Showing posts with label China Cabinets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China Cabinets. Show all posts

November 20, 2013

Paris Grey China Hutch

Hello....I've got a few projects that I've finished over the past few weeks and not yet written about them...will try and catch up, starting now!

This one I actually finished today.
I am a little bit in love with it!
Here is how it started out...
I immediately envisaged it painted in grey and white and filled with white china and natural coloured things, so styling it today and seeing my vision come to life was pretty fun!
I gave the exterior two coats of Annie Sloan Chalk Paint in Paris Grey. For the inside I used a custom mix of Pure White and French Linen (approximately 1/3rd of a tin of Pure White with a couple of tablespoons of French Linen) - this took the starkness off the Pure White and just gave it a nice antique white look without the yellowish tones of Old White.  I'm really happy with how the white looks.
The inside has had 3 coats of white.

New 4cm crystal knobs give it a nice bit of bling!







I'm taking this to my next market stall, which, weather permitting, will be this Sunday 24th November at Cassegrain Winery, Port Macquarie from 9am-3pm.


September 24, 2013

Vintage Green and Cream Corner Hutch

Hello...funny story...I posted a progress shot of this project on my Facebook page the other day, saying how I had decided it was well and truly time to get it finished.  It kept getting pushed down the list because I was doing it to keep for our home...you know...a furniture painter's furniture never gets around to being painted ;)
So, Sunday afternoon I got it done!
The funny part is, now it is done, I've decided I don't have the room for it, particularly because last week I painted (then decided to keep) the French Linen Buffet.  I love them both but they are such different styles...and the French Linen Buffet fits better in our home.

Here's how the corner hutch started out...

I painted it using Annie Sloan Chalk Paint® - Old White on the inside, and a custom 'vintage' green on the outside.  To make the green I used Antibes, Old White and French Linen in quantities I didn't really measure - it was approx equal amounts of Antibes and Old White with half the quantity of French Linen.  I did the first coat of green a lighter, cleaner shade to give it a bit of a layered effect.
It is very subtle but I think that it works well with this piece to add to the vintage feel.

Here's how it looks all finished...


It reminds me of this hutch I did last year...
That was pre-ASCP, and I used Porters Glossodia for the green and Resene Pearl Lusta for the cream. It's up there as one of my most-viewed posts...although nowhere near as many views as this one,or this one - which, ironically, has nothing to do with furniture makeovers!











This piece is for sale, please contact karen@restyledvintage.com for details.

Linking up with:

September 10, 2013

China Cabinet for Paula and The Story of the Perfect Vintage Green

Hiya, I am back again with another custom job for Paula - last week I made over her hall stand and this week I have done her china cabinet, both in the same 'vintage' green - a mix of Annie Sloan Duck Egg and Antibes Green.  
I know I am like a dog with a bone about this colour lol - but it really is the most gorgeous green - I just stumbled across it by accident, while having a play with a couple of Annie Sloan paints I had on hand a couple of months ago.  When the mixture is wet it looks nothing like the finished, waxed colour, so it was all a bit of a gamble really.  I do like to jump into things with both feet so instead of trialling it a small piece (which would have been rather sensible), I launched straight into this bookcase.  

As you do.  

Thankfully I loved it as soon as the paint hit the timber, and I was so excited when I saw the colour going on, then when it dried, that I just had to get it distressed to see how it would look...even though it was dark outside! 
(I have a great workshop but distress my furniture outside, it creates far too much dust to do it inside). 

Please tell me I am not the only one to get so excited about painting a piece of furniture that I continue working on it in the dark??? ;)

It seems a lot of you loved the colour as well - the bookcase sold straight away and many people left comments on my Facebook page saying nice things about it - thank you!

I went on to paint this desk, a dolls cot, a desk with hutch for my son, and the hall stand.  
I have a couple of other projects on the go in this colour too!

Anyway onto the after shots of Paula's cabinet...
The cabinet has glass shelves that I left at Paula's home, so I couldn't have a play with this for the photos...probably just as well, I love it already and if it had my things inside it...it may never leave my place ;)
I masked the glass inside and out in order to do a tidy job.  Sometimes for say a mirror I will just paint without masking and then razor the paint off the glass before it cures - in this case that would have been way to messy, given that there are leadlights on the panes.
I didn't remove the masking tape until after I had distressed, waxed and buffed this, in order to protect the glass from being scratched by the sandpaper, and to stop excess wax getting on the glass - messy to clean off!
The insides are all painted, including bits you wouldn't normally need to paint, but do when a mirror is involved - don't want an unpainted bit to be reflected in the mirror!





(Yep the handles are crooked - I haven't tightened them yet, to give the paint and wax a chance to cure a bit first)
I distressed this piece by hand using 240 grit sandpaper and then a fine 3M Softback Sanding Sponge.  
These give the most super smooth finish you can imagine, and are very pliable, kind of like a cloth - great for rubbing along mouldings etc.
Stuff with mirrors are hard to photograph, aren't they!

Paula has a beautiful collection of china that lives in this cabinet, and she has promised to share a photo of it refilled once I drop this back to her...when she does, I will be sure to come and add it to this post :)