DIY chalk paint drawers with world map dividers – The reveal!

DIY chalk paint drawers

The drawers are complete! Here’s the big reveal and a few more details for you :)  After a few pics, there is also a super simple recipe to create your own!

Finished drawers!

Finished! Complete with Etsy barn mirror from Upcycle Avenue and copper wire string lights from Frux Home and Yard

Custom map lining for drawers

Custom map lining and dividers – see below for details!

Chalk paint DIY drawers

Now we just need some pictures on the wall….

OK, here’s what we did for the drawers and the linings

THE DRAWERS – start with my last post here

 – Find old chest of drawers from a charity store

 – Remove old drawer knobs, fill the holes with pollyfiller/spacking and give it a quick clean

 – Give it 2-3 coats of grey chalk paint (recipe and instructions in my last post here).  Some people also give the furniture a coat of wax but we decided we liked the chalky texture

 – Measure and drill new holes.  Screw in new drawer handles.  We chose these from Lowes

Lowes drawer handles

Lowes drawer pulls

Adding in drawer handles

J creating new drawer pull holes

Measuring and adding in new drawer pull holes

J hard at work

THE LINING

 – The first part is simple. I found some old map wrapping paper at PaperChase and on E-bay, then cut and glued it into the base of the drawer 

 – For the drawer dividers, I cut some plywood wine bottle separators to size (available for free from any good wine store!), stuck some cardboard on either side to make a smooth surface, then wrapped them as though they were presents in a world map.   Really pleased with them!

making drawer dividers

making drawer dividers

World map drawer dividers.  With my two homes in Europe and America, and my work in Africa!

World map drawer dividers. With my two homes in Europe and America, and my work in Africa!

and voila!  Completed drawers :) Much better than IKEA!

Custom map lining for drawers

Xx

Chalk paint and drawers

We got a little over excited when we went to the thrift store recently.  We were in need of a dresser or a chest of drawers and were planning an Ikea trip, but at 3hr each way to Chicago, this was no easy feat.  Plus the lovely IKEA hemnes drawers that I loved were completely out of our price range..

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Inspiration! IKEA Hemnes drawers

So when we went to habitat-restore and discovered that they sold solid wood chests of drawers for under $50, my mind filled with all the ways we could decorate them!  Admittedly the initial chest wasn’t too pretty, especially as the top veneer had been chipped away and coffee stained

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Similar chest of drawers to the one we bought – I forgot to take a photo of the exact ones

So we decided to give it a paint job.    First job was to give it a quick sand and to use polyfiller/spacking to fill in the drawer knob holes.

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Our trusty primer

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Hard at work

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We wanted to keep the insides of the drawers as wood, so most of our time was spend covering the insides with plastic bags. As always the actual priming took seconds…

Primed drawers

The wood grain inside the drawers was much prettier than the walnut veneer on the outside

Primed drawers

Priming done!

Someone had recommended using chalk paint, which seemed easy enough after reading this fantastic blog post:

In My Own Style – Testing 1… 2…. 3…. versions of chalk paint 

This is the rough recipe we ended up using:

1 – Mix plaster of paris with water, slowly adding the water until the mix had the consistency of single cream, or paint

2 – Mix 1 part of this with about 2 parts of paint.  Importantly, do not choose paint with primer or the mix will harden!

We chose Valspar contractor grade 2000 paint from Lowes and had it tinted Hematite.  We had left over chalk paint in the end, which was still liquid 1 month later, so not including primer seemed to work.

Painting was super easy – the paint went on smoothly and dried smoothly.  It was also incredibly easy to clean the paintbrushes  We gave it three coats in the end, but only because we kept painting late in the evening on the porch and kept missing bits in the low light!

Here’s the final painted result… although it doesn’t quite look like it in the photo, the colour matched almost exactly with the swatch.

You’ll have to wait until the next post for the detailing and the big reveal!

Xx

Painted drawers

Living room – Benjamin Moore Pale Oak OC-20

Howdy,

The lamp has taken a backseat for a few days while I get some work done, so I thought I would fill you in on our living room colour choices.  Here’s the living room before, which was lovely but as I’m a serial “cool colours gal”, not quite right for me!

Living room before painting

We started out by painting the ceilings and window tops with some white ceiling paint from Ace, which despite the poor reviews on the website worked just fine for us!

This is the first time I have really had the chance to play with paint colours, so we wondered down the road to get some paint testers. We knew we wanted something light and airy, so we popped down to our local Ace to look at the Clarke+Kensington collection of off-white colours.

We started out with Bone White CW-W2 and Swiss Coffee CW-W3, both on the cooler side of things.  I can’t seem to find any pics of them online, so here’s the testers on the wall.

CWpaintcolors 2 CWpaintcolours

They came out a little dark in the photo, but on the wall bone white seemed dirty and swiss coffee seemed very bright and yellowy – very white.

After a few days of angst, we came to realise that we liked neither of them, and ended up randomly choosing an off white Benjamin Moore colour that we both liked on the swatch………Benjamin Moore’s Pale Oak OC-20.

Here’s the finished result – what do you think?

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Benjamin moore Pale Oak vs the old colour

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Its a soft browny cream colour

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This is a fair depiction of the colour against the white window top

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It really shows off the floor :)

The swatch match

Its a really close match to the swatch for anyone trying to work out the colour on their own walls

The other outcome of all of this is that I discovered the full range of Benjamin Moore colours… expect me to be more adventurous with future rooms!

Benjamin moore

Benjamin Moore – Ace will lend you their swatches!

Xx

PS This is the second part of this post

Spray-painting my floor lamp

Hello

This is part 1 of my attempt to redesign an old floor lamp

We recently went to our goodwill store (habitat for humanity restore) and picked up this lamp for $10.

Original lamp

Original lamp

It’s old and solid, and gives a beautiful light – worth far more than we paid for it!  I had grand plans to give it a new lease of life with a paint job and a mod podge or burlap shade. Something along these lines..

This was my first time spray-painting something, but after checking out this post from apartment therapy (how to spray paint metal furniture), it didn’t look too hard..

I started by popping down to my local Ace to get some paint, primer and tape

Supplies for redecorating lamp

Supplies for redecorating lamp

I wanted an antique gold style lamp, so I went for the “hammered” effect paint – no idea how it will turn out!

I decided that it wasn’t worth spray painting the top part as it was gold anyway and would be hidden by the shade.  So I wrapped the top in two plastic bags, and carefully masked the edges with painters tape.  I did the same at the bottom with the cable

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There have been a few posts that suggest you don’t need primer, but I didn’t want to take any chances, so I sprayed on a coat of white and left it out on our porch to dry.  It turns out spray painting is easy –  if I had realised, I would have done this years ago!  Here’s the primed version

One coat of primer and several mosquito bites later, I’ve checked the weather forecast, crossed my fingers and decided to leave it the full 24 hours to dry on the porch…  so, more tomorrow

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After a coat of primer

Starting in the living room

A few months ago, my fiancé and I emigrated to the US and moved into the most British house we could find! It’s a 100 year old brick house on a cobbled street, with a lovely relaxed landlord who didn’t mind us decorating.

Apart from it’s beautiful wooden floors, it’s also all a little bit run-down, which leaves plenty of room for DIY and to make it our own :)

We started with the living room, which is currently a tired old yellow.

The living room with it's wonderful floors and yellow paint.  It looks rather cosy here, but a little bit tired in real life!

The living room with it’s wonderful floors and yellow paint. It looks rather cosy here, but a little bit tired and dark in real life

I love modern rustic designs, with lots of glass and reclaimed wood and plants and pops of colour.  The type of thing that’s airy and elegant and full of light and space:

Or something a little like a less cluttered version of our old apartment

My old apartment furnishings

My old apartment furnishings

Plenty of books and light and colour

Plenty of books and light and colour

So it was a little on the cluttered side!

So it was a little on the cluttered side!

So the first part is to paint the living room a bright neutral colour and to buy a slipcover for the sofa. But which colour? Neutral? Red?

I quite like the idea of red…..

Stars, stripes and pine trees

Howdy!

Around a year ago, my fiancé was offered a job as a rocket scientist in Iowa. Yep, that really happens to some people! My fiancé, J, is a physicist and I research weather and climate in Africa, so both very cool jobs that in reality involve lots of swearing at computer screens.

At the time we were based in Milton Keynes in the UK, a town famous for concrete cows, roundabouts and 60s architecture, so the idea of emigrating to start a dream job was exciting and scary in equal measure.  We know nothing of the mid-west, apart from the vague idea that it would be flat!

After a lot of packing and a new job for me, we said our goodbyes and jumped on a plane to Iowa… only to find that it wasn’t so flat after all.  We spent a few panicked weeks house-hunting and watching spring start to arrive and ended up in a beautiful old brick house on a cobbled street, surrounded by pine trees.

This blog is mostly about that house, and how we are making it our own.  In October, we are also returning home to the beautiful Welsh boarders to get married, so there might be a little about that too.  I’ll try and write a blog post every week, but if I go quiet occasionally then bear with me!

And finally it’s about settling into life in Iowa, the strangeness and the fun.  And if you’re really interested, the rocket science ;)

Concrete cows in Milton Keynes

Concrete cows in Milton Keynes

 

Our new house

Our lovely new house

Bricks and lilac

Complete with pine trees

Complete with pine trees