Thursday, January 12, 2012

How to Paint an Upholstered Chair


This is the story of how I transformed a chair that looked like this:




To this:

I saw a tutorial on Pinterest from Hyphen Interiors on how to paint an upholstered chair and was dying to try it. My grandmother's chair had been sitting in my parents' basement for as long as I can remember. I wanted to reupholster it but that would cost hundreds of dollars, so I thought I'd try the tutorial out. The worst case scenario was that I would mess up the chair and would have to reupholster it anyway. Either way, it was better than the chair continuing to sit around unused and collecting dust.

What you'll need:
  • one quart of latex paint in the color of your choice
  • one spray bottle for water
  • one small brush (2 inches or smaller)
  • fabric (aka textile) medium (at least 3 eight ounce bottles, available at JoAnn Fabric)
  • acrylic paint in the color of your choice (that matches the latex paint). I used 16 ounces of acrylic paint total, but my chair needed lots of coats.
  • Sand paper in a fine grit, at least 180 (I used 220)

1. I taped off the fabric on the chair close to the legs and spray painted them white. Skip this step if you are going to leave the legs as is.



2. Mix 2 parts latex paint, 2 parts fabric medium, and 1 part water. You don't need much latex paint at all for this step. You'll definitely have paint left over. Spray down the chair until its damp, working in sections. Use the mixture as a thin glaze, painting with the grain of the fabric, to "prime" the fabric. Blend as best as possible.

I did three thin coats since I was taking the chair from such a dark color to a bright canary yellow. You might need less. Just be sure to wait the proper time between coats (check the can to see what it says)! Don't rush this part.

Here's how the chair was looking at this point, and I was wondering if I was going to have to go to Plan B of reupholstery after all:
3. Sand, VERY LIGHTLY, on any rough parts after this phase.

4. Then, mix 1 part acrylic paint with 1 part fabric medium, and two capfuls of water. I used 4 ounces of acrylic paint and 4 ounces of fabric medium per coat. Once you are done painting with your acrylic paint, follow the directions on the fabric medium bottle and use a hairdryer to heat set the paint, if necessary.

Because I was bringing the chair up to such a light color, I needed lots of coats of acrylic paint. Like 4. Yeah....

After Coat 1 [Pea Green]

After Coat 2 [Kermit the Frog]:

After Coat 3 [We're Getting There]

After Coat 4 [Tweety Bird]. We've made it!
But she still wasn't right. I couldn't get the acrylic paint into every nook and cranny. The edges still had a green tone to them and I wasn't thrilled with the way they looked. They made it look like I, well, had painted the chair. I wanted her to be totally seamless.

So I added a nailhead trim (also purchased at JoAnn Fabrics), which was frustrating at times, painful at others (stepped on a nail!), but totally worth it.

My grandmother's chair went from unusable....
To gorgeous, if I do say so myself!

No green edges visible!


She's living in our living room right now, but she might end up being perfect for the guest bedroom. Stay tuned...

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Quick Exterior Update

GOODBYE BABY BLUE SHUTTERS. You'll find no quarter here.


We took advantage of the warm weather today (almost 50 degrees!) and Dave pried off all the fake, hollow plastic shutters around each window on the house while I spray painted a chair (update coming soon!). Thank goodness he took the shutters down in January, because almost each of the 14 shutters had at least one bees nest underneath it. Isn't that nice....


Much cleaner look. The baby blue really clashed with the pinkish color of the brick and kind of made us look like we were perpetually celebrating the birth of a baby boy or girl. We prefer the exterior of the house to look less cluttered like this. We might put some black shutters on some day, but trust that they WONT be plastic and they WONT be hollow, cause, you know, we don't particularly want thousands of bees living in close proximity to our windows and doors.

Hope the rest of you got a chance to enjoy the wonderful weather!

Monday, December 26, 2011

Kitchen update!

When last we left our (kitchen) hero she was looking a little like this:



(actually, if you remember, those crazy brackets on each corner of each cabinet had already been ripped off)




And if you recall, here's a before of the den before we painted the fireplace and the upper portion of the walls:



More kitchen (with the crazy lantern light fixture):




View from the kitchen after the upper portion of the walls and the fireplace were painted:

Here's the breakdown of what we did to the kitchen:




  • Painted the cabinets a light grey



  • Spray painted the existing cabinet hardware (to save us roughly $250)



  • Removed the doors from the cabinets on the wall above the sink and installed painted slabs of wood for new open shelving



  • Painted the countertops with Rustoleum's countertop paint (and nearly died from fume inhalation in the process...but that's a different story in itself)



  • DIY'ed the pendant lights over the peninsula with a recessed light kit



  • Hired a handyman (Bruce is the man) to remove the crazy lantern light fixture and to replace the existing overhead light with a drum semi-flush fixture



  • Bruce also replaced the fan with a plain (and non-70s looking) white fan



  • Painted the bottom paneling in the den white



  • Added a rug from ikea and a few other trinkets



The whole thing cost under $500 (as opposed to the average $25,000 it costs for a new kitchen) and took us two weekends and work in between on the weeknights.

Aaaaand.....here are the afters!


Still left to do:




  • Paint the walls in the kitchen area to match the color on the upper level of the den area



  • Paint the trim around the window in the den (and the whole house for that matter--a painter is coming to give us a bid this week)



  • Get pieces of glass and install them over the brackets on the fireplace for 3 mantles



  • Spray paint the bookshelves either black or white



  • Get a coffee table and a media cabinet



  • Get a rug for the kitchen area



  • I'm sure other stuff we'll think of along the way :)



And of course eventually (maybe a year and a half or two) we'll plow the whole thing over and get a brand spanking new kitchen. But, for now, we love it and are just enjoying our hard work for awhile.


Sorry for the sparse description above, but its late and we have work tomorrow! We hope everyone had a very happy holiday!

Friday, December 9, 2011

Updating my grandparents' dressers

We are BACK after a major delay! I started a new job and had zero time to upgrade and/or blog.

But now, its time for a blog post close to my heart (not that they haven't all been, this is our first home, after all). When my Grandpa passed away in 2005 I inherited his bedroom set, which had been he and my grandmothers since likely the 60's or 70's (maybe even earlier, its hard to tell, though they looked like they were from that era--maybe my cousins could fill in the details here, if you're reading this Jenny and Amy!). To be 100% honest, before this year I wasn't interested in using the dressers at all because I thought they looked too old and dingy, and even pretty masculine, so they had just been sitting in my parents' basement (BIG shout out to our friends Pat and Amanda for helping us move them over here after a few beers at Three Floyds!). This is before I learned about the wonderful--and relatively easy--world of DIY furniture upgrades!

Here are some before pictures, which are a huge fail on my part. I had my camera all ready to go but then my mom and I (another HUGE shout out to Mom for all her help) got excited and started painting before I remembered to take the pictures. So we halted for a second while I snapped some photos that will have to make do.





See? Brown, dingy, depressing. Totally hip for the 70s though! Extra bonus? I found some of my grandmother's things in the drawers (she passed away before I was born so it was especially awesome to find pieces of her).

I wanted to keep the dressers' style vintage-y to embrace their (gracefully) aged look. So after some internet research I settled on using Annie Sloan Chalk Paint (extra extra bonus? Dave's mom's name happens to be Ann Sloan, so the name made me smile). Its imported from England and only sold at a few locations in the U.S. I bought mine from Classic Wall Finishes at www.bestfurtniturepaint.com. They are a truly amazing company with amazing customer service. Patty is well known on the DIY blog circuit as an expert in the Annie Sloan line, and when I hit a snag in painting and didn't know how to proceed, I took a chance and called her. She spent 20 minutes on the phone with me explaining what to do and even gave me tons of tips on how to use this truly unique paint.

Here's why its unique--you don't need any primer (DIY geek swoon), it covers all kinds of surfaces, including wood, laminate, and even metal, and once it dries, you can "distress" it with a sanding block to get that vintage look. When the paint is dry, you cover the piece in Annie Sloan's wax to give it a nice sheen and feel. With my mom and I both working, two coats of paint took under two hours to apply. The hard part was the wax, which took probably 3 hours total to apply two coats (I did this part on my own). As Patty explained, you really have to push the wax into the piece and then wipe the excess away. I was legitimately sore the next day. The paint is fairly expensive, about $35 for a quart, but two dressers with two coats each only took about 3/4 of one can.

Without further ado, here are the pictures of the dressers! I ordered knobs from Anthropologie and the vintage looking pulls from www.pullsdirect.com.





(This next photo most accurately reflects the actual color of the dressers).


Thanks for reading!!! Major upgrade occurring tomorrow: we are painting the kitchen cabinets!


Monday, September 5, 2011

From Dark and Dreary to Chic and Cheery



We're back from a brief hiatus! And I have better pictures thanks to my mom letting me use her fancy camera. And not a moment too soon. I couldn't go much longer without sharing the above picture of our wacko dog (and Dave and I on our first night in the house) with the world.

Now, on to the more important stuff. When we moved in our family room/den area looked like this:



Pretty depressing, huh? The dark brick on the fireplace wall just sucked the light out of the room. To top it off, there were dingy, dark mauve colored walls, bottomed out by some (albeit real wood) wood paneling on the bottom. In short, it was not our favorite room to be in. In fact, we spend most of our time in the living room where our big TV and entertainment center is set up. However, its just off the kitchen and we really wanted it to be a place to chill out, entertain, and get cozy in the winter next to the fire. Not to mention the fact that we spend lots of time in the kitchen cooking, and we wanted something pretty to look at while we did.

So we googled around and found out how to paint a fireplace. Most blogs we looked at recommended an oil based primer if the fireplace was particularly sooty. Our wasn't, but it did have some grout that was crumbling off on the hearth so we didn't want to take our chances. We primed that with the oil based primer and finished the rest with a latex primer. This was the hardest part of the job because the porous bricks just sucked up the paint. Thankfully, my brother Jim was in town and was kind enough to assist with this phase in exchange for some of our hometown brew Three Floyd's. This part took about 3 hours.

Then, we finished it with a creamy vanilla colored, eggshell finish latex paint. This took a long time as well, making sure we covered up every single indication that there ever was a brown brick wall beneath. We were so happy with our finished product:

Its so lovely, isn't it? The difference is so remarkable. There is so much more light in the room and it looks a thousand times bigger. Can't you just picture sitting in this room in the winter with a fire going and a glass of red wine? It almost makes me excited for Winter. Almost.

We also had to do something about the brown walls. We wanted to go just a shade darker than the fireplace so that there was depth but no noticeable difference between the two. Because the fireplace was a whole wall, we wanted to make it seem like part of the room instead of its own statement. Lots of bloggers recommend a stark white for a fireplace, but we felt like a whole wall of bright white would make the space cold instead of warm and inviting.

This picture best illustrates the difference between the former wall color and the new one:



See what I mean about the walls being just a tad darker than the fireplace?

You might be wondering about these pedestals on the fireplace. They do look a tad weird just sitting bare. The former owners had long, thick, dark pieces of painted wood balanced on top of them which you can see in the very first picture of the post (my mom found out were not screwed in when she tried to use one to hoist herself up when she was helping me clean . . .
thankfully there was no fall). We plan on purchasing thinner pieces of wood on top of them that we've stained. We'd like to keep a raw wood look to make things look a little rustic, and put some bright accessories to keep the room cheery.

The next step will be to paint the wood paneling with Olympic's "delicate white" in a semi-gloss finish. It will be so nice to sit in a light and airy room. I guess we'll have to furnish it then. Hmmm.....

One more thing: See the lovely wood railing below? Dave (my hero!) ripped it out our second night in the house. It dated the house unbelievably and cut what would be a very large and open room in half. It had to go, so Dave pried it off with a hammer. I tried to pull it off by myself while he was at work, and suffered our first-in home injury. Rather than keep trying I let him do the rest. Here's the before (with the former owner's furniture):


When we pulled the banister off, to our horror, 40 years of accumulated dust, food, and even a few receipts needed to be cleaned up. Hope you're not eating, because this is the sticky mess we had to scrub, using no less than two canisters of Clorox Wipes:

Yum. Once that was done we were pretty happy. Now, the place looks like one big room.