I wanted to share a very swoon worthy furniture makeover with you from my friend Shanna over at Swoon Style & Home. I am so in love with her transformation and know you guys will love it too! Take it away Shanna!
Owen has outgrown his dresser. We bought it at Overstock.com a few years ago, and it was part of a child-sized set of furniture (headboard, nightstand and dresser with mirror). As he has gotten bigger (sniffle), so have his clothes. So the hunt was on for new furniture for him. A few months ago, I happened upon a desk and dresser on Craigslist that I could not resist: beautiful, solid wood furniture for a song. The seller had a huge 7 drawer dresser and a desk for sale and was willing to part with both for $65 (total - not each!). I high-tailed it over there, picked them up and brought them home. The bones of these pieces were absolutely terrific: solid wood construction, dove-tail joinery on the drawers, great lines and tons of space. But the aesthetics, well ... take a look at this:
Owen has outgrown his dresser. We bought it at Overstock.com a few years ago, and it was part of a child-sized set of furniture (headboard, nightstand and dresser with mirror). As he has gotten bigger (sniffle), so have his clothes. So the hunt was on for new furniture for him. A few months ago, I happened upon a desk and dresser on Craigslist that I could not resist: beautiful, solid wood furniture for a song. The seller had a huge 7 drawer dresser and a desk for sale and was willing to part with both for $65 (total - not each!). I high-tailed it over there, picked them up and brought them home. The bones of these pieces were absolutely terrific: solid wood construction, dove-tail joinery on the drawers, great lines and tons of space. But the aesthetics, well ... take a look at this:
I could see past the flaws in the finish and knew that with a few coats of primer and navy blue paint, new hardware and a lot of hard work and time, they would go from drab to fab and my little boy would adore them. I was totally inspired by the seriously swoon-worthy furniture revamps that one of my favorite blogger-buddies, Erin from her fab blog Richmond Thrifter, does all the time (Erin did a guest blog for us back in our Mid-Summer Swoon week!)
First, I took out the drawers and took off all of the hardware. Here is a close up of the dresser's hardware. Kind of odd, no?
I noticed the desk had little panels on the fronts of the dressers, which screamed 1970s to me. I took my crowbar and gently pried them off so the drawers would be nice and flat.
Once the panels on the desk drawers were gone, I filled all the holes where the old hardware was with wood putty, because I wasn't sure if the holes would work with the new stuff. Then I had a little construction to do. The desk was missing a support piece between the legs. I happened to have a 2x2 on hand from my failed door-desk project, so I just used my saw to cut the 2x2 down to size, sanded it nice and smooth and then screwed it onto the legs. You can see it here: it's much lighter than the rest of the desk:
Next, I sanded the pieces. I cleaned them up and used a coat of oil based primer - my favorite brand: Zinsser Cover Stain Primer (it's the best. Really).
Next up: paint! I chose Naval by Sherwin Williams matched to Valspar's paint. I love Sherwin Williams. I do. But we live less than 5 minutes from Lowe's and I've had great luck with Valspar paints. Three coats later and the pieces were looking good! I will warn you: if you ever have a paint color matched be sure to hand over the paint number too. I told the guy at Lowe's "Naval" and he typed in "Navel" - like the orange. He handed me a gallon of neon orange paint. Thank goodness for the Oops shelf. Hopefully someone will need a gallon of bright orange paint in semi-gloss. [note: I'm not sure what possessed me to get a full gallon of paint. I barely put a dent in it ... double oops]. Here are the pieces before I put them back together.
I noticed the desk had little panels on the fronts of the dressers, which screamed 1970s to me. I took my crowbar and gently pried them off so the drawers would be nice and flat.
Once the panels on the desk drawers were gone, I filled all the holes where the old hardware was with wood putty, because I wasn't sure if the holes would work with the new stuff. Then I had a little construction to do. The desk was missing a support piece between the legs. I happened to have a 2x2 on hand from my failed door-desk project, so I just used my saw to cut the 2x2 down to size, sanded it nice and smooth and then screwed it onto the legs. You can see it here: it's much lighter than the rest of the desk:
Next, I sanded the pieces. I cleaned them up and used a coat of oil based primer - my favorite brand: Zinsser Cover Stain Primer (it's the best. Really).
Next up: paint! I chose Naval by Sherwin Williams matched to Valspar's paint. I love Sherwin Williams. I do. But we live less than 5 minutes from Lowe's and I've had great luck with Valspar paints. Three coats later and the pieces were looking good! I will warn you: if you ever have a paint color matched be sure to hand over the paint number too. I told the guy at Lowe's "Naval" and he typed in "Navel" - like the orange. He handed me a gallon of neon orange paint. Thank goodness for the Oops shelf. Hopefully someone will need a gallon of bright orange paint in semi-gloss. [note: I'm not sure what possessed me to get a full gallon of paint. I barely put a dent in it ... double oops]. Here are the pieces before I put them back together.
Finally, hardware. I needed a lot of it, with 7 drawers on the dresser and 4 drawers on the desk. I found some great satin nickel pulls at Lowe's. I found 10 for $20 (in a contractor pack - 3-inch pulls). I went with a simple satin nickel oblong knob from Lowe's on the small desk drawer to break things up (at $3). Unfortunately, the old hardware holes on the large drawers did not work with the 3-inch pulls - so rather than drive myself crazy, I went back to Lowe's and picked up four 4-inch pulls for an additional $12. Ta da! They totally transform the dresser, don't you think?
And finally, here is the furniture in place in Owen's room! So nice right? I still have a lot to do in here, like add artwork and a mirror, but that will happen soon!
I need a desk chair for him and he's getting a full sized bed and headboard soon enough. His room is really coming together. And now this means I can paint over his old dresser and put it in the guest room! All told, I spent about $130 on these two pieces ($65 for the furniture, $35 for the hardware and $30 for the paint: and of that, I still have some hardware left and, um, 3/4 gallon of the navy blue paint) - not bad! Here's one last before and after so you can compare:
Desk - Before
Desk - After
Dresser - Before
Dresser - After
Do you love to paint furniture like I do? Isn't it so gratifying to take something sad and shabby and breathe new life into it? Let's swap stories!
See you swoon,
Isn't the color just to die for! And although I liked the hardware in the before picture, the replacements are drop dead gorgeous! Thanks so much for sharing with us Shanna!
They look amazing!! I love them in blue! They remind me of the navy blue furniture I keep looking at from Pottery Barn kids. What a great transformation!
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Love this kind of makeover. The color is perfect and the furniture looks so sturdy and expensive.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for featuring me! And Brooke - that was totally my inspiration! The navy blue with silver hardware furniture from Pottery Barn Kids :)
ReplyDeletei like the blue, but i think the original hardware was more my taste. LOVE your blog!!!!! :)
ReplyDeleteWow - that furniture is completely unrecognizable now! Wonderful transformation and such a good color for a growing young man...
ReplyDeleteCan you tell me how wide the handles are on those 3" pulls? I'm wondering if they're too wide for my kitchen cabinets. Hope not - because that price is just right!
Nice colour combination.Blue is my favorite colour looks very wonderful. All items look very expensive.
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Its good color and design furniture. People always attract by this type of beautiful furniture.
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Hi Kelly,
ReplyDeleteI measured and they're 5 1/4 inches wide. Those contractor packs are the best prices for sure!