Tag Archives: furniture

Dining Room Addition

Despite many of the recent posts, we ARE still building a bunch of furniture in addition to keeping the Goodwills of Indianapolis in business.  This post is about the latest addition to our dining room…this buffet!

Here’s a quick synopsis of how we did it [although the details might be a little sketchy because (a) Bryan did most of the building, not me, and (b) we’ve been working on this over the course of a couple months].

This was another build off Ana White’s website, but we made quite a few changes since we found that some of the measurements were a little “off” (could have been her error or ours…who knows).  Regardless, we tried to stick to the plans as much as possible and fake it when things didn’t work out quite right.

The nice thing about Ana’s website is that you get the entire cut list (i.e., what boards you’ll need, how many of each board, how long to buy/cut the boards, etc) right at the beginning of the plan, so you too can leave Lowe’s with a car looking like this:

We followed the directions as best we could and eventually went from this:

To this:

To this (big jump where I wasn’t around to take a bunch of pictures…oops!):

We got a little too confident early on and decided to stain the top (and one of the doors) before we really should have.  We later decided that we wanted to do an antique glaze-type finish on everything except the top (more on that below) so we stopped after that door on the right.

Once we had the basic structure built, I got to do some painting.  First, I gave the entire thing (except the top) a coat of the SAME old semi-gloss white that I use for everything in my house (our violin shelf, our dresser makeover, the bathroom stripes, and trim/staircase touch-ups).  Yeah…and we STILL have some left, even after using it on another recent project that will be coming soon to the blog!  Here’s the piece after a couple coats of white:

You can see I taped around the top to avoid getting paint on the surface we wanted to keep stained (to match our dining room table).  After that, we decided to see what would happen if we put stain on top of the paint and then immediately wiped it off. The look we were going for was something similar to our kitchen cabinets:

So, I held my breath (not wanting to ruin the buffet that we had, at this point, spent over 2 months working on), and did this:

Yikes. I was scared. But, I wiped it off with a clean rag and actually loved the result! I never worked on an area bigger than that space above, because I didn’t want the stain to have time to soak in and get too dark.  After doing most of the buffet, I took this picture which is a pretty accurate depiction of the glazed look we ended up getting: 

(Note: I hadn’t done the wine rack in the middle, which is why some of it still looks very white).  Here’s the buffet after I finished the staining:

The last thing to do was give the top another coat of stain.  My favorite thing about this project was that, when we stained the top the first time, we noticed that somehow we had ended up with fingerprints on the surface.  They aren’t totally obvious so I labeled them for you :)

At first, we were BUMMED about this (the same way we’re bummed about anything that makes us look like the rookies we are when it comes to this stuff).  We talked about sanding the entire top down, restaining, etc.  Then our friend Kevin came to town for our wedding and pointed out that it made it super unique and very much “ours”.  After that, we of course decided to leave it.  The second coat of stain didn’t cover them up, thankfully.

We finished it off with a coat of satin polyurethane (you can see in the picture above how much of a difference it makes as far as letting the wood grain show through) and some oil-rubbed bronze hardware, and this baby was finished! Here it is all decorated with empty picture frames (just waiting for those wedding pics!)

And, just as a point of reference, here’s the best shot I could get of the entire dining room. And yes, I moved the two chairs on the far side of the table out of the way to get the picture.  I thought I was being sneaky ‘til I noticed the chair and how visible it is awkwardly in the kitchen entryway. Oh well, too lazy to take another one…the secret’s out!

xox, katie

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Dresser Makeover

While Bryan is venturing into the world of furniture building, I’ve been stepping into the world of furniture beautifying. I’d much prefer to take an old piece of furniture and make it pretty (I’m green like that I guess).  I have a couple projects I’m working on, but this was a quick fix that I wanted to share.

This dresser is one that had been at my parent’s house for pretty much as long as I can remember. It was my furniture when I was younger, was passed to my siblings, and then I took it with me when I moved to my apartment. I always wanted to give it a fresh coat of paint, but never had the outdoor space until now.

Here’s the before pic:

Notice that it’s a little beat up from 3 moves over the past 2 years. The knobs also aren’t really our style, although they definitely worked when this was a child’s dresser. As you can see, our thought process when we moved in back in April was “well, why carry it upstairs? We’re going to repaint it any day now.” 

Yeah…that was four months ago and the dresser was still in our dining room until last week.  It was functioning as a quasi-buffet, and also served as at least SOME furniture in our previously empty dining room.

So after we built our dining room table, we moved the dresser out to the garage and I got to work. After taking the drawers out, I used the random orbital sander to try to remove some of the (several) layers of white paint from the top.  

(Note: Don’t sand the top of a dresser then later use it as a stand to paint some picture frames like I did. If you look closely at the picture above, you can see faint rectangle outlines from where I did another project, necessitating even more sanding. This picture is from Sanding: Round 2).

Next, I removed the knobs from the drawers and did a quick sanding over the drawer fronts as well.

I certainly didn’t remove ALL the white paint (pointless unless I had been planning on staining the dresser, which I wasn’t), but some of it definitely came off.

There were a few rough spots where I dabbed on some wood filler, let it dry, and then sanded it smooth…but for the most part it was in pretty good shape.  I moved all the pieces out to the driveway to paint them.

I used more of the same white trim paint that I bought for the bathroom stripes project (obviously it’s been getting a lot of love, as evidenced below).

I also thought I was being really smart and avoiding messy cleanup by just using a paper plate to hold the paint. Don’t do this. Clean-up was certainly easier than cleaning out a paint tray, but there was no way to get the extra paint off the roller, and it was hard to ensure there was a thin, even layer of paint on the dresser. The plate under the paint can worked well to catch drips though!

I gave it about 3 coats of paint, and we moved it upstairs to the guest bedroom. We also wanted to replace the hardware to something that didn’t scream “KIDS FURNITURE”, so I picked up 6 knobs at Lowes for about $2.50 each.

Here’s everything set up and ready for new hardware in the guest room (plus Wrigley lounging in the sun).

I slapped those knobs on and viola! Grown-up dresser!

We still need to do something with the legs…the bright gold tips don’t really go with the new hardware. Maybe paint them all white? Paint them an oil-rubbed bronze color to match? Replace the legs entirely? So many choices…recommendations welcome!

xox, katie

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