Saturday, February 16, 2013

$27 Buffet, $5 paint job


 
 
 
I have a long wall in the living room. It's an awkward space. I needed something long there, and I was struggling to find anything for the right price. After rolling my eyes at $500 buffets on craigslist for 7 months, it dawned on me that I had never asked the Lord. At our last house I actually wrote out a "God List" and He provided each item in cool ways! But obviously, I forget His power and think I don't need Him anymore.
 
When I realized this, I prayed (while driving the van) and asked God for a solution. And as I was passing Salvation Army, I decided to cut my prayer short by saying "And, if it's Your Will, You can answer right here."
 
Above was the piece that sat there, extra 20% off tag, and I got it for $27. A dude in the store helped me load that heavy thing. And I promptly started painting.
 
I used leftover paint. I love the idea of Annie Sloan Chalk Paint, but decided it wasn't compatible with the budget that I have in mind. I read a good article on ways around it, and followed the steps.
 
Sherman Williams has paint 40% off, four times a year. This means their sample paints (about a quart I think? Maybe more? Larger than most samples anyway!) are under $4. It needs to be finished with a protective sealer (about $12 for the gallon when it's 40% off, and that sealer can cover loads of projects.) So it cost about $5 to paint this puppy. My personal preference is to "glaze" furniture. If there is any detail at all, I feel like it accents these features and makes such a striking statement. Like eyeliner for your furniture!
 
There are a lot of glaze options out there, but my choice has been the $.89 craft paint (from Hobby Lobby or Walmart, etc). Just water it down, paint it into any groove, and wipe off the excess.
 
(This is to be done before the sealer).
See the difference?!
 
 
I love the sides too
 
 
 
 
So my actual steps:
1. primer that has special powers so I don't have to do any sanding or preping
2. white coat of paint (not too much touch up since there is primer if I recall)
3. painted the hardware (leftover spray paint, metallic sheen)
4. put on gray "glaze" craft paint
5. Finished off everything with a sealer
6. Put an extra coat of sealer on the top because I figured a lot of coffee cups would get set there
7. For the fun of it, put numbers on the inside drawers
 
 
 
I was painting when it was time to go pick up my kid from preschool. His teacher asked about the paint on my hands and I explained the project I was doing. She said, "You wouldn't happen to want a yellow chair, would you? I'm trying to get rid of one."

And so there it was, within a few days of asking God for help (after months of trying on my own) my wall went from blank to this! Isn't God generous?! (And I changed colors around and so now it is this).

 

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