without polyurethane. Mainly because you have better color options. You’re pretty limited with the polyurethane stains. This particular piece of furniture was stained with dark walnut, which I love and will use it again.

4. Finish off with polyurethane. I like satin over any of the glossy. But that’s just a personal preference. Use at least two coats with high traffic areas of the furniture. Like the tops of desks, tables etc.

The knobs came from World Market. They have a great selection of very artistic different types that don’t cost a fortune. Especially if you print coupons from their website. All in all this was a pretty simple job and turned out far better than I thought it would. The final cost was under $100 which included the materials and the furniture itself, a great deal in my opinion.

Keep in mind when you are restoring furniture it will never look perfect. So enjoy the bumps and scratches, the dents and imperfections. And painting is not restoring, though I’m  not opposed to painting furniture, it’s a whole different process.

Next… a chair I’m working on. It has turned into the BANE of my existence. It has not been a good find and I curse the 4 coats of paint on the damn thing and the people that did it….but that’s for another post.

Cheap er Economical Decorating

I love making a space my own, whether it’s house sitting or staying in a hotel or visiting my mothers. Adding little decorating touches can really make a room feel like home. Here are some affordable and easy decorating items that I love.

I love plants – and succulents are easy to take care of – look fantastic and come in endless shapes, sizes and colors. Good options for low maintenance decorating. A small succulent is usually around $3, then a little planter pot is about $3-6. The cutest planters usually don’t have drain wholes in the bottom – so here’s a tip – add rocks or a little gadget called “garden genius” which is a pot filler. That way the water doesn’t settle at the bottom.

The brown pot? Yeah I got really excited – ooo look at this vintage planter I found in the tool shed. Or a citronella candle made to look vintage – sigh.

Tiny Houses

I love this idea – it reminds me of Texas architect Brad Kittel’s Tiny Texas Houses. In fact I’d venture to say Brad’s been doing this far longer than this guy – but oh well Yahoo didn’t come to Texas.

But notice these are MEN designing these houses – I seriously doubt many women would buy into this. Don’t believe me? Go to an airport, see how men pack versus women. One backback vs two suitcases and two carry on’s and that’s only because “they” won’t let us bring three carry on’s on board.
Anyway, usually when I’m at home I resign myself to one space. Kind of like a dog in its kennel. Yes I just compared myself to a dog, stop before you get to the B word why don’t ya. After dinner and a bath I tend to just hang out in my room. I don’t know why, it’s my happy spot. It’s comfy and everything I need is right there. So the idea of living in a tiny house actually really appeals to me.

I’m fairly certain I could do it. It’s large spaces that cause us to accumalate more crap right? I need a chair to fill that space, and a painting to fill that whole…I need some candles for that bare shelf and on and on and on. Next thing you know you are loaded down with a bunch of “stuff” you don’t need.
It baffles me how many friends and clients will shop houses based on how much stuff they have. Not location or quality of home first, but space – they need loads of space.

The more I think on this the more I like it, the wheels are spinning.