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Tauni Everett » Decorating » Best Decor » FURNITURE FLIP: DIY CHALK PAINT DRESSER

FURNITURE FLIP: DIY CHALK PAINT DRESSER

You may remember that a few weeks ago I introduced you to some fabulous new site contributors. You’ve since heard from Holly (events and party design), Kendra (Blogger tutorials) and Emilie (Photography).

Today, I am excited to introduce you another amazing woman.

Meet Ann Marie!

Twice Lovely

Ann Marie is an Arizona based blogger with a furniture refinishing business and an ETSY shop on the side. Her DIY furniture flips have been featured on some of the biggest sites online.

Amazingly, she is able to fit all this in whilst raising four children with her husband and blogging at Twice Lovely. Incredible.

Ann Marie’s posts will be filled with all the details she puts in to each “Furniture Flip.”

THE FURNITURE FLIP: CHALK PAINT DRESSER

 

I picked up this sturdy old dresser from the local Craigslist. It’s mammoth weight and the dove-tail joints told me that despite it’s ho-hum appearance, this piece was built to last and needed a fresh new look so it could be loved and enjoyed again.

DIY CHALK PAINT RECIPE

I’ve been hearing about different methods of making your own chalk paint at home. I’m always for ANYTHING that saves me moolah!! After some research and on the recommendation of some furniture refinishing friends, I settled on trying out this recipe:

(It actually ended up being way too much paint for the body of this dresser, and I would think a half recipe would cut it for most projects.)

I have to say, I thoroughly enjoyed working with it! I’ve only had one experience with the pricey chalk paint (that shall remain nameless) so I don’t have a lot to compare it to, but I applied the paint without priming or sanding and the adhesion was great!

A tip if you try this recipe out for yourself: Don’t try and overwork the paint. Just lay it down and let it set. If you try to brush it on and keep brushing over, it will just lift up, and you’ll get ticked off. This beachy blue gray color (a mis-tint I picked up from the hardware store) took 2 coats to cover, each coat taking about 30 minutes to put down. Quick and easy!!

After the paint was set up, I did quite a bit of hand-distressing with some 120 grit sandpaper to give it a beachy kind of look. After that was done, I applied Minwax Paste Finishing Wax
with a clean rag (I keep our old t-shirts around for just this purpose) and when that was set, buffed to a nice luster with another clean rag.

The original wood pulls got the same treatment as the dresser’s body, but I wanted to bring in a natural wood treatment on the drawers for a two-tone look that is SUPER hot in design right now.

WEATHERING WITH TEA AND RUSTY VINEGAR

To achieve a time-worn, antique looking wood finish I tried another internet method that has intrigued me, and it was so fun and remarkably effective! Using just a strong brew of tea and a concoction of rusty vinegar, you can age any wood to weathered gray.

  • First, fill a glass container with white vinegar, some fine steel wool, and something rusty. (I added the “something rusty” part. The online recipes I saw just said to put the steel wool in the vinegar and it would start to turn a dark brown, but after leaving it soak overnight, no such thing happened to mine. I’m not sure why. The next day, I decided I would try and put a rust ol’ valve that I had in there too, and that seemed to do the trick for me.)
  • Brew a strong cup of tea (I used Lipton Black Tea, but I think just about anything you have that isn’t an herbal tea would work.)
  • Remove any finish that’s on the wood with sandpaper.
  • Paint on the tea and let it completely dry (about 20 minutes or so).
  • Apply the rusty vinegar with your steel wool, then watch the magic happen as this dries! You’ll end us with a nice weathered, gray wood!

With the addition of some Howard Feed-N-Wax, you can take the gray, weathered wood to a deep, natural brown that is stunning! This is life changing, people. I may never use stinky canned stains again. Who knew you could get this look completely naturally?  I sure didn’t.

And here are the beauty shots. I could totally see this piece is a little boys room, or a beachy guest room. TONS of great storage!

On an unrelated note, take a quick look at the weeping willow tree in our backyard…

Yep! Those are buds! Spring is just around the corner!

(Our early springs and late falls in Arizona might make you in colder regions jealous,
but you’ll be laughing at me come mid-summer when it’s as hot as the lowest setting on your kitchen oven!)

Wow. So looking forward to Ann Marie’s next post. In the meantime, you’ll want to go poke around her site.

Thanks Ann Marie!

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GUESTPOST

GUESTPOST

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GUESTPOST has contributed 34 articles on https://taunieverett.com since March 13, 2018.

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    FURNITURE FLIP: DIY CHALK PAINT DRESSER
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    FURNITURE FLIP: DIY CHALK PAINT DRESSER

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    Last Updated:
    December 13, 2018

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