3:55 AM antique kitchen island | ||||
#DIY Kitchen Island from new unfinished furniture to antique! - The Inspired Room M any of you might remember back when I talked about my unfinished kitchen island and my uncertainty about how I was going to finish it (or if I was actually even going to keep it). Well, as you probably saw in the recent kitchen reveal. I finally made up my mind the island not only stayed in the kitchen but it got a new distressed antique furniture look! Did refinishing the island take special DIY blogger super skill, fancy tools or equipment or a workshop where you have to wear a safety mask and goggles? Nope. Not at all! This was EASY. Unless you consider a bag of screws, a hammer and a can of stain scary DIY supplies. Here is what it looked like BEFORE. Just a simple, unfinished piece of furniture. (Sitting on hardwood floors with holes, heheh, all prior to the new floors). Ideally we would have wanted a real antique table from a thrift store or something, but we already had this island (it was given to us) so it was free. Free is good. Very good. So we cheated and made it into what we wanted, an antique! If you can find an affordable new island or table that works for you but is a little too new looking or not exactly what you want, you can make it look older! Easy peasy! Or if you are so inclined, you could build one or have someone build it for you. Here are the basics of what we did to distress this piece and how to do it yourself! 1) Start with an unfinished piece of furniture. Obviously you can also use a finished piece too. 2) If you want a time-worn look, beat up the top. You do not have to beat up your counter top if you don t want to. My old wood kitchen counters were smooth and pretty like a brand new piece of furniture. That was the look I wanted for that kitchen and we loved it. But for this island we decided we wanted a more rugged contrast from the pretty white countertops. We wanted something that had a bit more character and that been there a long time look, something we could abuse without fear! Reclaimed wood is cool looking so we decided that was kind of what we were after. So to get started, we grabbed our furniture stain, a few tools and started wrecking the top of our island. It was therapeutic, actually. You cannot mess this up unless you accidentally hit your thumb with the hammer. And, those screws are SHARP so be careful when you start beating your island up. We really scratched and gauged the top A TON using our high tech skilled DIY er tools: a piece of sandpaper to rough things up, a baggie of screws and nails (just hit the baggie on the counter surface), and a screw driver and hammer to dent it. What was REALLY effective for us was this FUN but loud technique: use the hammer to soften the edges of the counter and wear it down in a few places. Just hammer away around the edge of the counter and see how cool it looks! We also just grabbed screws and screw drivers and dinged the top up in random places. 3) Next we sanded any sharp or rough places with a sanding pad so it was smooth (but still dented and scratched) and then wiped it down with a cloth to remove all the dust. 4) The stain we chose was Minwax Jacobean. We wanted a medium to dark rich tone for the wood so this one seemed perfect. We put the stain on with an old brush and a foam one (really you can use whatever you have but something old and not fancy is all you really need), let it sit for awhile (follow the directions on the can) and then wiped the excess off with a cloth. I think we repeated that about four times, waiting a few hours to a day or so in between each coat. You can judge how many applications you need, if your piece accepts the stain right away once might be enough. Ours was stubborn because it had been previously sealed. You ll notice the stain will settle in the distressed parts. Those areas will become much darker than the rest, so be aware. That is the look I wanted, but if you want consistency in the color then you might not want to distress it. 5) I finished up the top with Aqua Spar to give it a nice water resistant finish (you know, to protect all the beautiful damage we inflicted on the top, haha). Maybe this part was unnecessary but I m not a pro at this and I probably do random things I don t need to. This was the product we used on our unstained cherry counters in our old house so we just decided to use it here. Just because. 6) After the counter top was done, we painted the legs and body of the piece with dove white, the same as our white cabinets. We deliberated on all sorts of colors but in the end, simple and white won out. We didn t want the paint to look shabby so we didn t go for that chipped or peeling paint look, although we did distress the legs a bit with our techniques mentioned above so the entire piece would look aged. And for a little more fun (and because painted white shelves would have been a pain in the rump to keep looking good) we stained the shelves with stain too. 7) Lastly, we personalized the piece by removing the wood pegs and knobs and adding our own favorites: Brass Anthro animal knobs and Rejuvenation hooks on the side perfect for hanging towels or oven mitts! I m quite pleased with it and how it added so much character to our kitchen! PS. The kitchen source and detail post will be out probably Monday, I m almost done!
| ||||
|
Total comments: 0 | |