![]() Hello, this is Rachel. An old dresser found its way to me one day. It was beat up, and starting to fall apart. Places where duct tape had once held the drawers shut during a move, were missing paint. Water stains, dings and scratches graced its top. The bottom drawer had cracked, splitting wood as well. It had belonged to someones grandmother, and had been well used, but was going to be put out on the curb, so I rescued it! Here’s a “before” picture: I’ve been playing with Annie Sloan Chalk Paint® and wanted to see if it could help this dresser. First, I put some wood fill in the big dings and holes, and glued the cracked wood. Then I let my 9-yr-old help sand the rough spots (using 220 grit sand paper). Next I wiped the whole piece clean with some diluted TSP (wearing heavy-duty gloves!) and then once again with water. Next step: I applied Annie Sloan Chalk Paint® in Napoleonic Blue with a big brush. It looked a little streaky (which is normal for the first coat), so I applied a second coat with a 6″ foam roller. After the second coat, it was incredibly smooth. The coverage is amazing! 2 coats of Chalk Paint® looks equivalent to two coats of primer plus two coats of flat latex paint. And it dries MUCH quicker!
Next step: After letting the paint cure overnight, I applied one coat of Florence with a big brush. I let it dry for an hour. Then I took a damp rag, and rubbed some of this color off, so that the darker blue would show through. This is called “wet distressing.” Yes, you can distress Annie Sloan Chalk Paint® with water! No candle wax, no vaseline, no sand paper – just a damp rag! And, if you remove too much, just dip your finger in the paint and dab a little bit on. This paint is VERY forgiving! Once I was done distressing, I waxed the dresser with Annie Sloan Clear Wax and a large wax brush, just dabbing a bit of wax on the brush and rubbing it into the painted surfaces with the brush, then removing the excess with a paper towel and buffing with an old t-shirt. The more buffing, the shinier the surface. The wax cures and protects the paint so it is durable, water resistant and cleanable, just like regular latex paint. Here’s the final result (after adding new glass knobs):
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Greetings! This is JaYing, and it's my first blog post ever. The purpose of this Blog is to share our adventures in getting The Artistic Home Studio and Boutique off the ground. Rachel and I will chronicle our experiences testing different products and techniques that we want to teach at the Studio, as well as show our progress in getting the Studio/store ready for the grand opening (hopefully in April 2013). Rachel and I are extremely excited about working with a specialty paint product called Annie Sloan Chalk Paint (ASCP for short). If you haven't heard of this paint, well let me tell you, it's quite phenomenal! Rachel learned about it at a decorative painters conference this past summer. ASCP was created by Annie Sloan, a British fine painter/decorator, over 20 years ago. It arrived in the US in 2010 and has since taken the DIY blogisphere by storm. What's so great about this paint? It's mainly used to paint furniture, cabinets, walls and floors. But it also works on metal, laminate, plastic, glass, fabric, brick, concrete, indoor/outdoor! With Annie Sloan Chalk Paint, there is:
![]() First project: my husband's old, OLD cabinet from when he was little boy. It was pretty beat up with some deep scratches, and we'd relegated it to the storage room. Keeping to the mantra of No Stripping, No Sanding and No Priming, I just wiped it clean and began painting with ASCP color Emile. ![]() See the deep scratches? They were pretty deep. The first coat took about 15 minutes to paint. The paint went on very smoothly and was not streaky. It dried in about 35 minutes, so on went the 2nd coat. See that big scratch on the little drawer, second from right? Gone. Covered by 2nd coat of paint. Wow. However, I could still see the scratches on the top, albeit much fainter. After the 2nd coat dried, I painted a 3rd coat on the top only. ![]() See how smooth the top is now? Remember, I did NOT sand or prime or strip before painting! The paint levels into cracks really well. Impressive! And guess how much paint I used? About one cup of paint! The cabinet is 30"x13"x30". I'd read people saying it takes just 3 quarts of paint to cover an entire smallish sized kitchen's cabinets and didn't believe it. I think I believe it now. ![]() Next job, after the paint dried, is waxing. Annie Sloan developed a soft wax that is rubbed on her paint to seal it and give it a soft sheen. Waxes come in Clear and Dark colors. I chose Dark Wax because I wanted an aged, antique look to the cabinet. The wax has the consistency of Crisco or margarine. I used a flat topped waxing brush and rubbed JUST A LITTLE wax it onto the wood. The dark wax looks like dark shoe polish and smells a bit like it too. Right after I applied the wax, I began wiping off and buffing the wax. Again, the trick was to use very little wax. ![]() Voila! Here's the finished piece! So much nicer, huh? I've since moved it to our home office. That's my next project: painting the mismatched metal file cabinets and our desk! I'll post the before and afters as soon as I finish. In the meantime, check out some AWESOME photos of things people have painted and posted on (click) Pinterest |
AuthorThis is Rachel's blog about our adventures in bringing The Artistic Home Studio & Boutique to life. Archives
August 2019
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